Managing a chronic condition on the road doesn't mean you have to give up on getting out there. What it does mean is doing things differently than most travel advice assumes you will.
For me, I started to understand this years back while raising my two youngest kids with autism. I learned fairly quickly to plan holidays around what they could genuinely handle, not what the average travel brochure thought they should be able to do.
There were never any jam-packed itineraries, no overstuffed schedules, and definitely no pushing through just because "we've come all this way."
I wasn't going to set them up to struggle for the sake of ticking boxes. This approach has stuck with me.
Now, even though my kids are grown and sorted, I plan my own travel the same way. No pressure to see everything, plenty of downtime built in, and half-days instead of trying to cram everything into full ones.
There are always extra rest days for when my body decides it's had enough - and it will, usually at exactly the wrong moment. It was making my world a lot smaller.