Ever Wondered What Someone With Fibromyalgia Feels Like?
This is an excerpt from the soon to be released book on treating Fibromyalgia with Natural and Alternative Remedies by our board pharmacist, Chris Sajnendra
Now if you are someone with the condition then you know that with Fibromyalgia you simply “ache all over”.
The fatigue can be at times very debilitating even when you have just woken up from 8 hours of sleep. You know that even though you sleep long hours you still don’t feel rested. How do you tell someone that you find it hard to get to sleep sometimes or staying asleep. Or when you rise up, you are already experiencing fatigue. How do you even start the day?
You have specific spots on your body called “tender points” which are just too painful to touch, (the name aptly describes what it feels like).
Your mood fluctuates with the unrelenting pain and there are times when the pain and fatigue simply makes you feel “down in the dumps”. Yet you know that you are really not suffering from clinical depression.
Your muscles feel like they have just “jammed up” and feel overworked and stiff. They feel this way even when you have not exercised so when someone mentions exercise, you say to yourself “ they don’t understand it’s just not that easy for me, my muscles feel like I have already been through a marathon!” You know that it is hard to even start to explain the muscle twitching, burning and deep stabbing pain which you sometimes experience. The pain around your neck, shoulder, back and hips are constant.
And how do you even tell someone about the abdominal pain, the frequent headaches, dry mouth nose and eyes.
How do you even explain to your work colleagues how your symptoms are so severe that either you have to modify your work or quit altogether. You know deep within you that you run the risk of being misunderstood by your family, friends and even co-workers and even your doctors because you look fine from the outside.
Or why, you don’t feel like walking in the hot sun or gardening because you are not only hyper-sensitive to heat but cold as well, and that you sometimes perceive cold as pain.
How about the fact that sometimes you find it hard to concentrate or form words or sentences, you feel you are “foggy in your brain”. The noisier the environment and the more crowded it is, the harder it gets for you.
What about embarrassing things like an irritable bowel, incontinence at times, numbness and tingling in your fingers and feet and not to mention painful menstrual cramps.
Get the picture????

