Daily exercise and pain relief: Meet @jenatsky

Mar 10, 2023 | John, Volunteer Mentor | @johnbishop | Comments (29)

Jenatsky member spotlight

JOHN: How did you find Mayo Clinic Connect? What motivates you to take part in the community?

@jenatsky: I was looking for answers to questions pertaining to my chronic pain and associated symptoms. Answers from doctors and my own research had not yet satisfied my curiosity. I have a 20-year employment history in nursing and 10 years of medical record auditing and medical coding. But I was never involved in chronic illness or rehab and had never taken care of chronic patients like myself as well. It was unfamiliar territory.

Members on Mayo Clinic Connect share numerous stories and concerns about so many variations of illnesses. It’s refreshing to see what people had tried and either failed or succeeded to alleviate their symptoms. I felt I could contribute and offer my educated input considering my medical background as well as experiences from my own back ailment.

JOHN: What about Mayo Clinic Connect makes you feel comfortable to share and to be open with the community?

@jenatsky: I’m pretty much an open book and call things like I see them. Having worked in the emergency room of a large city hospital in critical care and public health nursing, I tend to look at illness as just part of a lifelong journey to the end. I try to offer advice that might help someone improve their situation.

JOHN: What support groups do you participate in?

@jenatsky: I participate in the Spine Health, Neuropathy, and Men's Health support groups.

I especially enjoy the Men’s Health support group and hope it will continue to grow. The Neuropathy support group helps me with my own issues with neuropathy. 

JOHN: What surprised you the most about Mayo Clinic Connect?

@jenatsky: Sometimes I see members make suggestions about medications, which concerns me. I try to obtain clinical information to correct potential errors that I see. 

But equally surprising and welcome are the vast number of resources available to members provided by the volunteer mentors in their fantastic responses. And speaking about mentors, I think the information and resources posted by you @johnbishop and @jenniferhunter have been especially helpful. They have shown me what Mayo Clinic has to offer reference wise. 

JOHN: What energizes you? How do you find balance in your life?

@jenatsky: I have a long history of volunteering. At the age of 14, I volunteered at a hospital near my home and later as a young adult, I volunteered with the community ambulance in my hometown. I’m an active blood donor and an organ donor. 

Participating in the Mayo Clinic Connect forum is another way for me to volunteer, which considering my physical limits, is all I can currently offer.

Luckily my wife is a clinical psychologist. She helps keep my head on straight and keeps me balanced. 

I center my day around pain relief. I exercise to relieve my pain, walking 2 to 3 miles daily and performing my home exercise program (HEP) twice a day or more if needed. My pain medications and cannabis alone don’t do the job completely and I have found I can start out exercising in pain but end up with no pain afterward. 

JOHN: Tell us about your favorite pastime or activity.

@jenatsky: I get the most enjoyment out of cooking, which I learned in Boy Scouts. For people who may not know, in Scouts when you cook, you don't have to do KP (kitchen patrol). I preferred cooking rather than cleaning up after cooking. 

Even when I traveled for work, I cooked on weekends, preparing meals for my wife to have during the week. She doesn’t cook. Now that I’m retired, I get to cook every day and absolutely love trying new stuff.

JOHN: Do you have a favorite quote, life motto or personal mantra?

@jenatsky: “Do unto others as you’d have them do unto you.”

JOHN: What food can you simply not resist? 

@jenatsky: Very easy answer: dark chocolate!

JOHN: Puppies or kittens? 

@jenatsky: Dogs when I was young and healthier. Now, we have a 6-year-old rescue kitty.

 

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Hi @jenatsky You have such a positive outlook and that's inspiring. We share 2 things I also enjoy which is cooking and dark chocolate, darker the better but i usually stay in the high 80's or low 90's. High 90's gets a bit bitter.
I too was a Boy Scott but i also did my time in the Military and KP was the motivation to become a Sargent as that got me out of KP. Cooking is definitely better and it's the same in the Military. If you cook you don't have to clean. jenatsky You have such a positive outlook and that's inspiring. We share 2 things I also enjoy which is cooking and dark chocolate, darker the better but i usually stay in the high 80's or low 90's. High 90's gets a bit bitter.
I too was a Boy Scott but i also did my time in the Military and KP was the motivation to become a Sargent as that got me out of KP. Cooking is definitely better and it's the same in the Military. If you cook you don't have to clean.

