Wednesday, November 3, 2010

My Story


One thing I discovered since I developed pelvic floor dysfunction and pudendal neuralgia (PFD/PN) is that others who live with pelvic pain want to know the details of my story. That's how we learn about this unusual condition. Our stories connect us to this virtual waiting room filled with men and woman in pain. By sharing our own experiences we find out that we aren't crazy, that our pain is real with real physiologic causes.We discover that our pain can be isolating and unrelenting. But we also find out about treatments that might help us, physical therapists who are solely dedicated to treating pelvic pain, and some doctors with true expertise in the field of chronic pelvic pain. We discover too, a community of men and women who want to share their intimate stories with each other to make the journey a little less daunting and lonesome. There are friends out there you just don't know yet. But look around the links on this page and you will find friends, support and information.


Well, here is my story, and I'll be somewhere between brief and exhausting. My warning to you is that I am an RN but I'll be careful to not talk too much medical lingo.


If you've read other essays of mine, you've learned that I was very physically active. By age four, my father was strapping rubber galoshes to cable bindings on wooden skis. I remember running around with them on the fall grass, impatiently expecting our first snow.  I was hooked.  I developed a serious love for altitude and speed. Powder and moguls. Giant slalom and downhill racing. During college, a ski outing with the guys meant a challenge to a race at some point.  Often it would start with a bet " I can beat you down the mountain without making a single turn." That was enough to get me into high gear, and we were off.


Every now and then, the race was interrupted with a high speed crash, bumping, bouncing, sliding down the mountain and a forever lost ski. No problem, my body always absorbed the concussions of the bumps and speed. I felt like Mighty Mouse flying down those slopes and fortunately, I never sustained a serious injury.


I was attracted to the adrenaline sports. My other love was riding horses and wrangling with my burro and mini-mule. For years, I lived in the high desert and would take solo journeys for hours with my beautiful Arabian, Hudson.  My burro would tag along, stopping to graze on a wimpy little weed, and then ambush us when he discovered he was left behind. Those memories are poignant, and still make me laugh.


When I wasn't riding, I was hiking or running the mountain trails with my border collies. It was a life I was used to- a life of working as a pediatric nurse, creating a loving home with my husband, and an athletic and social life with my community.


Things abruptly changed four years ago. But that change was cooking; simmering for years and I had no clue. At the time, I was no longer working as a nurse. I had a successful in-home dog training business for four years. I loved the work. It was very similar to my work as a pediatric nurse. I taught families how to integrate their new pup into the household. I taught them the basic skills they needed and how to handle this active bundle of fur with razor sharp teeth. And just like we learn that dogs rarely bite "all of a sudden and for no reason", my pelvic pain "to be" was sending me tiny little messages for years, but the words were so faint and inconsistent, that I ignored them. They weren't interfering with my life at all.  Every now and then I had a little low back pain, and menstrual cramp pain that never resulted in a period. I chalked it up to being in my forties. Once in a while, my foot would go numb, "No big deal." I experienced some urinary urgency and frequency, but it was mild, and I assumed I was entering that era as well.  As a runner, I knew many women who "leaked" now and then.


Another activity that I loved, was cycling.  In 1985, I packed up my ten speed bike, flew over to Europe with some friends, and cycled all over  Europe for three months.  My body was finely tuned at that time, and I would ride hours a day without a worry.  Cycling, running, skiing and horses were a mainstay of my active lifestyle and certainly a big part of my identity.


In 2006, when my symptoms came on acutely, ( *A Pain to Explain) on that airplane ride, I was reminded of some strange symptoms that I was experiencing a few weeks prior.  My low back pain was getting more intense, and it hurt quite a bit when I was training dogs.  While cycling, I had a few episodes of numbness in my right leg, pain near my sit bones and an odd buzzing sensation in my crotch. The pain always resolved when my activity stopped, so again, I just didn't give it much thought. Once the pain reached critical, it came on  acutely and I was taken to the Emergency Room.


I was evaluated by a surgeon and upon exam he discovered that my pudendal nerve was very sore and sensitive. He thought that perhaps I had injured it from cycling and likely it would calm down. My symptoms were quite intense. I was unable to sit at all.   I had urinary urgency and frequency, rectal pain and total centralized pain.


