auto immune disease

A Day in Old Town Phucket

One Nine Three.png

We had finally made it to the relaxing part of our trip.  After traveling all over Thailand for the past week and fitting in way too much in such a short time we had arrived at the part of our trip where it was about the beach, sunsets, and relaxation.  We were staying at the Hilton Phucket Arcadia Resort & Spa it was approximately 90 minutes from the airport.  We arrived in Phucket at night therefore, we weren’t able to see much of the city on our ride to the hotel.  Near our hotel we did see that there were some markets that we wanted to visit the next day.  

 Our first full day in Phucket we decided to have breakfast by the pool because we just had to enjoy the beautiful scenery.  This day we decided to take it easy and we rented a car with a driver and he took us all over the city.   We went through old town, Big Buddha, Kata viewpoint and a local weekend market. 

 

          

Screen Shot 2021-04-26 at 3.09.34 PM.png
Screen Shot 2021-04-26 at 3.13.33 PM.png
Screen Shot 2021-04-26 at 3.15.08 PM.png
Screen Shot 2021-04-26 at 3.15.41 PM.png
Screen Shot 2021-04-26 at 3.16.03 PM.png

 After a full day of sight-seeing we asked our driver to drop us off at the public beach market.  Here we did so much shopping and were able to catch our first Thai sunset believe it or not.  We also decided to get pedicures by fish, and it was the most hilarious/ticklish experience I’ve ever had.  

Screen Shot 2021-04-26 at 3.16.37 PM.png

Rheumatoid Arthritis

`-2.jpg

I have rheumatoid arthritis, I got diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis around the same time I got diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis.  I apparently had ignored the early signs of it, and it was already in the stage of the disease progressing itself and the damage being done to my joints and bones.  I was overwhelmed when I found out because there was another cause for my pain, another disease.  If you’re keeping track, I’m now at 4 auto-immune disorders, 4 chronic illnesses.  In total present day I currently have 6 auto-immune diseases and 8 chronic illnesses.  There are no cures for my illnesses, I can go into bouts of remission, I might have low symptom days, but I will not get better or be cured.  I have come to terms with this, it is not me being negative it is me just accepting the truth.  There is are a lot of issues in the medical field especially being a woman who complains about pain and there’s nothing that you can physically see to account for it.  Statistically it has been proven that women going to the Emergency Room complaining of pain we can often go 2 hours and 35 minutes before being seen versus when a man goes to the hospital complaining of pain he can walk in and out with a prescription in 45 minutes. 

 What is rheumatoid arthritis? 

Rheumatoid Arthritis is a long-term autoimmune disorder that primarily affects joints. It usually results in warm, swollen, and painful joints.  Usually, it affects the wrists and hands on both sides of the body.  The disease may also affect other parts of the body, including skin, eyes, lungs, heart, nerves and blood. This may result in a low red blood cell countinflammation around the lungs, and inflammation around the heart.

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

How did I get diagnosed? 

I got diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis while being diagnosed for psoriatic arthritis. My rheumatologist realized looking at the scans and my symptoms that there was more cause to worry than just the psoriatic arthritis.  I had more symptoms than what came with psoriatic arthritis such as fatigue, pain in all of my joints and iron deficiency.

 My experience with treatment

Right after I was diagnosed, I went gluten and dairy free because my doctor had read that it helped long story short the natural route with food and supplement hasn’t helped my condition, I wrote about it in detail in my psoriatic arthritis post.  Right now, with rheumatoid arthritis I’m more concerned with stopping the disease and the pain.  I am in ongoing aquatic, physical and occupational therapy to help me build the surrounding muscles in order to compensate for those bones that cannot work as they once did.  

 How has it impacted my life?

 I’m not going to sit here and say arthritis hasn’t completely derailed my life because it has.  Chronic pain has completely changed everything.  Rheumatoid Arthritis has also eaten away at the bones in my spine and caused a curvature towards the end of my spine and my bones falling to the side instead of lining up on top of each other causing another chronic illness called Spondylitis.  Currently, I’m at what they consider Grade A Spondylitis which is still extremely painful.  This causes my discs to sit on my nerves, which in turn causes nerve pain down to my knees so when I’m sitting for long periods of time, I have trouble walking, I have trouble bending over, I have trouble standing, and getting up from chairs.  

 My main advice to people is to keep up with their pain management whatever it may be.  My course of treatment or maintenance for my body I like to call it was medical treatment, acupuncture every 4 weeks, chiropractor visits ever week, and massages once a month.  This course of maintenance kept the flares at bay majority of the time.  Because of the pandemic, my treatment was stalled, and pain management locations were considered non-essential, also I’m considered high-risk, so I was quarantined. This past year I have been in one of the worse flares I have ever experienced which caused immense trauma to my body.  

 Support:

t’s very hard for family and friends to understand what you are going through.  I have learned is keep educating yourself, educate them if you have to but eventually they’ll come around. You can’t blame them, it’s very rare for you to go from being “normal” to have your whole life fall apart.  Depression runs very high in chronically ill patients especially those with excess inflammation, because of the excess inflammation of the brain. The things I’ve looked to for support is my immediate circle, I wasn’t as fair to mine and didn’t open up to them all.  I’ve also found a lot of help in talk therapy; it’s helped me with managing my pain threshold and advocacy.  I’ve joined several online support groups because honestly sometimes the pain is too much to show up anywhere in person.  There are so many people around the world dealing with these same issues and they’re all willing to talk about it and help each other out.  It really is a wonderful community.