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Need to be tested for MS & COLIN CANCER
WHERE should I go? Marilyn h
Lots of pain in left hip & leg. Started about 4 wks ago.

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@swig46

Need to be tested for MS & COLIN CANCER
WHERE should I go? Marilyn h
Lots of pain in left hip & leg. Started about 4 wks ago.

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Hello @swig46 and welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. Here are some suggestions for groups you can join based on what you've shared:

Autoimmune Support Group: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/autoimmune-diseases/

Colorectal Cancer Support Group: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/colorectal-cancer/

Bones, Joints & Muscles Support Group: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/arthritis-and-joint-conditions-268850/

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Your comments about chronic pain & boy scout cooking were good. Like yourself, I like hearing fr those who are dealing with medical gaps. Doctors often learn from their patients.

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John, I read your bio and you sound just like me and my day. I'm almost 80 and have had pain since I was in my early 30s. I have lots of osteoarthritis in many joints and back pain that is always different. After the pain resides in my joints, they look awful but don't hurt anymore. I walk 2 to 3 miles a day. I have to start out slow, but I also finish feeling less pain and better. But if I sit for a period of time, I'm stiff getting going again. My back pain is always there and different. Some days it is nerve pain, other days it is a numb feeling and goes down my leg, other days it is the two bones that I sit on, and if I stand too long, it is just below the two shoulder bones in my mid back. That pain puts me in a chair for relief. I have had many X-rays and MRIs, and one surgeon wanted to operate on it when I had foot drop, but I have resisted. I have done lots of stretching and that and Tylenol are all I rely on. I love to cook also, but standing still has been more difficult for me now. I keep at it but may have to sit for a little bit in order to continue. I enjoyed your posts! Keep going! This is the day the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad! Cheers Judy

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@dbeshears1

@jenatsky It was lifting reading your journey and thanks for your motivation! My husband & I have a passion for cooking and eating (healthy). In the past, I was the prep and cleanup person, while he was the chef like you see on TV with all of my chopped up ingredients in front of him and of course the dishes always being removed and countertops wiped down as he’s moving. Our roles are reversed now; it is no longer safe or wise for me to have a sharp knife in my hand slicing & dicing. But I can stir and whisk up a storm! But @artscaping I am sorry to admit that some “gender” roles still exist: I still wind up with doing all of the dishes, and all outside grilling and garbage toting is on him 😀.
Thanks again for sharing @jenatsky - I keep eating dark chocolate; I’m sure it provides the emotional support that a pill could never provide, so I’m not giving it up!

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Thank you for your input. Yes, pain management is all day everyday. Distraction has been the key for me. Staying busy instead of dwelling on the pain

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hello I am new to the group. I live with two autoimmune diseases and diabetes. I be in pain every day about two weeks ago I couldn't walk. I join this group for mental support and questions.

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@cass52

hello I am new to the group. I live with two autoimmune diseases and diabetes. I be in pain every day about two weeks ago I couldn't walk. I join this group for mental support and questions.

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Hello @cass52, Welcome to Connect. Here are the links to lists of discussions in the support groups you mentioned so that you can look through them and see which ones might be helpful for questions you have.

--- Autoimmune Support Group: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/autoimmune-diseases/
--- Diabetes & Endocrine System Support Group: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/diabetes-and-endocrine-problems/

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Does anyone have experience with MS? Please share

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@swig46

Does anyone have experience with MS? Please share

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@swig46, Here's a discussion where members have shared their experience with MS.
-- Multiple Sclerosis (MS) - please introduce yourself: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/multiple-sclerosis-ms-please-introduce-yourself/

Here's another discussion that might be helpful for others looking for relevant discussions or topics:
--- How to Search on Connect - It can help you!: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/search-it-can-help-you/

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