I wonder if having a soul-sucking, brutally unpleasant & futureless job might pre-dispose Long Covid?
Actually, in the 1980s, when ME/CFS was described in the newspapers as "yuppie flu", it was the high-flyers with glamorous, well-paid careers who often developed ME/CFS. That's why they called ME/CFS yuppie flu, because it seemed to hit yuppies a lot.
They were young urban professionals (yuppies) who had spectacular lifestyles, obscene amounts of money, lots of womanising, and endless parties, as was characteristic of high-flying careers in the 1980s.
Then all of a sudden, they found themselves so profoundly ill and so deeply weak and fatigued that they were unable to leave their homes, and often unable to even get out of bed, except for a few hours just to eat, go to the toilet, etc.
So it was often the people with everything to live for, and with the most amazing lifestyles, who were hit with ME/CFS.
So that does not really fit with your theory of life avoidance.
Also, if you speak to anyone with ME/CFS, they are always desperate to get back to normal life. They would give anything to be cured, so that they can go back to the life they once had. So no, ME/CFS is not an excuse for life avoidance. Not in the slightest.
Note that for decades ME/CFS has been portrayed as just laziness, a poor attitude, bored of life, malingering, etc. Even today, lots of the general public and some doctors view ME/CFS as not a disease, but just someone lacking in the right attitude. But this is just ignorance. And there has always been a lot of ignorance.
Multinational disability insurance companies also reprehensibly encouraged this erroneous view that ME/CFS was just poor attitude, so that they could avoid having to make expensive payouts to patients. If you can paint ME/CFS as just poor attitude or malingering, then you can save yourself $billions by not having to provide disability support. So these scumbag insurance companies promoted the lie that ME/CFS was not a real disease.
Edited by Hip, 11 August 2023 - 12:53 AM.