upsiforgot

joined 7 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

I'm neither an expert nor do I smoke. But from what I heard, quitting smoking has two major points- one being the nicotine addiction your body has built up. The second one being your 'emotional addiction', I.e being used to smoking as a tool to decompress, socialize, take a break, fight boredom etc. which is embedded in your routines - this one might be harder to fight. Maybe try to identify those things and find alternatives, start installing different ways to cope and simultaneously take care of your bodily addiction via gums, patches, whatever is the right way for you.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Well that sounds rather unpleasant. Maybe I was a little naive in assuming that this doctor for sure won't tell any bullshit, as he seemed (~~old~~) experienced. I'm glad you had the courage to get a second opinion

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Well, yeah, but on the other hand: who else can I ask? Of course, nobody here knows me or my situation. But I do, and let me tell you: there is nobody who I can get some thoughts about this , some questions I didn't consider yet, ideas on what to do...and maybe a little encouragement... I'm overwhelmed by the amount of people who cared and shared their thoughts

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

Welp, I certainly didn't know that - no you've really got me pumped up to try that! I somehow always fancied cycling but at the same time didn't gain enough momentum to actually do it. But now, as I'm craving to get my body moving, and this may really work with my current situation (and also knowing what to look out for, the whole wheight balancing thing) I'll definitely give it a try! Thank you!

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 months ago

Thank you for this insight. I really don't want to be sick but if there is something, especially something that could be treated, I'd like to know. My GPs response somehow made me feel like I was overreacting but with so many people reacting so differently, I'll try to take myself serious and get that checked out!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Thank you for sharing your story. I'm really impressed by your mindset after going through all of what you wrote. Biking sounds fun, I might be looking into it, right now I can't really put a lot of weight on my wrists/ hands but maybe I find a way around that. I actually live in an area where biking of all sorts is quite popular :-) .

[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Yeah well my GP just shoved this aside and I didn't do any reasearch about it, because I try to avoid reading about symptoms etc. in order not to get 'biased', like interpeting too much or influencing my diagnosis (does this make sense?) but as you were asking about it it came back to my mind. Maybe I should check in with a specialist as I just now tried to find some information and it seems to fit really good, it even matches some minor other problems I had earlier (and my GP himself diagnosed me with)

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Thank you for your answer, I appreciate everyone wo is taking the time and effort. Well, my brother has spondylitis ankylosans. I asked my doc about it (my mother always warned us to have in our mind when something comes up) but he said that this is not related and my symptoms wouldn't match as I am too young. He also stated that it especially has nothing to do with low back pain. Other than that, no chemicals, no radiation (we live in a area where this actually can be a problem so it is quite common to check for it and we never had any elevated levels) I'm not working in a high stress environment, no heavy lifting or something like that and I move quit regularly during the day

 

Edit: thank you all very much for your time, thoughts and effort to reply to this. I really appreciate it and I try to find a new doctor. Your questions and encouragement were very helpful and made me realise that my symptoms are too strong, considering my lifestyle. For those who asked questions, here are the answers: I eat healthy, we cook fresh, colourful food almost every day, only drink water, coffee, tea, no alcohol, no smoking, no fast food. I walk my dog several times a day and when I'm doing something where I have to sit for an extended period of time, I take a little walk evey hour or so and also use a standing desk attachment to change my position. I sleep on a really good mattress (my partner struggled with our last one so we invested in a good pair of matresses, matching our body type) I have a healthy weight on the lower end of the scale. I had to cut back my exercise that I was doing for twelve years due to the pain, switched to light Yoga and streching until even that became unbearable.
Thinking about all this together, I think my fear of not being taken serious made me believing my current GP.

I'm in my mid twenties. My body seems struggling, since May/ June, so some time then I went to my GP. His response: "everyone experiences symptoms of their ageing body at a different time, seems like you just experience it earlier..." This was around May/ June, it just tends to get worse. Which leads to the questions featured in the title. My body hurts, like, a lot. Especially my low back/ sacrum. My knees, shoulders, wrists, ankels. My hands are swollen in the morning and they hurt, I can't unscrew any lids or bottle caps, sometimes can't even write anymore as my fingers are very stiff. As the rest of my body. I can't reach for anything on the ground in the morning, it makes everything so difficult. I can't really bend over to tie my shoes or pick something up. I can't do my regular activities even though I really want to do my sports like climbing which I really like. I do like being active and want to stay fit. But it just hurts too much. At the same time, resting somehow makes it even worse. I'm exhausted, but need to constantly move around on a low level. How is everyone else doing this if this is what ageing feels like? How am I supposed to have kids or even just live like this, as I always just hear that with an ageing body, everything just gets harder every year? I really do appreciate everyone who reads this. Thank you in advance for answering if you have any tips on how you manage this

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I wouldn't consider those as stripes, there are many pictures showing a comparison, I'd think those slightly darker areas are shadows. The stripes that mark a cockroach are really dark and distinctive, way more 'stripey' - maybe look for a photo from directly above to compare it with yours. The one on your picture looks harmless to me. They like to eat leaves and will die of hunger inside of the house

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The stripes would be very prominent and more in the middle of its head

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago (3 children)

The one featured in the picture seems like a "Bernstein Waldschabe". Just a harmless little friend that gets trapped inside sometimes. No killing (and no panic) required A Deutsche Schabe has black stripes on its head

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