Subscribe today ~

Subscribe today ~

Line drawing of a person with a broad smile, holding a test tube, sitting at a table with an open laptop.

💌 You Deserve Relief—Even on the Days That Hurt Most

Join hundreds of Spoonies getting support, and laughter. You’ll get:

✅ A Spoonie truth

✅ 3 survival tips to protect your joy

✅ Warm, honest encouragement (not spam)

Lovin’ Spoonful in Tx:
Real support, humor, and practical tools for life with chronic illness.

Whether you’re a Spoonie yourself or love someone who is, this is where you’ll find the empathy, resources, and sarcasm you’ve been looking for.

We know the reality of managing life with chronic pain, fatigue, and limitations—because we live it.

Lovin’ Spoonful is here for:

People living with chronic illness (“Spoonies”)

Partners, family, and friends who want to understand

Caregivers who want practical support without the sugarcoating

What We Offer

Courses & Masterclasses — Skills, scripts, and strategies to navigate relationships, health, and daily life.

Free Resources — eBooks, affirmations, planners, and toolkits.

A Spoonie-Friendly Approach — Learn at your own pace, with a dose of humor and no unrealistic expectations.

Supportive On-line Community

A spoon with the phrase "Bout to stir up some SHIT" written on it.

📱Got the SpoonSpace App Yet?

Connect with a no-pressure Spoonie community, access real resources, and feel seen—not judged. No creepy tracking, no ableist vibes, just chill support.

Mobile app interface showing a daily spoon tracker with a score of 12 out of 12, labeled as 'Normal'. Below are quick activity options with respective spoon counts, including shower, make breakfast, work meeting, grocery shopping, social call, and doctor appointment.
Screenshot of the SpoonSpace app showing Insights & Patterns with weekly overview of average daily spoons used, and top activities including social call, work meeting, and shower.
Screenshot of a mood and energy tracker app showing today's energy levels for morning, afternoon, and evening, and a weekly mood overview with red question marks for several days.
Mobile app screen showing a symptom tracker with recent symptom of lower back pain rated 6 out of 10, occurred on June 20, 2025, possibly triggered by sitting too long, with an option to edit the app.