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Chronic Pain – Part I

March 26, 2012 in Fibromyalgia, Physical Health

Several years ago, my doctor diagnosed me with fibromyalgia. We tried pain pills for about a year, but I didn’t want to be on that merry-go-round, so I stopped taking them. I’ve been able to control the pain fairly well with exercise and cutting back quite a bit on sugar.

Now, as I’m getting older and have a bit of arthritis, too, I’m finding the pain management to be a bit more difficult to handle. And, my sweet spouse is working hard to deal with his own aches and pains from working a labor intensive job for 30 years.

As is my nature, I’ve embarked on a learning and practice adventure consisting of many different spokes to the health and aging wheel, and I thought you might like to join me. We are going to look at pain management through diet, exercise, sleep, meditation, water, holistic health alternatives, and attitude.

Let’s start where many of us don’t want to start – our diet. I don’t know about you, but I like to eat and I want my food to taste good.  In addition, I don’t have a large repertoire of fruits and vegetables. I grew up in Nebraska; a land of beef and grains, steak and potatoes. With this, we drank gallons of milk, and our regular treat was ice cream. We never had a garden, just a small bed of tomatoes and cucumbers. My mom loved to bake and we always had fresh bread, pies, cakes and cookies around the house. And, of course, chocolate is one of the four main food groups. This has been the way of our food for a very long time. What we didn’t know was the damage we have been doing to our bodies for over 50 years!

If you have fibromyalgia or arthritis, you are already painfully aware of how inflammation affects you. As I talk to people with fibro, they often speak of “flare ups” that rival Mt. St. Helen with the explosive power of pain. But, even more critical is the silent stealth of the inflammation attacking us at the cellular level, playing a significant role in developing heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes, allergies, arthritis and prostate disease.

Your body uses inflammation to signal you that something is wrong, and you should stop doing whatever it is that you are doing, or it sends millions of white blood cells to overpower whatever bacterium or virus has invaded your body, or your immune system raises the temperature of your body so high that whatever bug has hold of you dies of heatstroke.

It stands to reason that you don’t want your body to stop protecting and healing you, but you do want to get rid of the excessive, chronic and inappropriate inflammation. What is causing the malfunction in your body? You are out of balance! And, so are are millions of other people!

Our cells produce chemicals (prostaglandins) to create and quiet our inflammatory responses. These chemicals are produced by using the nutrients in our food, more specifically our bodies use the fatty acids in our foods to make prostaglandins.

Omega-6 fatty acids make inflammatory prostaglandins.

Omega-3 fatty acids make anti-inflammatory prostaglandins.

Those of us living in modern industrialized nations consume about twenty times more omega-6 as we do omega-3. In order for us to be in balance, we should be eating roughly equal amounts of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids.

Since most of us aren’t nutritionists, you are probably asking just like I did – ‘splain please!

When you go to the store, what do you buy? Boxes of processed food, some soda (which has it’s own problems), crackers, pasta, a jar of spaghetti sauce, maybe some cookies, breakfast bars, bread, cereal, milk, a little beef, and because we are eating healthy – chicken and/or turkey.  Most of us will get some vegetables, salad, salad dressing, etc. And, if you are single, and hate to cook for one – you may get some frozen TV dinners, pizza, and other assorted frozen items.

Today’s modern diet includes too many grains.  They tend to be high in omega-6 fatty acids.  We don’t eat as many fresh vegetables and legumes, which give us high amounts of omega-3 fatty acids.  More importantly, our livestock and even our seafood (farm-raised) are consuming high amounts of grains as well rather than their natural diet, so the milk we drink, eggs and meat we eat are lower in omega-3  and higher in omega-6 fatty acids. The end result?

Higher omega-6 + Lower omega-3

=

Higher pro-inflammatory prostaglandins + Lower anti-inflammatory prostaglandins

In part 2, we will talk about additional factors that can throw us out of balance, but this is enough to start with.

For the next week, when you go to the grocery, pay careful attention to what you are putting in your cart.  You don’t need to change anything, just write it down to increase your awareness. We are creatures of habit and we tend to walk through the aisles of the grocery and pick up what we are familiar with.

Once you are really paying attention and have increased your awareness, shift to more fresh vegetables and legumes, along with free range beef, chicken and turkey in lesser amounts that you might have eaten before.  Eliminate as much sugar as you can, and move toward a fresh diet rather than processed foods.  Let’s start there, and begin paying attention to what your body is telling you.

