Guest guest Posted January 5, 2003 Report Share Posted January 5, 2003 Oh, you really think 1000 options would do it? ;-) Sorry, just feeling cantankerous lately. But... I do feel this poll has raised some interesting discussion. Otherwise, I can't shake the feeling of what is the meaning of a poll if many people are like me and arbitrarily pick some number because they don't really relate to the options given? Note, this is not true of all the polls, it's just this particular one that 'gets' to me. Is it better to just not respond? Rick Hahn wrote: > Hi . You're right it's very difficult to express your condition > in any poll (with less then 1000 options). -- kjg@... Canberra, ACT Australia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2003 Report Share Posted January 6, 2003 Rick and all, I feel like I'm getting stuck in the tar-baby (Brer Rabbit?). I don't mean to be critical, I'm not questioning intent. In fact, the more I ponder this, the more confused I am getting. I started this question because I wanted to know if others felt the same kind of confusion that I felt. I got some interesting information from Granny (thanks). But, the question that I think I am asking is not being addressed. So, obviously I'm not asking it properly. I want to stress totally and completely that I hugely appreciate the work you guys put into running this forum. It has been so meaningful to me. Again, I wasn't trying to be critical, but to say this confuses me. I want to know if others feel confused by this also or is my confusion totally out of the ordinary. I recognize that everyone has good days/bad days, variable days etc. But, I think my problem is that I really don't know how to evaluate my own self. The more I ponder this, in fact, the more I do realize that this is a real issue for me. The real truth is that I really cannot remember being pain free in my entire life. When I was about 4-5 years old, my aunt gave me 1/2 an aspirin. Her daughter was sick (fever??) and my aunt gave her aspirin. Being a typical small child, I wanted attention and cried. So, she gave me some. Well, it was like going from night to day, I felt so totally different - better, able to run around, go outside and play instead of sitting inside being quiet. From then on I was an aspirin addict, begging it off anyone that was around. I hoarded aspirin and by the time I was 9, I was carrying around my secret cache, stealing aspirin from everywhere I could find it until I was old enough to have my own money and could buy my own. By the time I was 13, I was taking 3 aspirin every 3 hours around the clock. I would wake up around 2am because of pain, take some aspirin before I could go back to sleep. Telling my mom, my aunt, other relatives and later doctors was a useless exercise. No one believed I could be in that much pain. So, I came to think that everyone had the same kind of pain that I did and that I was the wimp for not being able to do without the aspirin or be as active as everyone else even with it. Until my MRI came back 2 years ago showing proof that I had a 'real' problem, I guess I didn't believe it myself. So, my question about the poll is really a question about myself. I'm sorry for being so aggro about this, but I guess this is something I really need to deal with. Rick Hahn wrote: > Hi , > We decided very early on that RISG would be a non-profit org and not > a foundation. ... G -- kjg@... Canberra, ACT Australia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 In a message dated 1/7/03 8:01:09 AM, kjg@... writes: << But, the question that I think I am asking is not being addressed. So, obviously I'm not asking it properly. >> What is the question? Pris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 In a message dated 1/7/2003 8:01:35 AM Pacific Standard Time, kjg@... writes: > So, I came to think > that everyone had the same kind of pain that I did and that > I was the wimp for not being able to do without the aspirin > or be as active as everyone else even with it At one point, Adrienne asked me, 'does everyone have headaches every day? " She was probably about 12 or 13 at that time. Way before any diagnosis. I recall taking her to the Doctors several times a month for pain, and being told... ( which infuriated me) that she could not Possibly be in this much pain and obviously she is just trying to get attention and is making a big deal out of little bits of discomfort. I didn't buy what the doctors in the HMO said... I was so disgusted, I began the search for answers outside the HMO and did it backwards... called the doctors I wanted her to see, and asked them, How do we get in to see you and have the HMO pay for it. It took lots of time, energy and battles. But finally we got the answers and the diagnosis...that she wasn't making this all up. And finally we left the HMO and now she has real doctors who treat her. My heart goes out to you, that you had to deal with t his for so long without the acknoledgement and support. K Adrienne's Mom Adrienne age 19 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 , after reading about your childhood and use of NSAID, I wondered how many youngsters have arthritis and aren't being treated because they just grow up with pain which they think is *normal.* Actually, the aspirin all those years (if it didn't cause you to have ulcers) probably prevented you from being even worse off than you are today...which probably doesn't help you very much. You really do have more problems then most of us, unless there are others " in the background " that haven't come forward. (Please do...and tell us your stories.) Just curious, because you took so much aspirin all those years, did you have any kidney problems? Best regards, Connie (granny) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 Adrienne's Mom, God bless you for being such a good Mom. It upsets me to read about the doctors' attitudes. I have had Reactive Arthritis since I was 10 yrs. old. I'm now 39, and I went through the same thing but my parents weren't as savvy as you are. I had severe Achilles Tendonitis that wouldn't heal. The pediatrician told my Dad that I was probably faking. It's quite an imaginative child to fake something as obscure as Achilles Tendonitis! Who would even think of that? I never got proper care or even a diagnosis until age 34 when I started seeing a faculty member at UCSF, Dr. Sack. He's been my doctor ever since. The first time I saw him after going undiagnosed and treated for 24 years, he said " Well, this isn't rocket science. It's perfectly obvious what you have. " I'm so sorry children with spondyloarthropathys are still being abused by incompetent members of the medical profession. There is a lingering tendency to disbelieve women and children. It's so easy to beat up on kids because they can't fight back. Again, God bless you for being an advocate for your child. Janet in San Francisco Re: Re: New poll for - Rick In a message dated 1/7/2003 8:01:35 AM Pacific Standard Time, kjg@... writes: > So, I came to think > that everyone had the same kind of pain that I did and that > I was the wimp for not being able to do without the aspirin > or be as active as everyone else even with it At one point, Adrienne asked me, 'does everyone have headaches every day? " She was probably about 12 or 13 at that time. Way before any diagnosis. I recall taking her to the Doctors several times a month for pain, and being told... ( which infuriated me) that she could not Possibly be in this much pain and obviously she is just trying to get attention and is making a big deal out of little bits of discomfort. I didn't buy what the doctors in the HMO said... I was so disgusted, I began the search for answers outside the HMO and did it backwards... called the doctors I wanted her to see, and asked them, How do we get in to see you and have the HMO pay for it. It took lots of time, energy and battles. But finally we got the answers and the diagnosis...that she wasn't making this all up. And finally we left the HMO and now she has real doctors who treat her. My heart goes out to you, that you had to deal with t his for so long without the acknoledgement and support. K Adrienne's Mom Adrienne age 19 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 K, Thank you for your thoughts. I am so glad that Adrienne has such a strong advocate. What a wonderful mother you are!! G Firstwifek@... wrote: > > At one point, Adrienne asked me, 'does everyone have headaches every day? " > She was probably about 12 or 13 at that time. Way before any diagnosis. I > > My heart goes out to you, that you had to deal with t his for so long without > the acknoledgement and support. > K > Adrienne's Mom > Adrienne age 19 > -- kjg@... Canberra, ACT Australia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2003 Report Share Posted January 7, 2003 I'd be interested in hearing about that too. I've had ReA since I was 10. The doctors told me to take 10 aspirin a day. I refused on the theory that I wanted to have an intact stomach when I grew up. I now have a very severe treatment resistant form of the disease. I wonder if I am better off not having taken any medication until adulthood since there weren't good meds. when I was a kid, or if I wouldn't have gotten as bad if I'd listened to the doctors. I would be interested to hear the outcome of someone who took the massive doses of aspirin as a child and what happened. Janet in San Francisco Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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