TMSHelp Forum
TMSHelp Forum
Home | Profile | Register | Active Topics | Members | Search | FAQ | Resources | Links | Policy
 All Forums
 TMSHelp
 TMSHelp General Forum
 Trying to solve this riddle....

Note: You must be registered in order to post a reply.
To register, click here. Registration is FREE!

Screensize:
UserName:
Password:
Format Mode:
Format: BoldItalicizedUnderlineStrikethrough Align LeftCenteredAlign Right Horizontal Rule Insert HyperlinkInsert Email Insert CodeInsert QuoteInsert List
   
Message:

* HTML is OFF
* Forum Code is ON
Smilies
Smile [:)] Big Smile [:D] Cool [8D] Blush [:I]
Tongue [:P] Evil [):] Wink [;)] Clown [:o)]
Black Eye [B)] Eight Ball [8] Frown [:(] Shy [8)]
Shocked [:0] Angry [:(!] Dead [xx(] Sleepy [|)]
Kisses [:X] Approve [^] Disapprove [V] Question [?]

 
   

T O P I C    R E V I E W
pan Posted - 02/20/2013 : 12:45:04
....pretty much all damn day long.

I'm trying to understand the illogical thought process that won't fully allow me to commit to the TMS/stress illness diagnosis.

Basically I've been suffering from one sided lower back pain and leg pain for about 2 and a half years. The pain is only about a 5 out of 10 so I understand I'm luckier than many people but it truly is a blight on my life and is the cause of much anger and frustration (go figure). Before the back pain started I had a period of extreme health anxiety due to a period of about 3 years when I was getting various weird and wonderful symptoms which I catastrophised as various nasties. I recovered from this and thought that all the anxiety issues had been eradicated but the back pain has made me question this.

When the back pain first started it would flare up very slightly and would last as little as a day then would disappear...I could then be pain free for months on end but it would always return. The flare ups have become far more prevalent now and the intensity of the pain has increased. I do have a huge number of factors that point to a stress illness possibility in that I have lost my mother, father and step father to cancer in the space of 2 years, I have a little boy who has made me question many things, I have quite a volatile relationship with my wife, I am in a job I detest and that changes daily which really pulls me out of my comfort zone...I'm also stressed as I'm having to finance a house I've inherited which is a real strain logistically and financially and I'm desperate to sell the place.

Anyway, all that aside I have seen various GP's and Osteopaths who have advised me that I have all the usual suspects such as piriformis syndrome, SI joint dysfunction etc etc and it has been pretty much drummed into me that my pain is originating from a structural issue.

I have to laugh as I recently revisited the osteopath pretty much out of desperation and I knew I may well as have chucked £30 down the drain as I knew I wouldn't get any answers and that as I had no faith in them and therefore any witchcraft would fail to strike home. Once again I was given the same stretches to do and the same core strength message. It was all about muscle imbalance and twisted pelvises etc etc.

So, here is the thing and the quandary I've been thinking on today. For the past 2 years I've been treating this as structural issue and doing all the stretches and exercises and have had zero improvement, its actually got worse. Now, I run almost every day and can do a sub 2 hour half marathon...I have no pain when stretching etc but the pain is just always there and seems totally independent on movement etc. with all this in mind what the hell do I have to lose by treating this as a manifestation of a stress illness??

I know they say a sign of madness is to do the same thing over and over and expect things to be different so in that respect I must be bonkers. The thing is it just feels so risky to accept the stress illness theory and commit to it and that is what I'm struggling to get my head around...why is it hard to commit to something that actually carries little or no,intrinsic risk, its almost like your mind doesn't want you to commit as it knows that is what will break the cycle.

Anyway, apologies for waffling on...any opinions please.

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

20   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
pan Posted - 02/26/2013 : 10:21:43
Thanks for taking the time to reply everybody.

I'm actually just sat waiting for my appointment with the TMS practioner...have had a couple of days going over the pros and cons and just came to the opinion that I knew I would end up seeing somebody at some point so I figured better sooner rather than later.

