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T O P I C    R E V I E W
chester Posted - 01/10/2012 : 06:41:26
My first bout of TMS was 4 years ago. I learned about the disorder and slowly recovered completely. This past August it came back as sciatica in the other leg.

I went to a TMS doctor, had an MRI that showed only a slightly bulging disk, tried self-treatment such a journaling, and have been in therapy with a TMS specialist since November. Nothing is working.

I have pain all of the time. It's worst when I sit, because I am putting pressure on where the pain already is. I take OTC painkillers 3 times a day to take the edge off.

I have no idea what I'm doing wrong, or what to do next. All I know is that I can't continue to sit at a desk 9 hours a day in pain.

I'm open to any and all suggestions. Thanks in advance.
20   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
joan Posted - 08/24/2012 : 08:42:51
quote:
Originally posted by BecB

Hello,

I am pretty new to the board but I just wanted to add my thoughts. My issue is not back pain but trigeminal nerve pain, tooth pain, and tongue pain. A year ago I was completely taken over by it. I felt it all day long and all I did was focus on it. It has been such a journey for me to understand how the whole body/mind relationship works. I could absolutely believe none of this a year ago. I was going through tests and living in chronic pain and popping meds to get through a day. Anyway, sometime the whole thing takes time. I was in the same boat with the most horrific pain of my life that could not really be medically explained since it was so very severe. I think it is really a process of learning this stuff and then really believing it. Our mind plays tricks and even if you fully believed it and were healed four years ago, maybe now your mind is telling you that this could not be the same thing or something. I know for me that when I realized that it was TMS there was still a lag period when I felt symptoms all the time. It is like it takes a while to really sink in, even if you think you believe it. Anyway, I think you are doing the right thing by journaling. I have read about people who were upset about their job and developed problems with sitting or typing. I am not saying this is the case with you. Try to stick with it and when you have physical pain, even if it is all the time, try to focus instead on what is bothering you menatlly whether it be people or circumstances or anything else. It can be a long and hilly course but you will heal.

Becca

tennis tom Posted - 08/19/2012 : 07:52:40
quote:
Originally posted by chester

...Even if I didn't have any pain, this would have been a strenuous hike for me.



Sounds like it could be some of both. Only your subconscious knows for sure and it ain't telling. The main thing is you did it and then broke through the pain and didn't let it spoil your plans. Keep doing it and grin and bare it until you break on through to the other side.

Kudos to you!

"Start slowly and taper off." Walt Stack
chester Posted - 08/19/2012 : 06:36:03
So yesterday I hiked 3 miles. Included in that, I jogged for 2 minutes 4 times (as part of a training/motivational podcast I was listening to). It hurt quite a bit, although interestingly, my heel hurt less when I was jogging than when I was walking.

Last night, though, I could barely put weight on it. When I stood up, I felt like a deer in the headlights, unable to take a step. But we had dinner plans and I refused to bail out, so I took some pain meds and gritted my teeth.

The thing I'm wondering is... Was the increased pain tension-induced, or did I just overdo the hike? I know Sarno says to push yourself incrementally. I used to run long distances, but I'm now woefully out of shape. Even if I didn't have any pain, this would have been a strenuous hike for me.
tennis tom Posted - 08/17/2012 : 09:43:48
Kool Chester! SteveO's book is giving me a lot of HOPE too!
chester Posted - 08/17/2012 : 09:36:33
I'm very pleased to say the Steve O's book is helping me quite a bit mentally and, therefore, physically. In particular, it's gotten me to (finally) stop obsessing about the pain.

In my first bout of TMS (2007-8), I attended a few of Sarno's small group meetings and alumni panel meetings. For me and my personality makeup, the small group meetings were not helpful at all. To me, it was a case of misery loving company. I'm sure many people do get something positive out of such sessions, but I didn't.

The alumni panel meetings, though, did me a world of good because I got to hear specific details of how people healed from conditions far worse than mine. That's what Steve O's book is doing for me know, and I'm quite excited about it.
chester Posted - 08/15/2012 : 13:13:26
quote:
Originally posted by tennis tom

Have you gotten SteveO's new TMS book? If not, you can Kindle it and get an immediate "TMS Knowledge Penicillin" booster.



I ordered it a few days ago and am about a quarter into it. Good stuff; I hope it can help get me over the hump.