Georgia Feiste, owner of Collaborative Transitions Coaching, Inc., located in Lincoln, NE, is a personal growth and leadership coach, writer, and workshop facilitator.  She is also a Usui Reiki Master and EFT practitioner, living with Fibromyalgia.  While Georgia specializes in career, business and personal life transitions for people seeking change in their life, she is also passionate about working with people with chronic pain associated with FMS.  She is uniquely skilled in providing support and encouragement as her clients set intentional goals to attain their desires, holding open the space they need to stretch and grow. Her passion is success grounded in purpose and passion, standards of integrity and priorities in life.    Her websites are http://www.collaborativetransitions.com, where you can find her blogs about business and career, http://www.rainbowbridgecoach.com , where she and many other coaches blog about mind, body, spirit and emotion, and http://www.georgiafeiste.com where you can catch her thoughts on a wide variety of topics.  Georgia can be reached at (402) 304-1902 if you wish to schedule a 30 minute consultation.

Fibromyalgia Pain Relief with Yoga

August 13, 2010 in Fibromyalgia, Physical Health

FMS pain carries frustration and anxiety with it because you contract your muscles and your breathing when we feel pain.  When you have constricted your breath, you may  begin to feel anxiety which may make the pain worse.  Tightening your muscles also makes the pain worse. 

Because you don’t feel well, you don’t want to do anything – and that leads to a sedentary lifestyle – which makes the situation even more injurious to the entire body.  Your muscles weaken, your immunity levels drop and you can move quickly from frustration to depression.  Your situation can be a vicious cycle, or for some, a downward spiral.

As always, check with your physician(s) before starting any exercise program. 

People with chronic pain from Fibromyalgia deal with pain most of the time, with little to no relief.  Yoga can relieve some of that pain when you practice the gentle movements with caution and awareness.  There are a number of studies that show that a consistent practice of Yoga can reduce the amount of pain in those who suffer from chronic back pain, arthritis and fibromyalgia.

Because the practice of Yoga includes deep, slow breathing as you move into and through the postures, you can reduce the constriction in the muscles and bring a larger quantity of oxygen to the parts of your body in need of healing.  In addition, deep breathing helps you calm the anxiety caused by the pain, helping you relax and send a greater flow of energy and blood into the limbs that are most affected.

Yoga is not a cure for FMS, but it can provide you with a smaller amount of pain, resulting in better sleep, more strength, endurance and stamina, and increased your ability to look at your situation in a more positive manner. 

The most important component of the practice of Yoga is that you are in charge.  You do as much or as little as you can tolerate.  Some days you may be able to do more than others.  You never want to push the stretch further than you can tolerate; feel the stretch, but don’t push it so far as to feel sharp pain in the joints.  Listen to your body and adjust your poses and the intensity of the stretches.

I have found that I always get immediate pain relief with Yoga stretches and deep breathing.  For me, it’s because I sit in front of my computer for a good share of the day and my muscles get tight from not moving enough.  I’ve determined that this is also why I am so stiff and achey when I get up in the morning. 

When I first started practicing Yoga, I only did the standing exercises because it was too painful to lie down on the floor.  Quite frankly, I often had a hard time getting up off the floor.  But, with daily practice, and persistence I often finish my routine on the floor and then relax with some meditation at the end.

Yoga may not be the answer for you, but I encourage you to give it a try.  Just a few light stretches at a time.  Just until you begin to feel it.  Go a bit further each day. 

And, let me know how it goes, okay?

Blessings,

Georgia

Georgia Feiste, owner of Collaborative Transitions Coaching, Inc., located in Lincoln, NE, is a personal growth coach, writer, and workshop facilitator.  She is also a Usui Reiki Master, living with Fibromyalgia.  While Georgia specializes in career, business and personal life transitions for people seeking change in their life, she is also passionate about working with people with chronic pain associated with FMS.  She is uniquely skilled in providing support and encouragement as her clients set intentional goals to attain their desires, holding open the space they need to stretch and grow. Her passion is success grounded in purpose and passion, standards of integrity and priorities in life.    Her websites are http://www.collaborativetransitions.com, where you can find her blogs about business and career, http://www.rainbowbridgecoach.com , where she and many other coaches blog about mind, body, spirit and emotion, and http://www.georgiafeiste.com where you can catch her thoughts on a wide variety of topics.  Georgia can be reached at (402) 304-1902 or you can schedule a 30 minute consultation via Automated Appointment.