Oh well, interesting to see how this pans out...no pun intended, ;)

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

alix Posted - 02/22/2013 : 14:15:43
Pan, I assume that you have seen the last post from Monte. One of the sound advice he gives is the following:

3. Do not keep searching outside yourself for the answers to TMS. This includes help/support groups, internet searching or believing that you must be diagnosed by a TMS doctor before you can accept TMS. This type of searching (distraction) will usually “feed” the strategy or is your “crutch” for not beginning your own genuine “inner work/change”.
shawnsmith Posted - 02/22/2013 : 13:10:31
quote:
Originally posted by pan
I think Monte is right when he says that the endless research of TMS is actually TMSing in itself.



Sorry to hear of the passing of your mom.

Monte is 100% correct. He consistently gives sound advice. Resist the urge and use some positive affirmations to counter the incessant mind-chatter. Eventually, with time and effort, this urge will recede into the background. I am not saying stop reading altogether, but just not so much as it is information overload. There is no shortchut to healing. As I said, it takes time and effort as well as a whole lot of patience. Please reflect upon the words contained in this thread: http://tmshelp.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=8227
pan Posted - 02/22/2013 : 13:02:24
quote:
Originally posted by shawnsmith

quote:
Originally posted by pan

Grrr...damn the constant need for information gathering.



Stop doing that Pan, it will not do you any good. Trust this advice from someone who has been there and done that. The time you spend collecting information could be put to way better use.




Yeah, I know shawn but its a bit like that scratching at an itch or picking a scab scenario.

It's a bit like Googling in my health anxiety days...it's like you think you are suddenly going to unearth this golden nugget of wisdom that makes everything makes sense and applies to you and allows you to move on, of course the reality is you can read/watch the same stuff over and over and fall into that trap of mental masturbation with all the info...I think Monte is right when he says that the endless research of TMS is actually TMSing in itself.

I know the cure resides in the world of the emotional and the fact I'm so emotionally numb in regards to my mums recent death is a big clue that more may be going on then meets the eye but everything is still being researched, analysed, scrutinised in a logical and methodical manner....not the way to go I know.

I have an appointment with a TMS practioner here in the UK on Tuesday. My concern with this is just as an osteo/chiro will always diagnose a structural problem I'm sure a TMS practioner is go find the psychological...I'm a bloody poster child for TMS and literally have the top 10 stressors in that profile thing but does that really mean a thing? In actual fact I'm totally confused as to why in going to see the chap as I just can't see how a TMS diagnosis can really be given.

Oh, I'm waffling agin...been a cruddy week and I'm having a pity party...apologies.

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

shawnsmith Posted - 02/22/2013 : 12:36:29
quote:
Originally posted by pan

Grrr...damn the constant need for information gathering.



Stop doing that Pan, it will not do you any good. Trust this advice from someone who has been there and done that. The time you spend collecting information could be put to way better use.
pan Posted - 02/22/2013 : 12:11:20
Grrr...damn the constant need for information gathering.

Watching a couple of Monte's vids on YouTube and then stumbled across one for some physio guy who explained all about how muscle imbalance begins and thenleads to pain which fitted my presentation and osteo diagnosis like a glove. Talk about one step forward and three back. Very true that constant researching just doesn't help once you have grasped the basic concept.

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

Cath Posted - 02/21/2013 : 06:36:50
Your relationship with your Mum sounds a lot like mine. It's almost 5 years since she passed away now, and I still miss her, but I think I've worked through a lot of that numbness and the guilt. My Mum died just 3 months after diagnosis, and like you, I wanted that time to really count, but it slipped away so quickly, and she deteriorated so soon.