I did not understand at all what was happening. Especially the symptoms of centralized pain. Sometimes an injury can send confusing messages up the spinal cord. The brain has a hard time decoding them, and it can over-react by sending alarm bells throughout your entire body. That is what was happening, and  the sensations I experienced were bizarre. Bed sheets felt like sandpaper. My skin felt sunburned. I could not sleep.  I could not find a comfortable position. I was exhausted and afraid of this acute and overwhelming sensory storm.


I am so fortunate to have a loving, intelligent and supportive husband. He is also a physician. He felt helpless during this initial phase and I could tell he was very concerned. But no matter what, he and I work as a team. We went into action mode and learned quickly that physical therapy might help me.


I found the best physical therapists (PT) in the field and I spent one week in San Franciso at the Pelvic Health and Rehabilitation Center. I remember after my PT assessed me, she told me that I was a "poster child for pelvic floor dysfunction."  All those years of adrenaline sports, combined with some structural imbalances set me up for this problem. Oh, and did I mention?  I have a skinny butt.


I spent two hours each day at PT which included myofascial work, trigger point release, and learning how to lengthen my short, tight pelvic floor muscles.  My PT taught me about trigger points, and how they impaired nutrition to the muscles and ultimately the nerves. I learned how connective tissue needs to be supple as it also aids in the flow of oxygen and nutrition to muscles and nerves. It was painful in the beginning, but after the first week, many of my symptoms calmed down. My PT was incredibly supportive and to this day, we still remain in touch.


I returned home and then continued PT locally with some outstanding PT's with expertise in pelvic pain.   Some people choose surgery, but I have not gone that route.  I often tell people this is an unpredictable journey, but most people recover or improve.  I spent two years in PT and I definitely improved but I am not cured.  Specifically, my sitting tolerance has improved. I can drive about 30 minutes at a time, although I still use a cushion. I have less urgency and frequency. Sex is a little more..."creative".  I am still on pain medication and I struggle with fatigue.  I walk about an hour every day with my dog. I practice tai chi, and I meditate. I gave away my bike. I snow shoe, but I don't ski. I nap. I read. I write. I knit. I nap again.


It has been over a year since I have gone to PT on a regular basis. In the past few months, my symptoms have worsened.  I feel hints of the centralized pain returning. I don't sleep well. I have decided to return to PT to see if I can get back to where I was about a year ago. The decline has been gradual and it's taken time to come to this decision again.


I've debated about blogging.  How much of my personal life do I want to share?  Did I have the physical and mental energy to do so? After four years of personal experience and learning, I hope that my sharing helps someone in their search for information and support.


My life has definitely changed. It is still rich and I am grateful. I live at a different pace now. I make more deliberate choices. I listen to my body.  I set boundaries. I express gratitude.  I struggle with fatigue and at times I get depressed. I count on my strong circle of support, and that includes those in the virtual realm.


I'm humbled by this challenge.  I encourage you to pay attention to those early signals as your body is talking. I encourage you to get the best help you can, and develop a trusting support system.
If you can't take a walk, take a step. I love walking slowly now.  Not all of this, has been bad.


Peace,
Cora.

3 comments:

  1. Hi Cora, I have forgotten my new identity name already and hope I can post anonymously, As a blogger at school and within my family I cannot link to this site without opening myself up to people in my life taking a window of opportunity to look into my life..work colleagues, parents of children I teach etc.
    I just wanted to tell you I loved reading your story, you are a mirror image of me in many ways, even in name...there's a clue !!!!!!

    I am pleased I have found you, kindred spirits

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  2. it's amazing how we manage to find each other... :)

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  3. Thank you for sharing this. It means so much to me to hear a story that doesn't include a match search for doctors in risky procedures and surgeries. I believe this is a slow process, but people are disturbed by my willing to take it slow. Unfortunately, slow is very practical for me because the primary earner and by household as well as the primary caregiver. So, to onlookers and to my less compassionate self, it seems selfish to choose to take it slow. I am afraid of thefinancial repercussions for my family. for so many years I have pushed myself beyond my limits to provide for my family, in spite of frequently debilitating chronic pain. PN has finally stopped me.

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