Fibromyalgia and Me

August 1, 2010 in Fibromyalgia, Healing, Physical Health

About ten years ago, my doctor diagnosed me with fibromyalgia. I was experiencing pain on a twenty four hour basis. It kept me up at night – I often would get only two or three hours of sleep. I was also diagnosed with IBS, and began to have severe issues with that, along with very severe headaches. I was working ten to twelve hour days, and was having difficulty keeping up with everything, including taking care of myself. Those of you with fibromyalgia are familiar with the story; those of you who are not have difficulty understanding and at times discount how miserable those living with FMS can feel.

Ten to fifteen million people are diagnosed with Fibromyalgia in the United States. All are searching for relief from the muscle and joint pain they are struggling with on a daily basis. This can be pain that is so severe, and accompanied by chronic fatigue, that it stops us from participating in life as it was meant to be lived.

Here is what those of us with FMS know: When we talk to doctors, we often hear “There is nothing wrong with you, it is all in your head”. My immediate reaction to this is not printable, so let’s go with “Not true”.

Not to alarm you, but, what if I told you that some of what you are experiencing is “in your head”. No, don’t stop reading! This is good news!

I recently read that “Fibromyalgia is a very serious disease that slowly progresses over time. There is no cure for it so the best alternative that people have is to slow the progression of the disease with medication and a proper diet. They can also use various medications to offer some relief from the pain. The amount of discomfort a person with Fibromyalgia suffers from can cause them to have trouble completing daily tasks as well as maintaining employment.”

Yes, well, that is an obvious approach. Eat right, kill the pain with pills. I knew that this was not enough for me – I wanted my old life back, as much as I could get, and I didn’t want to do it by masking the symptoms by taking drugs that either made me ill, caused me to gain weight, or made me so loopy I couldn’t keep my job.

We know Fibromyalgia is extremely difficult to diagnose, because the cause of it is confusing. Here is what I have been told about what causes Fibromyalgia, and I am sure you have heard much the same:

  • Depression
  • Trauma
  • Overexertion
  • Anxiety
  • Lack of exercise
  • Stress
  • Humidity
  • Lack of sleep or sleep disturbances
  • Infectious disease
  • Extremes of temperature
  • Abnormal functioning of the immune system
  • Lactic acid accumulation in the muscles
  • Food allergies
  • Serotonin deficiency
  • Anemia

What I discovered for me, and have since discussed with Dr. Chad A. Miller, board certified chiropractic neurologist, who specializes in patients with Fibromyalgia, is that Fibromyalgia needs to be approached from multiple directions, because it appears to have multiple causes, and no two people react to medical and alternative treatments exactly the same. (Miller, 2009)

According to Dr. Miller, Fibromyalgia is NOT a permanent diagnosis.

I was so excited when I heard this that I have spent a good portion of the last few years doing research on everything I can do to help myself live with FMS. I have tried everything I have read, trying to stay away from drugs as best I can, kept what works and let go of what didn’t. I am virtually pain free at this point, except for the aches and pains when I first get up in the morning, and many of my other symptoms are almost non-existent.

I have come to the conclusion that I don’t want to “have” FMS and I don’t want to be an FMS survivor – that labels me. I want to be me, all of me, not just part of me. So, the part of me that loves to share what I learn has decided to blog and coach around FMS in an effort to connect with like-minded people. I am going to share what I have learned about what causes Fibromyalgia, what has worked for me, and what hasn’t. There are many sites, and lots of opinions around which drugs are most effective. I will leave it to my readers to help me with that portion of the conversation – I rarely take any drugs for pain relief – I find that I actually hurt more when I do and the side effects get in the way of enjoying my life.

Thanks for joining, and I’ll talk to you again next week.

Georgia Feiste, owner of Collaborative Transitions Coaching, Inc., located in Lincoln, NE, is a personal growth coach, writer, and workshop facilitator.  She is also a Usui Reiki Master, living with Fibromyalgia.  While Georgia specializes in career, business and personal life transitions for people seeking change in their life, she is also passionate about working with people with chronic pain associated with FMS.  She is uniquely skilled in providing support and encouragement as her clients set intentional goals to attain their desires, holding open the space they need to stretch and grow. Her passion is success grounded in purpose and passion, standards of integrity and priorities in life.    Her websites are http://www.collaborativetransitions.com, where you can find her blogs about business and career, http://www.rainbowbridgecoach.com , where she and many other coaches blog about mind, body, spirit and emotion, and http://www.georgiafeiste.com where you can catch her thoughts on a wide variety of topics.  Georgia can be reached at (402) 304-1902 or you can schedule a 30 minute consultation via Automated Appointment.