I tried to tell a friend just how guilty I felt, and she pointed out to me that it wasn't my fault that I couldn't act in the way that I really wanted to in those last few weeks, by hugging her and telling her how much she meant to me. Our patterns of behaviour were instigated by her, as the parent, many years ago. As her behaviour was moulded by her parents. I did seek counselling, because journalling wasn't enough, and in one of my sessions, the Counsellor asked me to really think about my Mum. Almost conjure her up as a presence beside you. (Ok, a bit creepy, but I did have my eyes closed and was lying down.) She then asked me what I would like to say to her if she was still here now. And I croaked, "just how much I love her and miss her." Then the flood gates opened. When I walked out of that session, I felt like a great weight had been lifted.

I think it's necessary to work through your grief; resolve it and become comfortable with yourself again. Sounds like your Mum was a major stabiliser in your life. I remember telling someone that I almost felt like I was floundering without mine.

pan Posted - 02/21/2013 : 05:32:35
Crikey Cath….tell me about it.

Of course, now isn’t the place to go into the details of my mother’s death but the feelings you mention ring very true for me as well.

When my mum was diagnosed with terminal cancer she was given about 4 months to live and 4 months was what she got…as much as you want those 4 months to be a loving and amazing time it doesn’t always work that way as real life still gets in the way. There was unfortunately stress, frustration and arguments. I carry the guilt with me that my mums last months weren’t those idealistic walking in the sunshine times but I made sure she was close to her Grandson which was so important to her.

I too don’t really feel I have grieved for my mum…she passed in October and the tears still haven’t come. Funny thing is my dad died about 2 years ago and I was never close to him as had a volatile relationship with him as a lad…my mum and dad divorced when I was a teenager and both had remarried. I had lost contact with my dad for a lot of the time and just really spoke on the phone. Whilst I loved my mum to bits I never could say I loved my father or even liked him hugely for that matter but his death really shook me and I cried and seemed to grieve easily for him. This just hasn’t happened with my mum and I just can’t figure out why.

I think for me it’s a weird thing as I feel in many ways I’m now alone in the world. Yes, I have my wife and young son but the death of both your parents does make you realise that your foundations have gone…I may be a 45 year old grown man but this still makes you think.

So yes, I’m feeling much the same as you. I do have guilt and I also feel emotionally numb at this moment in time regarding my mums death….as strange as it seems I even have tried to force myself to cry but this just feels stilted, unnatural and just false. I also have that horrible horrible feeling of having not told my mum just how much I loved her before she died. Even though we were close we rarely hugged or kissed and never rarely told each other we loved each other…when she died I regretted this. I know she knew just what she meant to me but I had a duty to tell her this but the words never really came out.

Anyway, I’m waffling…maybe I should journal. ;)


Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

Cath Posted - 02/21/2013 : 04:31:40
Hi Pan

I am still on the healing path along with a lot of others here, but can identify with a lot of your story. I've grappled with the structural theory too, but am now totally convinced that my pain is stress related. And by the way, I think you hit the nail on the head with your last comments. My pain began just 8 months after my Mum passed away from cancer. There were a lot of other family issues going on at the time too, so I was already pretty hyped up. I've come to realise that my pain is related to the fact that I didn't properly grieve for my Mum, and also that I didn't allow myself to get close enough to her in her last few weeks to let her know just how much I was going to miss her. In fact, I didn't know how much I was going to miss her because I felt so emotionally numb. I felt guilty that I hadn't expressed what I truly felt while she was still around.

Don't know whether any of this resonates, and I only lost one beloved parent, so can't imagine how you felt losing both parents and a step-parent.

Sounds like you've had a pretty tough time, so go easy on yourself, let go and allow some of those feelings to surface.
pan Posted - 02/21/2013 : 01:54:47
Hi balto...yep, totally agree about the fear factor in all of this. When I was struggling with the health anxiety fear and the worry of what the symptoms meant was often a driving factor.

Strangely enough, I discovered the idea of TMS early on in my health anxiety days and was sure I had elements of it within my stress illness. I remember vividly reading about TMS and posting on here with my chest pain issues etc and in a way wishing I had back pain as this would fit Sarno's thesis much better and I'd be better able to accept...fast forward a few years and looks what happening...ho hum.

