I just wanted to share with you a blog I wrote last summer about the various stages of endometriosis. I’ll include links to each stage below, but for the most part you can skip around in the text. I’m not a doctor, so I don’t know exactly what you’ll find in any stages, but I hope it’s helpful.
One thing is for sure, endometriosis is a common and debilitating disease. And the reason I write about it is because its so common, and the reason I write about it is because it is so debilitating. Its debilitating because it causes pain, discomfort, and other symptoms, which lead to a lot of stress and anxiety. But most importantly of all, it causes a lot of women to be unable to have children.
A lot of endometriosis sufferers, like myself, find that the pain is a bit like being shot in the butt. Its debilitating but the pain is also the only thing I can control. I am a mother of 3 boys and a mother of 3 girls, but I am just so tired of having to have a pregnancy test every 4 months; that, and I just don’t want to. I don’t have enough energy to go back to school.
I am currently in the middle of a huge battle with endometriosis in my midsection that just keeps getting worse, so I can’t possibly help you much with this topic. But I can tell you that I have had to take medication to keep the pain at bay. I do have to use a lot of painkillers right now because I have to manage it on my own.
I’ve had endometriosis for as long as I can remember. I’m not sure what part of my body is the problem, but it’s definitely something I have to manage on my own. I’ve tried various treatments, including hormone shots, injections, and surgery, but there’s no way I’m going to be able to get pregnant if I don’t get off the painkillers.
Endometriosis is a condition where the tissue and/or fluid inside your uterus grows outside the uterus. This often makes the endometrial tissue bleed. The doctors say that the pain that comes along with it is what makes it so much worse. Some people who have endometriosis also have other types of pain, such as chronic pelvic pain.
It’s a chronic condition that can cause you to feel like your whole body is made of cotton, but that does not make it a painkiller. It’s a painkiller because it helps with the pain. But when all you want to do is feel better, you don’t do anything.
The reason endometriosis can be so bad is because it’s a chronic condition. The pain is just a symptom of it. If it’s not a symptom then it’s not a problem. If it is a symptom, you’re not doing anything about it.
There are two types of pain, acute and chronic. Acute pain is pain you deal with immediately, and then we get to chronic pain. Chronic pain is pain that hasnt been dealt with yet, and can last for months or even years. Acute pain typically starts with a physical problem, such as a bruise, which can then spread to other areas in your body, and may cause a wide range of other symptoms to start.
Chronic pain can be so debilitating that it can be considered a disease, but the most common definition of a disease is a state of physical or mental abnormality that is beyond the control of a normal individual. These diseases are often called “chronic” because the pain can last years or even decades. Most people will have pain that lasts for the rest of their lives, but not everyone will have chronic pain as a chronic disease.