(no subject)
Feb. 26th, 2003 12:55 pmBleh.
Okay, so I've had this vaguely recurring problem with the muscles in my lower back, on the left hand side, near the hip. Mostly it's just extreme pain which kinda radiates down my hip and into my leg. It'll stay for two or three weeks, and then go away for months and then come back.
It's back, and really it's worse than it's ever been. It doesn't hurt to bend over -- in fact, it feels better when I'm bent over (get your minds out of the gutter), but standing up straight nearly knocks me out with the pain.
800mg of Motrin does nothing. One of the Doc's hydrocodone put me to sleep, but didn't really do much for the pain. (though I /did/ sleep all the way through the night, so I liked that well enough) I've added 600 mg of Advil to the Motrin and I can at least sit at work and type and stuff, but godDAMN, this is annoying as all fuck.
And of course it happens RIGHT before I leave for Houston which happens RIGHT before Mardi Gras when we've got friends in town who want to see parades and stuff.
Whee. *grumble*
Still, pain is a pretty interesting experience. I don't /like/ it, but I am always curious about the ways it effects the way I think and act. It alternately has a clarifying effect and a muddling effect. One minute I'm thinking more clearly than I ever had, and the next, all I can think is, "Ugh.. food good... pain bad ..." or "Pleasedeargod I'll alwaysbegoodforeverandever if you just takethepainawayplease."
Okay, so I've had this vaguely recurring problem with the muscles in my lower back, on the left hand side, near the hip. Mostly it's just extreme pain which kinda radiates down my hip and into my leg. It'll stay for two or three weeks, and then go away for months and then come back.
It's back, and really it's worse than it's ever been. It doesn't hurt to bend over -- in fact, it feels better when I'm bent over (get your minds out of the gutter), but standing up straight nearly knocks me out with the pain.
800mg of Motrin does nothing. One of the Doc's hydrocodone put me to sleep, but didn't really do much for the pain. (though I /did/ sleep all the way through the night, so I liked that well enough) I've added 600 mg of Advil to the Motrin and I can at least sit at work and type and stuff, but godDAMN, this is annoying as all fuck.
And of course it happens RIGHT before I leave for Houston which happens RIGHT before Mardi Gras when we've got friends in town who want to see parades and stuff.
Whee. *grumble*
Still, pain is a pretty interesting experience. I don't /like/ it, but I am always curious about the ways it effects the way I think and act. It alternately has a clarifying effect and a muddling effect. One minute I'm thinking more clearly than I ever had, and the next, all I can think is, "Ugh.. food good... pain bad ..." or "Pleasedeargod I'll alwaysbegoodforeverandever if you just takethepainawayplease."
no subject
Date: 2003-02-26 04:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-02-26 11:27 pm (UTC)because of my bone problem, there is no back cracking for me; the one time my ch seriously tried it, he tried it very very gently for fear of disastrous results, and only tried it at my urging because of my pain. what my ch usually uses is traction and adjustment. traction consists of using gravity and your body's weight to realign the spine: you lay face down, and after ascertaining the state of your spine, the ch puts hard pillows under your legs or hips (usually one on the left, one on the right), and you lay there for 10-15 minutes or so while gravity and weight do their work to 'pull' your spine back to a natural placement. he'll then come in with an adjuster - one of those things that looks like a cross between a doorstop and a syringe, that gives a hard pop when you push it in - and feel your vertebrae and use the adjuster to realign them. none of this hurts - the adjuster sometimes stings a little, but never for long - and i almost always feel a noticeable improvement after a session. a session never took more than 30 minutes from walk-in to walk-out, either, and there were times i couldn't stand up straight when i came in and i could when i left.
the medical community disses chiropracty, usually, but doctors in general have a bad history of treating the back themselves. try to avoid chain clinics (dunno if you have them there, but they do exist here) and see if you can get referrals from anyone you trust. i actually found my dr in the phone book and was exceptionally lucky with the results, but i, too, swear by him. i hope you're able to give it a shot sometime!