Yep, the constant monitoring and appraisal of my pain and symptoms is huge and I'm constantly hunting out clues, that never exist of course, which could indicate that my pain is structural. The idea that my pain will get worse and worse and debilitate me is huge. I recall the first osteopath I saw dropped into the conversion that she had seen SI joint patients end up in wheelchairs as their condition got so bad....yeah, thanks for that, from tiny acorns etc etc.

Thinking on this again last night and one of the factors that gets me is that even though I'm a poster child for TMS and that the last 5 years of my life have been a total stress and emotional overload this doesn't necessarily mean that my pain is TMS...stress and emotional overload can exist quite happily alongside a structural issue and that's what I need to move on from.

Just wondering as well, how important are dreams in all of this. I've noticed that my dreams are pretty vivid and seem to be focused on aspects of my parents passing etc. I have a feeling that guilt may be an issue for me in all of this but that's a whole other story...

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

balto Posted - 02/20/2013 : 21:39:47
Pan and Chickenbone, If you would try to look for a common point in what you've posted, fear would be it. All the symptoms you two have are there to produce fear, to make you anticipate what will happen to your body? What these symptoms mean, oh my Gosh I'm going to....

What caused the symptoms are stress, traumatic events, anger, hatred,... but what keep the symptoms there are your fear of the future.

If you have backpain and you are not worry about you going to be paralyze, or this pain will be chronic, or it will cause permanent nerve damage... the pain will leave you.
If you can stop yourself from thinking about what will happen to your body because of this pain or symptoms, the symptoms will lessen and eventually leave.

------------------------
No, I don't know everything. I'm just here to share my experience.
Peregrinus Posted - 02/20/2013 : 20:32:59
Pan:
Let me know when you have it all figured out! I have similar problems: back pain on the right side, hip and groin pain on the same side, and occasional other pains here and there. I had a lot of work stress before I retired and I have a house I want to sell! (Sound familiar?) I ride a bike almost every day for about 2 hours and really push it for someone my age. It’s been going on for about 7 years. At times it seems to improve and occasionally I’m pain free for a few hours.
I have also become “book saturated” and it seems like they are all saying the same thing. I believe TMS is my problem but I find anecdotal testimonies distracting. I’ve been studying Ace’s keys to healing and have attempted to rewrite them so they are understandable and pertinent to me. His views reflect his own experience to some extent but are otherwise general in nature and I think widely applicable.
You are fortunate that you have discovered TMS so early in your life. Don’t give up (by seeing osteopaths, chiropractors, spinal surgeons, etc.) and, as Ace urges, have patience.
chickenbone Posted - 02/20/2013 : 18:10:08
Hi Pan, maybe I can relate to you how I was able to resolve this issue. Believe me, I still have a lot of TMS issues, but fortunately "doubting TMS" is not one of them. It was a stumbling block for a long time.And by the way, my TMS symptoms did not just involve pain. I had at different times GERD, frequent urination, heart palpitations, terrible allergies to everything, anxiety attacks, and IBS. I ran to several doctors for various of these symptoms. In Panama, doctors (the honest ones anyway), tend to tell you what they really think because they do not need to worry about being sued. A lot of them, after testing, basically said that my symptoms were not manifestations of physical disease. Unfortunately, the more you see doctors, the more you will have problems with TMS because this tends to feed the TMS strategy. Whenever I would bring up the idea of seeing an Orthopedic Surgeon about my back pain, my doctor husband would assure me that they had absolutely nothing to offer me and that included all manner of back specialists. He especially warned me that these people were very likely to give me some REAL physical problems that I did not have before. To them everything is physical. I knew that my husband was right. However, it took several more years to really make the leap of faith away from the physical. What finally did it for me was 1. I found the courage to start high impact aerobics. Often during the class, I was just praying because I was so scared I would really hurt myself. But guess what, after all this jumping around and banging on my joints and twisting and contorting, I felt great and free from pain. I came to firmly believe that my pain could not possibly have been structural (Although a Orthopedic doctor told me not to lift more the 2 pounds (and I was lifting 10) and NO EXERCISE). 2. I needed some science to cinch my new belief. So I read a few books written by Neuroscientists and Orthopedic Surgeons who believed in MBS/TMS. I learned that it has been proven scientifically that the brain is fully capable of producing pain or symptoms anywhere in the body on it´s own. I did not read a ton of books and get confused, I read the books I needed to read to help me believe what I KNEW to be the truth, but which my Ego did not want me to find out.
alix Posted - 02/20/2013 : 16:44:52
For me the most meaningful post on this board that guided me is the one from Dave. I printed it, made a PDF etc... I constantly referred to it throughout this journey. It is the 8th post down:
http://tmshelp.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=6169
At the end of the day, it is all I ever needed to know. That was the key to my cure.
pan Posted - 02/20/2013 : 16:20:44
Thanks for the reply Plum. Emailed you back with a different addy as the one on here is redundant I believe. Is from waaaayyy back in the day. :)

