Affects one million people in the United States. Less than half the doctors in this country know the name of this illness. I don't know of another illness like that. This is probably the craziest story I have ever heard of in my life. It was what should have been the happiest moment of my life. I was engaged to the love of my life. I was a PhD student at Harvard. And then...WHAM! I had a hundred-and-five-degree-fever that lasted for 10 days. The doctor had said to me, "Everything you're feeling is in your head." I had a blackout. When I came to I couldn't read a word. I disappeared entirely and no one knew why. Among the people who hadn't a clue was me. Except for the doctors, nobody doubted I was really sick. It's a story that you need to see to believe. Are you tired all the time? Tired. Tired all the time. I just slept all the time. Why am I so darn tired all the time? Chronic Fatigue Sundrome. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. La Fatigue Chronique. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome? No, that can't be right. You're too sick. Hi. I'm Jennifer Brea. I'm Kiran Chitanvis. And this is our Kickstarter Campaign for Canary In A Coal Mine, a film that takes a look into the lives of people living with one of the world's most misunderstood diseases - Myalgic Encephalomyelitis. It's a disease suffered by a subset of people diagnosed each year with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Had I not become ill with M.E. three years ago, I would have never believed the story was possible. In order to make this film, we need your help. Take a look. I was at a Chinese restaurant with some friends and when the check came I couldn't sign my name. My brain was burning. He said maybe I was stressed or depressed or sad or most implausibly that I wanted to be sick. We doctors are the most arrogant of professionals. I've got the answer right here, ladies and gentlemen. To everything that ails you! We just don't have doctors going to guys and saying if you would change the color of your hair, you would feel better. If you could, you know, get a younger wife, you would feel better. Ones gotta insist that this is a physical disease, that this is not a psychiatric disease. It's an acquired form of an immunodeficiency disorder. If you go back historically, you can see illnesses very similar to this called many different things. Toxins can insidiously creep in to every aspect of our lives, flipping certain individuals who've might otherwise be resistant to an infection. The severity of the illness is equivalent to congestive heart failure. We think that there is very very likely to be some sort of infectious culprit. It was just a group of people, a committee that happened to be pulled together by the CDC that came up with this perfectly horrid name, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. I was frustrated and normally I would write in a journal to process my experience but I had lost the ability to write, and so that's why I started filming these video diaries, and it was really just a personal space to process what I was feeling and to sort of deal with some of that anger of no one knows what's wrong with me, no one has a treatment for me and everything that I love and care about is slipping away. You might saying to yourself, if I really couldn't stand up, why would I be filming it? Well, I kind of think that someone should see this. As I dug deeper, I realized that my symptoms followed a pattern and that there were millions of people around the world who had my disease As I shared my story on facebook, old friends from college and high school sort of coming out of the woodwork to share their stories. They didn't have M.E. but they had other chronic illnesses, auto immune diseases and I started to realize that, you know, this is actually a universal story. Our approach in making this film is to give the audience a really subjective view into the lives of people with this disease. What we really want to do is to bring the audience in and to make people feel for the first time what it's like to live with this devastating illness. It's just beyond any words. The participants in the film are doing a lot of self-filmed footage and it really gives you a visceral view into their lives in a way that you would never get by bringing a film crew into somebody else's house. Taking on a project like this is completely insane. It's difficult to travel everytime we go, you know, one hour from Princeton to New York, we have to pack all of my own food. It's like there's more gear for to take care of me than there is like camera gear we're packing in the car for the shoot. She conducts the interviews for most of the shoots from a different room and conducts them over skype through a teleprompter. I can interview people whether I'm in the next room or at home in bed and, you know, there's a crew halfway around the world shooting. In addition to a few, new technological things we're gonna be trying out. Some tricks up our sleeves. Got a few tricks. The diagnosis of M.E. is really in a place where something like epilepsy or multiple sclerosis was a hundred to even thirty years ago. And how many more diseases will this happen to unless our approach changes. There's $16 million dollars in male-pattern baldness and we got $3 million bucks going to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. My husband has asked me, you know, "Jen, what do you care more about, your health or this film?" There's no way we're gonna go into the mall and show our numbers. We can't even walk to the mailbox." (laughing) Even though we often feel like, whatever it is that we are grappling with, no one else can understand the fact is that we will all have that experience of coming across an obstacle that feels insurmountable. There was a future you take for granted everyday and never articulate to yourself and yet it's always there and when you come down with an illness that has no end, it strips away that idea of a future. When we're in that moment that everything changes, how do we react? When I got sick, he took care of me. But I'd rather carry you around all my life than have anything happen to you. We kept saying, you know, don't get discouraged, you never know what's around the corner. Things can change. I have this belief that if I can read a lot of science and do a lot of self-experimentation that I can turn this thing around. We believe in this story and we're gonna do everything we can to see this film happen. Yes, we would hope to be taken as seriously as male-pattern baldness but I am not looking for any miracles here. No one can promise a cure but one very important step towards that goal is visibility. There are things that could be happening today that would improve the lives of patients with living with M.E. Visibility means more research. It means not having to wait 5 years for a diagnosis. Visibility means not having doctors give you advice that can cause you harm. Visibility means that people with M.E. would no longer be forcibly institutionalized because their doctor that has never heard of their disease. Right now, to most of the world, we are invisible. Fifty Thousand dollars is what we need to make it through the completion of production and have a film that we're really proud of but to make the film that we dream of, that's just the beginning. And we're going to need a lot of help to get there. Kickstarter is an all-or-nothing campaign and if we don't reach our funding goal, then we don't get to keep any of what we have raised. Up to this point, we've shot about a week's worth of footage and just imagine what we could do with the funds to shoot four weeks, six weeks, and to do it not just in the New Jersey-New York area but around the world. We want this film to have such an impact that I could walk up to anyone on the street and say, "Hi! I'm Jen and I have Myalgic Encephalomyelitis" and they would actually know what the f@#$ that was. Go to our Kickstarter page, check out the link and make a donation to the film. You can also follow us on Twitter or Facebook or even just pass along either the Kickstarter link, the Facebook Page or the Twitter handle or preferably all of the above. Or all the above!!! The biggest way you can help us is by spreading the word and then scroll down and check out some of our other video as well as the awesome rewards by writers and artists who are also living with M.E. Join us on our mission to give a true face to this disease that's so misunderstood. Most of us look at what's around us and see very little and yet we have the capacity to see infinity in the smallest of things. This is our life and everyday we're just so grateful for it. Plus you learn from everything you survive.