Episode 123: Invisible Illness, Unshakable Strength - The Long Road To Being Heard and Believed

March 27
24 mins

Episode Description

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What happens when you spend 18 years searching for answers to symptoms no one else can see? 

In this powerful episode, Rachel Weaver shares her long and exhausting journey with chronic dizziness, beginning the day before graduate school and continuing through years of appointments, tests, frustration, and uncertainty. 

Her story shines a light on what it feels like to live with an invisible illness while trying to function, be believed, and keep moving forward.

Rachel opens up about the emotional weight of being dismissed, misunderstood, or told you must be “fine” because you can still show up to work or school. She shares how brain fog, anxiety, and the pressure of rushed appointments made it difficult to advocate for herself—and how everything began to shift when she finally found providers who listened, collaborated, and respected her lived experience. 

This conversation is an honest look at the gaps in healthcare and the courage it takes to keep asking questions when answers do not come easily.

If you or someone you love has ever felt unheard in the healthcare system, this episode will hit home. Rachel’s journey is a reminder that persistence matters, your symptoms are real, and the right provider relationship can make all the difference. 

It is a moving conversation about resilience, self-advocacy, and finding your voice in a system that too often overlooks the patient experience.  She covers more in her memoir Dizzy.

Key Takeaways

  • Invisible illness can be deeply disruptive, even when others cannot see the symptoms.
  • Being high-functioning does not mean someone is not struggling.
  • Self-advocacy in healthcare is hard, but it can change outcomes.
  • The best providers listen, collaborate, and treat patients as partners.
  • Chronic illness often brings emotional and financial strain, not just physical symptoms.

Soundbites

  • “Just because no one can see it doesn’t mean it isn’t real.”
  • “Being able to function is not the same as being okay.”
  • “Sometimes the hardest part of illness is proving you are sick enough to be heard.”
  • “The right provider does not just treat symptoms—they listen to your story.”
  • “Rachel’s journey is a powerful reminder to keep asking questions and keep advocating for your health.”

Resources:

Rachel's Website - Books and Resources

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