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

plum Posted - 02/20/2013 : 16:05:21
pan, I relate to much of what you say here, including the desire for confirmation from a tms professional. Doubt easily undermines our conviction and faith, hence the reading. During the past fortnight I have spoken with Georgie Oldfield and Howard Schubiner...

Essentially I feel as Alix does on this front; the answer, the healing lies within. This is why I've been filling my boots on this forum for a short while. I'm pretty clear on my path now and as hillbilly advised, I shall stick to it like glue. Gigalos has the right idea.

Anyways, I sent you mail.
alix Posted - 02/20/2013 : 15:54:45
Pan, it really started to click when I dug into my emotions. No new books. No new theory. Nothing. Every time I was distracted by the pain, I turned my attention to my emotions (past and present).
pan Posted - 02/20/2013 : 15:37:55
quote:
Originally posted by alix

Pan, be a little bit mindful that searching for TMS practitioners can be a full time distraction. I have driven 100s of miles up and down California to find "the one". It was all a nocebo at the end as I analyzed every reaction they had. The last one I saw finally advised me to consider a "gluten free" diet and told me that Feldenkreis works great for her husband. So much for TMS. The solution was within myself.



Good point alix...funny thing as I already checked out this guys credentials and stuff and was working out in my mind if I would feel comfortable believing him if he did give me a stress illness diagnosis. I know what you mean when you say the solution is within yourself...leaving that aside I'm so well read on the bloody subject I probably know as much as any practioners. Funny how we need constant reassurance and validation hey. Must admit to being one of those people who has always wanted a big buxom nurse to take me in her arms and tell me all will be well whenever I'm poorly sick. ;)

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender

alix Posted - 02/20/2013 : 15:29:15
Pan, be a little bit mindful that searching for TMS practitioners can be a full time distraction. I have driven 100s of miles up and down California to find "the one". It was all a nocebo at the end as I analyzed every reaction they had. The last one I saw finally advised me to consider a "gluten free" diet and told me that Feldenkreis works great for her husband. So much for TMS. The solution was within myself.
pan Posted - 02/20/2013 : 14:49:39
Thanks for the replies guys.

Funnily enough I just watched one of Monte's videos on YouTube and he talked in that how very often getting bogged down in all the theory is an element of TMS in itself as this process also allows you to become distracted..this makes sense to me.

Living in the UK TMS practioners are quite thin on the ground but I did have a brief chat with Georgie Oldfield today and she put me on to a chap in Bristol called Matt Kinal who I'm hoping to see next week. He is a physiotherapist but who works from a holistic and TMS thesis and she thinks he would be an ideal person to ascertain if my problem is likely to be stress illness...same as most people I feel a solid diagnosis from a TMS practioners will go a long way to helping me commit.

Wake me up with your amphetamine blast
Take me by the collar and throw me out into the world
Rock me gently & send me dreaming of something tender
I was brought here to pay homage to the beat surrender


TMSHelp Forum © TMSHelp.com Go To Top Of Page
Snitz Forums 2000