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 muscle pain...tms?

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art Posted - 10/24/2005 : 17:45:16
I seem to have most of this under control..everything from food sensitivites, to foot pain, to back pain, to knee pain...all, all, all substantially improved....

The one problem that persists is my tendency to sustain soft tissue or muscle pain. For example, I've currently got pain in the muscles around my waist on the right side brought on by a summer of kickbiking, a scooter like device that one propels forward by kicking along the pavement. The motion is such that pain in the spot where I have it makes perfect sense. But then, alot of my injuries have made perfect sense and still have responded well to TMS self treatment..

I've been assuming though that this kind of injury had to be real. It's much easier for me to believe that knee pain, or any joint pain for that matter, is TMS than it is for me to believe a strained muscle is..

Interested in any experiences anyone else may have had along these lines..

Many thanks..
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marytabby Posted - 10/25/2005 : 16:45:26
I agree with Dave. You have come very far with your recovery but the TMS will still try to disguise itself. Keep working with what you have been because it's working, even if it doesn't seem so with this ongoing pain you have.
art Posted - 10/25/2005 : 15:03:51
Thanks Dave...Man, sometimes I get the feeling I'm really flying blind. It does have that chronic, come and go feel to it, now that you mention it.

You know what wouild be good? If someday they could invent some sort of TMS machine...Just kind of scan you to see if it's a simple oxygen deficit or something...Sure would make things easier, eh?
Dave Posted - 10/25/2005 : 08:01:02
TMS siezes the opportunities you give it to seem like a real injury. A baseball player pulling a hamstring running to first base. A man who hears a "pop" in his lower back as he lifts something heavy. Whiplash. The list goes on. . .

After awhile you learn to tell what pain is TMS and what is not. Of course it is possible to strain a muscle. But that acute injury will steadily heal. If the pain is chronic, or attributed to repetetive activity, it is likely to be TMS.

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