| Morphine is where it's at. |
| Dilaudid. (It was for gallstone pancreatitis.) |
minimizes, not "cures". Just like you don't want to "cure" anger or anxiety, which are valuable feedback mechanisms, you don't want to "cure" pain either. Pain is your body's way of telling you something's wrong. You can experience that without adding a narrative about how it has always been wrong, will always be wrong, is excruciating and you're going to die, etc. You can take the suffering component out of it by staying present and accepting what is (e.g. "I had surgery on my foot and this pain is my body's way of telling me to take it easy and stop walking around") |
| I think Tramadol helped chronic neck and shoulder pain —until it didn’t. Also works well as an antidepressant (off label). Weaned self off of it. Have some in the house and only take it for the worst of pain —and I have chronic pain-like twice a year. |
How did you fix your chronic neck and shoulder pain? |
I didn’t unfortunately. Have tried PT, acupuncture, Rolfing, massage, chiropractics in rotation for years. Just made an appt w a pain doctor my internist recommended. I am seeking injections for pain. |
| I haven’t tried ketamine, but it does help some with chronic pain syndromes apparently. |
Until it ruins your bladder... |
Same! What is this crap they’re pushing? |
| My mother was given fentanyl patches for cancer pain (terminal) and that apparently helped. |
Another vote for percocet. I normally use Tylenol 3 (+ codeine) which gives me an overall high, but I am still aware of the pain (from rheumatoid arthritis). But with percocet, I am simply unaware of the pain. |