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Old 01-24-2008, 12:28 PM
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nopainever nopainever is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 157
15 yr Member
nopainever nopainever is offline
Member
nopainever's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 157
15 yr Member
Default I totally understand...

JCrew...

I was so where you were. I went to Nationals for swimming and was my high schools top swimmer. I was the only girl on the guys water polo team and I played soccer for 10 years. I snowboarded every winter season and I waterskiied every summer since I was 5, at our house at the Lake. That was all taken away from me. I was so scared of this RSD when I 1st was told I had it. Well, when I started researching it. I felt so isolated, so misunderstood, and so angry...

It's a long and tough road, but I have become a STRONGER person inside from it. I know you probably don't want to hear that, but I truely feel that.

Everyday that I wake up I tell myself that I am going to beat this thing. I seriously believe that we will!

Anyways, I am always here for you!


Heather

Quote:
Originally Posted by jcrewrockstar View Post
I can't lie, after reading what the two of your wrote, it breaks my heart to hear that you can't do half of what you used to do, or, how the pain can take over and rule things so much. I, too, used to be athletic...in the beginning of this injury, the hardest emotional component was losing part of my identity in a sense. I was the girl, in college, who went to school on scholarship, played soccer, and was Player of the Year. I was the girl who played basketball, everyday, with the kids I took care of and mentored at work, i was the girl who lifted weights everyday and had defined arms. All those parts, I came to realize, were wrapped up in and with my identity. It was a grieving process until I came to accept it.

But, it is hard to hear that RSD can continue to, even with understanding employers, and tons of medication, take more and more from you. I completely understand having to have emotional strength and equilbrium; that is the one thing I feel I have control over and refuse to surrender it to RSD or anyone/anything else. I only wish for you guys, for myself, for everyone, that, with medication, RSD wouldn't have the power, the wrath that it seems to have, to continue to control and dictate so many limitations in everyday life.
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"We Will Conquer This Demon They Refer to As, RSD!"


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