I know this comic has already been posted on lemmy. But it’s the only way that I feel captures my feeling, it’s like I live on an unspecified timer, everyday, after that I go back to the can.
There’s the constant pain, the lack of sleep and/or quality of sleep, waking up everyday like you’ve been run over by a train.
Then there’s the extra sensitivity, and the “electricity”, every time I sweat I feel an electric shock in my body. At many points, it feels like an active electric current is being run through my body, like I’m strapped to one of them electric execution chairs.
Then there are the constant brain fog/headaches, no matter what I seem to do, half of my brain is preoccupied with pain in random areas. My brain is like “Hey wassup, I know you’re trying to focus, or sleep, but your left leg is in a g o n y, because no reason really, maybe you moved too much. And so you have exceeded your uhhh free trial of leg for today.”
Depression comes in play too, either because I don’t go out much because of the pain, or because of the lack of sleep. And then depression fuels anxiety, and they fuel each other, and we have kick started our “mental doom engine.”
Then there’s the sleep. I have school coming up, it is absolutely necessary that I stick to a schedule, except that won’t happen. Because the only way for me to fall asleep, is to be at that point when you’re so sleep deprived that you can’t keep your eyes open. I have tried at many points to use this my advantage, but it seems like this point is almost always at 5 or 6 AM.
I have abandoned traditional art, and almost anything that involves the use of arms. I can type on the keyboard pretty comfortably because it requires only my wrists and fingers, but even that starts to hurt after a while.
And lastly, it is almost treated as an invisible disability. “Your limbs don’t seem to be broken/swelling”, “You’re not using crutches”, “You’re not on a wheelchair”, and “Fibro my what?”. I have been using sticks/staves/brooms in many situations to get up and move, and I use whatever object I can grab and get up with.
Since I grunt all the time, move slowly, use long objects all the time, I have always joked that I feel like an old person. As I’m writing this, my old person knee is acting up for no reason whatsoever, it just likes to be silly at times (night).
Tl;Dr: The comic I posted, I guess.
Thank you for reading.
EDIT
The good ending. All of the responses were to my surprise, overwhelmingly positive! I thank everyone who has commented with their own insights, I learned a lot, remembered a lot, and discovered a lot of things that would help me manage my pain. Thank you all, I wish you all the best of luck
If you don’t experience chronic pain, it’s very hard to imagine chronic pain.
I’ve experienced far worse temporary pain and been able to manage it, but pain that just keeps going is completely different.
I used to be happy whenever I got a bruise or a cut because finally someone could see that I was in pain.
Still that doesn’t mean one should try to. I’m guilty of this too, as I didn’t start thinking of anyone with chronic pain (or any chronic illness) until I had one. But that shouldn’t necessarily mean that one has to be cursed with illness to understand it. I guess that’s what all of these awareness campaigns are about… Huh.
Yes. For temporary pain, take a pain killer or go to a doctor, easy. But for long term pain, you just have to live with it, it is now a part of you, and it really morphs your entire personality, as you start to drift more and more to things that don’t cause you much pain. I used to fucking love playing soccer, now, it’s a death sentence.
I have lived, and continue to do so, in a household where this actually applies. Anyway wish you the best of luck in everything!
I am very fortunate that (after many years of trying) I have found medications that treat my condition effectively. As long as I’m careful and follow my strategies, the pain just seems like a distant memory.
I hope that you will find ways to cope, people who care, and new sources of joy that will remain accessible to you.
Thank you.