One thing I do have going for me is that the pain moves on almost a daily basis. From my lower back to my heel to my hip flexors to my outer calf. At least from that I know this can't possibly be anything structural.
tennis tom Posted - 08/09/2012 : 09:43:58
Have you gotten SteveO's new TMS book? If not, you can Kindle it and get an immediate "TMS Knowledge Penicillin" booster.
chester Posted - 08/09/2012 : 09:39:18
Thanks. I don't doubt at all that this is tension-induced, but I need something right now to get me through it, even if it's just a placebo. Painkillers alone aren't cutting it.
tennis tom Posted - 08/09/2012 : 09:33:57
Sorry to hear about your pain Chester. My advice--since this is the TMS board--is to look at the Rahe-Holmes stress dis-ease, list and see if there is anything tension creating (hence the name TMS: Tension Myositis Syndrome). See if you can recognize any events going on concurrently with your physical pain or preceding it. This may help convince you your symptoms could be psychogenic in origin.


THE HOLMES-RAHE STRESS TEST
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holmes_and_Rahe_stress_scale

G'luck
chester Posted - 08/09/2012 : 09:06:17
Seven months later and I am still not recovered.

The pain has gotten better to some extent - I'm no longer taking any pain meds. I can usually function, just not comfortably.

However, for the last few days I've had horrible pain on the bottom of my heel. It's so bad that I can barely put weight on it. I'm only 48, but I hobble around like I'm 90.

I'll take any advice I can find at this point, because if it doesn't improve by the weekend, I'm going to have to go to an MD to see if he can recommend some physical remedy. If I can't walk, I can't work.
donnroc Posted - 02/01/2012 : 16:02:56
How do you feel about being at the computer nine hours a day ?
I get Homicidal after two !
BecB Posted - 01/27/2012 : 20:01:53
Hello,

I am pretty new to the board but I just wanted to add my thoughts. My issue is not back pain but trigeminal nerve pain, tooth pain, and tongue pain. A year ago I was completely taken over by it. I felt it all day long and all I did was focus on it. It has been such a journey for me to understand how the whole body/mind relationship works. I could absolutely believe none of this a year ago. I was going through tests and living in chronic pain and popping meds to get through a day. Anyway, sometime the whole thing takes time. I was in the same boat with the most horrific pain of my life that could not really be medically explained since it was so very severe. I think it is really a process of learning this stuff and then really believing it. Our mind plays tricks and even if you fully believed it and were healed four years ago, maybe now your mind is telling you that this could not be the same thing or something. I know for me that when I realized that it was TMS there was still a lag period when I felt symptoms all the time. It is like it takes a while to really sink in, even if you think you believe it. Anyway, I think you are doing the right thing by journaling. I have read about people who were upset about their job and developed problems with sitting or typing. I am not saying this is the case with you. Try to stick with it and when you have physical pain, even if it is all the time, try to focus instead on what is bothering you menatlly whether it be people or circumstances or anything else. It can be a long and hilly course but you will heal.

Becca
Darko Posted - 01/27/2012 : 19:10:59
Well said Balto! Just to add to that......

Once we take RESPONSIBILITY for the fact that the "root issue" resides in our minds and not in out body, or in the outside world 2 wonderful things happen.

1- You have nothing to fear because you understand that all your pain and suffering is caused by your mind....and if you created it you can learn to uncreate it also.

2- You gain personal power.....you are no longer a victim of your symptoms, disease, pain, emotions....or whatever else!

"THE WORK" is not your diet, stretching, taking pills or ANY other thing one does to treat the symptoms.......THE WORK, my friends, is to get control of that crazy BS producing machine in your head. Look at your beliefs, thought patterns and perspectives....change everything so that your mind serves you and you life. Remember that the basic cause of TMS is emotions.....and thoughts create emotions, and suppressed, painful emotions lead to TMS......so you do the maths.

No matter how many times you read this your mind will resist it because it doesn't want to cede control. You have to TAKE IT BACK!

Get in front of the mirror and start having some serious words with yourself and meditate. Take a look at the things that keep popping up in your head and either deal with them or let them go. Choose the pain and be ok with it, it is simply a guide that is telling you that you're on the wrong path. Change the way you live and the pain will go......focus on that! If you focus on getting rid of the pain it will never leave you.

