What sometimes helps my #ChronicPain
People are constantly sending me their ideas for remedies for my pain. I realize you mean well.
But if you don’t have chronic pain, meaning ongoing, every day pain, you don’t understand.
People are constantly sending me their ideas for remedies for my pain. I realize you mean well.
But if you don’t have chronic pain, meaning ongoing, every day pain, you don’t understand.
You look like a new person- hi there! Thanks for reading. This site is where I vent about having an invisible disability as well as cancer. Please consider sharing this post because it’s really helpful in my shift to a writing career. Welcome back! Please tell share this post or consider buying me a cup of coffee because it will help me continue to pay bills while I shift to a part time writing career.Being a Spoonie with Cancer sucks Monkey Balls via GIPHY I’ve been writing so much about having cancer here, I haven’t addressed the side issue of having both cancer and chronic illnesses. Before cancer, I know I had: asthma spinal degenerative disorder neuralgia as a complication of the spinal disorder. In the process of having cancer, I’ve found that I also have rheumatoid arthritis. Of course I also found out that the treatment for it is the same as one of the drugs I was taking for the cancer, but less often. So while some of my pain issues were worse, that one was better. Until now. via GIPHY For almost two weeks, I’ve had a headache, a low-level migraine that kept roaring into a full-blown incapacitating episode. It was strange though, because it was a motion headache, and it was happening in my ear. The right side of my skull also hurts. I figured that was just a fun new manifestation of bone pain. Yay. Since the cancer started, I started to hear my blood