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.
I've been getting foggy between the ears for years. When I was in my late 20s, I was working with a German attorney. At one point, he turned to me and said, "Frau Blumberg, you have a memory like a sieve." I have always remembered this, and it still makes me laugh.
Hazel
keep enjoying it while you can. i have gloucoma and macular degeneration (along with everything else) i slowly make it to the grocery store and back. but, i do it. and will keep pushing even if i need to wear 2 glasses. jole, joke joke BUT YOU WILL HAVE THE MEMORIES SO DO NOT FORGET THEM.
I resemble that remark. Several in my family have MFDPDD deposits in the brain from Amy. For a time, we just thought we were genetically related to pee-nuts!
Oldkarl, forgive my utter stoopidity, but what's MFDPDD?
Hazel
DEAR HAZEL: WONDERFUL POST. VERY SIMILAR TO MY DAY. BUTTERFLIES (MANY, MANY) AND THE HUMMINGBIRDS DO THE SAME AT MY PLACE. ONE DAY I WAS WAS LYING ON THE GRAVITY CHAIR AFTER TAKING PAIN MEDICATION AND I HEARD A HUMMING . THERE WAS A HUMMER JUST 3 FEET FROM ME AFTER A WHILE HE WAS STILL THERE STARING AT ME. SO I GOT UP TO REPLACE THE EMPTY FEEDER WHICH HE WENT RIGHT TO. MAKES A WONDERFUL DAY SEEM SO GOOD. AND TO THINK HE WAS TELLING ME TO FEED HIM. SMART BIRD. IT WAS A GOOD DAY EVEN WITH THE PAIN.
That is not stupidity. It is only a more honest name for the disorder known commonly as Amyloidosis. It is when bits of protein are manufactured improperly by the liver. Then the kidneys cannot wash them out of the blood, and they die in the blood and are buried (deposited) some improper place in the body. In the heart, or the nerves, or the brain, or bones, or eyes, or pancreas, or whatever. When they are buried between good cells, they throw the processes of the body askew, and create a mess. For instance, when these fibrils (protein pieces) a buried between nerve cells, they can short out messages, and the heart might not receive the message from the brain to beat. Depending on the particular mis-folded protein, one may end up with things such as lupus, Light Chain Amyloidosis, Crohn's, or any of a thousand other types. There is a great organization with a fine web site, http://www.Amyloidosis.org. My own type Primary Systemic Familial LiteChain, apparently produces maybe about 3 cases per year per million people in the US, and about 1/3 of these are actually diagnosed before death. It is usually diagnosed sometime after the 70th birthday. Most often after death. Mayo Minnesota is the leading MFDPDD center in the world. MFDPDD http://bit.ly/1w7j4j8
Peach, I think that all animals are such intelligent little--or big--beings. (We humans aren't always.)
I love the sound of hummers zinging around overhead. Yes, they hang around our empty hummer feeders and tell us that they're empty.
The cats love to watch them from indoors; our cats are indoors only. Our tiny Yorkie is also fascinated by them. Our big dog is less than enthusiastic. Give her a treat, take her for a walk, give her a ride in the car, and she's thrilled out of her mind. She's somewhere between 16 and 18, and she's a lab/hound mix. She's been with us for about 5 years. The Yorkie is 12, and he's been with us for about 4 years. The cats are all rescues and seniors, as well, except for one FIV+ cat who's about 5 or so, and who was going to be euthanized at a local shelter for being FIV+. His "owner," a school teacher, left him outdoors all of his life, where he was no doubt beaten up by other cats and thus became FIV+. He has scars all over his sweet face. He's just a big, huggable guy.
We lost our 18-year-old Persian boy, Red, about 2 weeks ago; he'd been with us for the last 14 years. I still feel that I see his sweet little self out of the corner of my eye. I work at home, and if I didn't have the critters around, I'm sure I'd be very lonely.
Hazel
Oldkarl, thank you for letting me knkow what MFDPDD is! I had no idea!
Hazel
I, too, keep a list in my purse of all current meds - OC included. Also lists what I am allergic to and my known medical issues.
@oldkarl
When we moved from the Willamette Valley over to central Oregon, our one regret is that the drive to the coast is much longer, so it's not a day trip anymore. Driving along the Oregon Coast, it's just one beautiful view after another.
We enjoyed our cross country road trip in the fall of 2015, when our daughter lived in NH. What a beautiful, diverse country we live in. The only bad thing about the trip was the pain in my feet.
Jim