Relief
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1 Forum post tagged with "Relief":
relief
by waterlover
In Lupus Support Forums > General & Support
"This may seem like a silly question but I have to ask it anyway....
What does anyone do for relief? I am talking about everything from skin issues to joint pain and fatigue. I am curious and the reason I am asking is to see if there is something else I can do to give me some sort of relief from symptoms when I feel at my worse.
Currently I take advil gel caps on top of my regular mediations"
1 Article tagged with "Relief"In Lupus Support Forums > General & Support
"This may seem like a silly question but I have to ask it anyway....
What does anyone do for relief? I am talking about everything from skin issues to joint pain and fatigue. I am curious and the reason I am asking is to see if there is something else I can do to give me some sort of relief from symptoms when I feel at my worse.
Currently I take advil gel caps on top of my regular mediations"
Related Discussions:
Dual Diagnosed - Relief Only or Relief AND Recovery?
Written by JR1
In Dual Diagnosis Support Group
"
Some folks argue that those of us who have bipolar disease or addiction are more sensitive than usual to pain--both mental and physical pain. Pain relief for those of us who have for years "self-medicated" is a troublesome issue. In the back of our minds is the instinctive caution: "The substances which made us sick will not make us well again." Yet many of us who were substance "abusers" are faced with the choice to take prescriptions for mind or mood altering substances.
Our new prescriptions may be different from the booze and street drugs we have taken, but the general effect and the dependence we feel when we take them under doctors' orders are not so different, though perhaps no so intense, from the stuff we have abused. We must be at all times wary of relapse.
"
Written by JR1
In Dual Diagnosis Support Group
"
Some folks argue that those of us who have bipolar disease or addiction are more sensitive than usual to pain--both mental and physical pain. Pain relief for those of us who have for years "self-medicated" is a troublesome issue. In the back of our minds is the instinctive caution: "The substances which made us sick will not make us well again." Yet many of us who were substance "abusers" are faced with the choice to take prescriptions for mind or mood altering substances.
Our new prescriptions may be different from the booze and street drugs we have taken, but the general effect and the dependence we feel when we take them under doctors' orders are not so different, though perhaps no so intense, from the stuff we have abused. We must be at all times wary of relapse.
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