If you resist the pain it will persist.....simply because you will be focusing on it. Your brain magnifies the things you focus on.

If you haven't read "pain free for life" by Scott Brady I suggest you do.




balto Posted - 01/27/2012 : 16:14:08
If you can not make yourself completely believe that your pain/anxiety is psychogenic, it is going to be tough to rid yourself of it. If you continue to think your pain/anxiety is there because something is wrong structurally with you, or because of what you eat, breath in, or absorbed in.... or because of some rare disease that science have not find a cure for yet, you will continue to suffer. You have to think mindbody. You have to somehow make your brain believe that it is stress and worry and wrong thoughts that is the cause of your illness, your pain. Thousand and thousand of people believe in Sarno's diagnosis and loose their fear of it and got well.

We worry too much about ours health, our body, our life, money... which created stress, and if the stress is prolong tms/anxiety will appear to "help" you forget your stress. :) But even when your life stress is gone, the pain, the anxiety is still there, why? because now you have a new stress which is your fear of the pain, the anxiety symptoms. hahaha, your brain is now trap you in a loop, an endless loop of: pain - fear - stress - then more pain - fear - stress.....

How to break out of that loop? There are many way to do it, for me, the quickest way is take away that middle component in that loop: take away FEAR.

No more fear will result in no more stress. Without stress the pain will leave by itself. It has no more purpose to stay.

So for tmser's the question is not how do I get rid of this pain or that pain, how do I get rid of this symptoms or that symptoms. The question should be how do I get rid of the FEAR, the health worry? Search this forum, there are many many wonderful posts on how to deal with fear. How to rid yourself of fear.

Also, check out this cnn news article. You think your life is stressful? you think you have it tough? Check it out:
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/01/26/gotta-watch-living-without-limits/?hpt=hp_c3
and be thankful for what you have.
Stryder Posted - 01/27/2012 : 12:04:29
Ophelia said: "...why is it so hard for peole to get rid of it, even when they believe it is TMS..."

Good question. It has to do with conditioniong. The TMS pain is a cycle that repeats, and when you have been in the cycle and play the movie over and over again in your mind, you have trained your mind (badly) to use this as the distraction. Some people can break out of this cycle sooner than others, and it also probably has to do with how long you have been in the cycle. Also, since the muscle pain of TMS is real pain, it will take some time for your symptoms to resolve. The length of time cannot be scheduled or decided upon once you buy into TMS theory. It's very individual. We all read in Dr. Sarno's books about how some learn the TMS theory and within a few days/weeks they are done, all better. For myself, it took much longer, and I had time of going backwards in progress too. You will get better as many have gone before, keep going, you are on the right path.

Take care,
-Stryder
Ophelia Posted - 01/27/2012 : 09:42:23
An anti anxiety drug is a very interesting idea, and i have often wondered if it might help with my constant and unrelenting [except when i sleep] sciatica like Chester I am getting so disheartened by my apparentl lack of progress in beating this, I simply cannot understand why my TMSmuscles will not relax and release the sciatica, and accompaning numbness and tingling in both feet, whey is it so hard for peole to get rid of it, even when they believe it is TMS .Any encouragement so gratefully received by the way Chester how are yu ding/ Ophelia
Back2-It Posted - 01/26/2012 : 21:36:44
quote:
Originally posted by chester

My first bout of TMS was 4 years ago. I learned about the disorder and slowly recovered completely. This past August it came back as sciatica in the other leg.

I went to a TMS doctor, had an MRI that showed only a slightly bulging disk, tried self-treatment such a journaling, and have been in therapy with a TMS specialist since November. Nothing is working.

I have pain all of the time. It's worst when I sit, because I am putting pressure on where the pain already is. I take OTC painkillers 3 times a day to take the edge off.

I have no idea what I'm doing wrong, or what to do next. All I know is that I can't continue to sit at a desk 9 hours a day in pain.

I'm open to any and all suggestions. Thanks in advance.



I'd be curious as to whether your pain would be reduced if you took an anti-anxiety drug vs a pain killer? If you believe the pain is in your brain, then an experiment with an anti-anxiety drug might help you to nail the proof.

"Bridges Freeze Before Roads"
Stryder Posted - 01/24/2012 : 20:40:24
Chester said: "I don't believe the bulging disk is the cause of my pain. In fact, even my GP, who is not a TMS believer, says that such a slight bulge should not cause the amount of pain that I'm having."

