Chronic Pain members - Welcome, please introduce yourself
Welcome to the new Chronic Pain group.
I’m Kelsey and I’m the moderator of the group. I look forwarding to welcoming you and introducing you to other members. Feel free to browse the topics or start a new one.
Why not take a minute and introduce yourself.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Chronic Pain Support Group.
@blindeyepug and @hazelblumberg
Chocolate is my drug of choice - when I'm not feeling well I give chocolate a try before anything else. Sometimes it works!
Teresa
PS By the way, for a number of years I worked for attorneys - many kindred spirits here!
@ hazelblumberg. Hardly get winter here at all. I live in Texas. Summers are killer, but rest of the year very pleasant. I kinda miss winter (originally from Missouri), especially at Christmas.
@jim. Wow, that was a very bad reaction to medication. So sorry you went through that. Must have been very scary. I became suicidal after being put on Clonazepam. Also had severe panic attacks when on Wellibutrune. Needless to say I don't take those meds any more! Different people can have really different reactions to different medications. That's why it is so important for the doctor or their office to call and check on you when you start a new medication.
@blindeyepug
I became extremely suicidal after 6 weeks on one antidepressant. I finally landed on Wellbutrin ten years ago. It doesn't do the whole job, but I think it helps. I've never tried going off it to see if I felt any different. I might try it when I feel safe enough, but right now isn't the best time. Back when I experienced suicidal thoughts on the trial medication, it was the first time I had had those thoughts. It was a couple of years later that I started attempting. I had been taking Effexor for awhile, but I don't think that's what triggered the wish to die. Clonazepam is one of the meds that make me drowsy, which is a good thing, but it's mostly for anxiety. I only take 1mg, with the option of taking a second chance one, which I rarely do.
Having the doctor call after starting a new med? That's never happened to me. My doctors must have all missed that class.
Jim
correct me i am wrong but it should be dark chocolate. also delicious.
No, I get a lot of messages, too. I tried just reading the digest, but then I got totally confused about where to find the most recent comments. So, I continue to go through the separate messages. See John's comment below; that'll help you to stop receiving the large number of emails.
Hazel
Really, it does! But now that, as the natives say, "our blood has thinned out," 19 F is cold to us. I grew up in the snow belt of NYState, lived in Indiana, Minnesota, Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, so I was used to COLD. The first year we lived here, we laughed when people wore down jackets in winter. Now we're wearing them, too; we saved them from our Minnesota days, just in case. It's a very damp cold, which makes things ultra unpleasant. And the humidity and heat in the summer are more than I can stand. For me, summer brings on cabin fever. I would really rather be back in the Land o' Snow. Loved being back in Ft. Wayne, Indiana, for a visit in the winter! We sat in a wonderful coffee shop, looking out the window at the swirling snow around us. Our then dog, Joe, who passed away about five years ago (and whom we still miss greatly), came with us and was totally freaked when snowflakes landed on him.
My husband just saw a job opening in Indianapolis, and he's going to apply for it. We don't have any expectations at all. It'd be nice if he got an interview, of course. Then he could visit friends in Indy and Bloomington. He still has family (his brother and sister-in-law) in Ft. Wayne, we'd love to be closer to them, and we would love to live in Indy, where there's so much more to do than there is in Tallahassee. And it would be a lot closer to a lot of other places in the US. However, we would miss our relative closeness to the beach. Less than a two hour drive gets us to such pristine, beautiful, snow-white-sand beaches nowadays. Not that we get down to the northern Gulf of Mexico often enough.
Hazel
Barbara, you have made my day!!!!!!!! Thank you so much!
Hazel
Artscaping, I totally understand. Of course you want to be sure to be strong enough to care for a pet. If you decide that you are, perhaps you can find a neighborhood person who'd be interested in doing some dog walking for you?
Hazel
Hey, Peach, you're doing fine! I am about as old school as you can get, and I'm less than thrilled with computers. And when I go into my credit union and find that all work must cease because the computers are down, I have to admit it makes me laugh.
Where I put my foot down is smartphones. I have NO interest in owning one. My husband, who's a few years younger than I am, is utterly addicted to his. I went without a cell phone for the longest time. Then I finally caved in and bought a flip phone (yep, they're still being made), so that I can have one in case my car breaks down and I need to call my insurance to send out a tow truck. After staring at my computer screen all day long for work, the last thing I want to do is stare at yet another screen. And besides, where I live, out in the boonies, our cell phone reception is almost nonexistent anyway.
I really don't feel that I have to look up the meanings of words, show a bajillion photos of my animals to people, or play Bejeweled Blitz every second of my spare time. I do NOT do Twitter. I wouldn't even do Facebook if I weren't interested in sharing animals, particularly special-needs ones, who desperately need to be adopted. And I admit that I have met some wonderful people on FB, many of whom I've actually met in person, which has been terrific. But there are truly times that I think that living off the grid would be terrific.
Peach, I'm 16 years younger than you are, and you don't seem to have ANY problems with the computer era at all, as far as I can see. (But don't you miss dial phones? I sure do!)
Hazel