In 1989, I broke my back in a skiing accident. I did not seek medical attention because the pain felt identical to when I had hurt it before. The docs then, never even x-rayed my back, but thought it would be great fun to spend a lot of time checking out my separated shoulder which did not hurt 1/10th as much as my back.
So when it happened again, I just "sucked it up" and went on with my life. After a month of terrible sleep and very little reduction in pain, my neck was still swollen. I went to the doctor, who was NOT happy with me. Too late to fix anything. Two years later I was beginning to get back to normal. That was when I began to gain weight because I could no longer play sports or lift weights
I did set a personal record, in bench press, the week after I broke it
then never benched again, for years.
My advice for chronic pain is not good. Suck it up. You really do get used to it. Act as normal as you can. If your leg hurts, don't limp on it! You'll only hurt everything else too. If it only hurts but is not causing injury, ignore it. It doesn't go away, but you do get used to it, so it's what your normal is. I only take pain meds, at night. When I began worrying about my liver, I reduced them down to less than a single normal dose of OTC meds. I decided taking more prescription pain meds would only mean being addicted to a higher dosage. Flush that.
When I broke some ribs before thanksgiving, I was too hurt to work (breathe, yawn, clear my throat, cough, sneeze or sniffle... all of which happen anyway) and finally just went back to work because; if people wrestle and fight MMA fights with broken ribs, I should be able to bounce around in a truck and on a forklift, over broken ground.
It was awful, but you know? I failed to die of it, at all. When something'd happen that was excruciating, I found saying the words "Is THAT all you got?" and going right on, was very effective in keeping my attitude tougher than I wanted to be.
So when it happened again, I just "sucked it up" and went on with my life. After a month of terrible sleep and very little reduction in pain, my neck was still swollen. I went to the doctor, who was NOT happy with me. Too late to fix anything. Two years later I was beginning to get back to normal. That was when I began to gain weight because I could no longer play sports or lift weights


My advice for chronic pain is not good. Suck it up. You really do get used to it. Act as normal as you can. If your leg hurts, don't limp on it! You'll only hurt everything else too. If it only hurts but is not causing injury, ignore it. It doesn't go away, but you do get used to it, so it's what your normal is. I only take pain meds, at night. When I began worrying about my liver, I reduced them down to less than a single normal dose of OTC meds. I decided taking more prescription pain meds would only mean being addicted to a higher dosage. Flush that.
When I broke some ribs before thanksgiving, I was too hurt to work (breathe, yawn, clear my throat, cough, sneeze or sniffle... all of which happen anyway) and finally just went back to work because; if people wrestle and fight MMA fights with broken ribs, I should be able to bounce around in a truck and on a forklift, over broken ground.
It was awful, but you know? I failed to die of it, at all. When something'd happen that was excruciating, I found saying the words "Is THAT all you got?" and going right on, was very effective in keeping my attitude tougher than I wanted to be.