Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG OP. Step back and out. I was diagnosed with a BRAIN TUMOR and my family denied it. All those treatments. Months of rehab. Said goodbye to those family members forever. Your sister doesn’t need you in her life. Seriously. Life is better without them.
What do you mean they denied it? They thought you lied that the Dr found a brain tumor? Why? They sound nuts.
Anonymous wrote:My much younger sister has had a host of health problems that have led to many ER visits, doctor appointments, and tests that never amount to anything. She gets migraines, complains of constant neck plan, numbness in her arms, and poor circulation. She’s extremely dramatic so over the years I stopped paying much attention to the “I’m at the ER” and “this is what major medical problems I may have now” texts and phone calls. I’ve talked to her about her need to overreact to everything and how not everything is an emergency. Well she has started having some facial paralysis and a neurologist ordered and MRI of her neck/spine and apparently she has a syrinx in her spinal cord that has caused significant damage and will be meeting with a neurosurgeon to discuss surgical options. Apparently all of her symptoms are from this syrinx in her spinal cord. I feel awful that I lectured her so much, and dismissed so many of her concerns. I am really concerned about her but at the same time I know she’s going to turn this into an attention grab. How can I let her know I am worried about he without feeding into her attention seeking behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two things can be true: your sister had unremitting mysterious pain AND your sister has dramatic / high maintenance tendencies. Did you sister have these tendencies earlier/in other aspects of life or only with regard to this problem?
I agree with PP that you should try to be supportive w/o feeding the drama, starting with "I am so happy for you that you found an explanation. How can I help you get through the surgery?"
I agree with this. Just because the pain is real doesn't mean that everything else stops for everyone else. I say this as someone who lives in constant pain because of a car accident when I was a child. I have no right to disrupt others' lives with my complaints just because I hurt. Unfortunately it doesn't sound like OP's sister got that message. I see both sides of this and I don't think that OP is out of line in her wanting the sister to get a better handle on her emotions and to reel back the drama.
You don’t understand because people believed you since you had a car accident.
Not really. People who know me today know nothing about the accident because I haven't told them. I also don't tell them about the pain. My point is that some people wear their emotions on their skin and they feel that everyone has to know what they're feeling come hell or high water. And that isn't so. OP's sister has done as much damage to herself emotionally and her relationships with others by her actions as probably the health problem has done to her body.
You have no way of knowing this. People can't help having the personality they have anyway. But what you CAN tell from this thread is that OP has no empathy or sympathy whatsoever, so instead of criticizing a woman you don't know, why don't you condemn OP, who has shown you who she is?
Uh, people most certainly CAN control their personality. One person didn't just suddenly wake up one morning and have a sunny personality while another is the complainer. These are patterns of behavior that have developed over years of acts. OP's sister has chosen to act the way she has and that has greatly contributed to the poor way people perceive her. She needs to own it and if she wants to change it then she needs to take the steps to do it. She isn't a feather in the wind and she needs to stop believing/acting like she is. She now has a diagnosis. She needs to own it and take charge to act on it to resolve her physical health issue.
And I'm not going to condemn OP because I understand her position. She has reacted the way most people probably have around OP's sister.
Anonymous wrote:OMG OP. Step back and out. I was diagnosed with a BRAIN TUMOR and my family denied it. All those treatments. Months of rehab. Said goodbye to those family members forever. Your sister doesn’t need you in her life. Seriously. Life is better without them.
Anonymous wrote:I am 44 and she’s is 30. I love my sister, shes extremely intelligent, funny and generous. However, she can also be her manipulative. I think I am frustrated because it has been over a year since she went to the ER and I felt she was finally at a better place with all this medical drama. I do recognize that if she ends up having spinal surgery this is very serious. I am worried about her. This is going to sound terrible, but I feel like this is one those situations where she went from specialist to specialist until someone agreed something was wrong with her. We all have minor medical issues that if we had dozens of scans, and test run, they would find something too.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:I have an incredibly high pain tolerance. I did an unmedicated birth that included over 10 hours at 8 cm - there were many times that I wanted to die during that experience.
I’ve also had a debilitating nerve injury. The pain was worse than my childbirth experience. There were times it was constant and all consuming. It’s not like your arm falling asleep or something. Your affected limb looses the ability to sense properly and the result is all kinds of mismatched sensations, like feeling like you are standing on pointed rocks while laying down, that your limb is in an ice water bath when it feels hot to the touch, and the excruciating, stabbing pain of sciatica. It’s challenging to stay mentally healthy in that situation, and unreasonable to expect someone going through that kind of trauma to do so.
I hope that helps you understand what she may be dealing with.