My latest…2025-07-02T12:40:27+10:00

My latest…

Poor excuses

By |November 28th, 2011|Categories: Funnies|Tags: |

Oh go on, let's have some fun. What's the poorest excuse you've heard from your insurer (or related body) and don't name names, but let's have a laugh... at their expense for a change.

Why a flower?

By |November 26th, 2011|Categories: About, Creativity, Living, Manage, The pain|Tags: , |

Chronic pain is a waste of life’s precious time, its a huge hold up. But if you have to deal with it then you have to find a way to cope through the awful journey and survive it. Before my precious implant (Professor Teddy I love you!!), I couldn’t move much without pain, everything hurt and it hurt all the time. And yet, my gorgeous friends and family kept telling me ‘but you look so good for someone who’s in pain all day!’ (Uum… thanks??).

Down the hole: a descent into painful isolation

By |November 25th, 2011|Categories: Advocacy, Creativity|Tags: , |

Chia Moan's painting Shrinking World aims to shed light on the effects of living with severe and persistent pain. Moan was among artists who spoke to pain sufferers and says she remembers one patient who said she felt like Alice disappearing down the rabbit hole, with the opening at the top growing smaller and smaller.

Women’s Health and Research Institute of Australia (WHRIA)

By |November 24th, 2011|Categories: Help, Learn, Professional, Professional Resources|Tags: , |

Your symptoms & history indicate that the nerve in the pelvis, the pudendal nerve, may be responsible for all or some of your pain and other symptoms. The pudendal nerve runs from the lower back, then passes between 2 ligaments, then runs along the top of the pelvic floor muscles, then through to the base of the pelvis the pelvis and out to the perineum. Adjacent to the ligaments are muscles: the pelvic floor muscles (PFM) at the front and the obturator and piriformis at the back.

Pain as an Art Form

By |November 24th, 2011|Categories: Learn, Manage, Personal resources|Tags: , , |

Mr. Collen said the main goal of the exhibit is to raise awareness about the problem of chronic pain. However, he said he hopes one day to find a sponsor to take the exhibit on tour. “People don’t believe what they can’t see,” Mr. Collen said. “But they see a piece of art an individual created about their pain and everything changes.”

Art and distraction

By |November 23rd, 2011|Categories: Creativity, Learn, Living, Manage, My treatment, Personal resources|Tags: , , , |

My creativity has been one of my main coping mechanisms through my chronic pain life. It's the place I go to feel free, release the steam, express my pain, and to get distracted to the point of pain! But it's worth it every time. There isn't a lot I can achieve with my capacity so one drawing, one painting over months, one post on my blog... anything, it's all worth it.

Pain loops, syndromes and an over protective brain

By |November 21st, 2011|Categories: About, Creativity, Funnies, Manage, The pain|Tags: , |

How many definitions for pain signals are out there? It doesn't stop and I have to be really honest here, it all sounds like hogwash for a person who was unstoppable and prior to her injury had the stamina of a bull (as a friend once described me).

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