You both are 100% correct. Consider this...

Have you ever woken up from sleep and you find that your arm or leg has "gone asleep"?? ,,, meaning that your limb feels numb and doesn't respond for a few moments until you shift position. This "gone asleep" feeling is what happens when a nerve is compressed. Dr. Sarno mentions this in several of his books. Sarno says that if the disk were compressing the nerve, then you would feel numbness, not pain.

The pain you feel is muscle pain from TMS, not the disk pressing on the nerve.

It took me a while to re-train my brain to grasp this fact.

As far as being frustrated on the path to recovery, we have all been there too. You cant put a time limit or a schedule on re-training your brain from years of thinking physical. It take as long as it takes, unfortunately there is no short cut. But you can be assured that you will get there as so many before you have.

Take care,
-Stryder

chester Posted - 01/20/2012 : 07:23:27
quote:
Originally posted by Ophelia

quote:
Originally posted by chester

quote:
Originally posted by Dave

quote:
Originally posted by chester
...It's worst when I sit, because I am putting pressure on where the pain already is...
This comment is telling. It means you have not fully accepted the pain is due to TMS. The pain comes when sitting because you are conditioned to expect pain during that time, not due to some physical cause.


But the pain is not "coming" when I'm sitting. It's always there. It's just worse when I'm sitting because I'm putting more pressure on an already painful area.

The first time I had TMS my GP said it was due to a herniated disk and spinal stenosis, and I recovered. This time, the same GP says all I have is a slightly bulging disk (other side, of course) that should not be causing me this much pain - neither he nor anyone else is telling me it's physical.

I am totally confident that I can and will get through this. I'm just really struggling with its impact on my career in the meantime. And I hate to have to rely on painkillers (even OTC ones) to get me through my work day.



Chester, how I sympathise, I too have been suffering with permanent sciatica for over 2 years, pain radiates down left leg with pins and needles in both feet, I have sent MRI C-T scan and nerve reports to a TMS practioner who has assured me that my MRI is very normal and the slight change on the nerve test is not the result of sciatica. Result massive relief and confirmed belief that it is TMS I have read Sarno & Schubiner books and totally buy into the programme the answer for you and I is just to think positive and realise that our brain is more than capeable of overturning this pain, the choice is ours and ours alone, we HAVE to learn to discount all the endless medical tests we have undergone, none of which have cured our problem!! Good Luck let me know how you are doing, it is so great to know there are others out there in 'the same boat'. Ophelia



Thanks, Ophelia. I do realize and agree with everything you're saying. I am just very frustrated with the pace of progress and with my inability to accelerate it.
Ophelia Posted - 01/15/2012 : 11:06:14
quote:
Originally posted by chester

quote:
Originally posted by Dave

quote:
Originally posted by chester
...It's worst when I sit, because I am putting pressure on where the pain already is...
This comment is telling. It means you have not fully accepted the pain is due to TMS. The pain comes when sitting because you are conditioned to expect pain during that time, not due to some physical cause.


But the pain is not "coming" when I'm sitting. It's always there. It's just worse when I'm sitting because I'm putting more pressure on an already painful area.

The first time I had TMS my GP said it was due to a herniated disk and spinal stenosis, and I recovered. This time, the same GP says all I have is a slightly bulging disk (other side, of course) that should not be causing me this much pain - neither he nor anyone else is telling me it's physical.

I am totally confident that I can and will get through this. I'm just really struggling with its impact on my career in the meantime. And I hate to have to rely on painkillers (even OTC ones) to get me through my work day.



Chester, how I sympathise, I too have been suffering with permanent sciatica for over 2 years, pain radiates down left leg with pins and needles in both feet, I have sent MRI C-T scan and nerve reports to a TMS practioner who has assured me that my MRI is very normal and the slight change on the nerve test is not the result of sciatica. Result massive relief and confirmed belief that it is TMS I have read Sarno & Schubiner books and totally buy into the programme the answer for you and I is just to think positive and realise that our brain is more than capeable of overturning this pain, the choice is ours and ours alone, we HAVE to learn to discount all the endless medical tests we have undergone, none of which have cured our problem!! Good Luck let me know how you are doing, it is so great to know there are others out there in 'the same boat'. Ophelia

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