Professor Yaffle
Butterbeans and Breadcrumbs
By the way, thanks to Professor Yaffle for posting the origin of the spoon metaphor. I knew what it meant, but not where it came from, and I had been vaguely curious about why people had latched onto something as seemingly random as spoons for that metaphor. It's good to know that it is, in fact, as arbitrary as it seemed, and that if those women had had a basket of chips in front of them at that moment, the A+ board would currently be full of people who don't have the nachos to deal with something.
I first heard of the metaphor from someone with CFS. It is a little different from saying you don't have the energy to do something because of your disability, its more that you have to be conscious of your limited reserves, that doing this one thing might make you unable to do something else you had planned later on.