I thought I knew pain. I had had my share of it — from hip arthritis to sprained ankles to gallstones and two bouts of childbirth. But nothing has been like the past two weeks of astonishing, electrifying pain that has nearly disabled my every activity.
It started so innocuously. There was an enticing looking trampoline in the back yard of a house we were renting to celebrate our 25th anniversary. I climbed on to bounce with friends, no more than a few minutes.

But the morning after that two-minute jump, I woke up and found that my neck and upper back felt stiff and tweaky, like I’d slept on my pillow wrong. I figured it would go away as soon as I started moving around and loosening things up.
I was wrong. I entered, for the first time in my life, a growing, debilitating, excruciating pain that just would not go away. By the fourth night,I wasn’t able to sleep in my bed any longer. I was up every two hours, crying, only able to find intermittent relief if I rolled around on the floor with a lacrosse ball wedged underneath my shoulder blades.


I applied blue ice and microwaved, aromatherapy shoulder wraps. I got a plastic goose hook with a sharp beaky hook, and the only thing that allowed me to tolerate walking around was simultaneously digging that thing into my upper back, poking and clawing at the relentless spasm. A sweet friend came over and gave me a wonderful shiatsu treatment and when she left, I was comfortable lying on blankets on the floor. I dozed off feeling blissed out. But when I got up, the pain returned.

The only thing that gave me pure relief was regular doses of Percocet which allowed me to drift into comfortable sleep. The minute I put myself into a sitting or standing position for more than five minutes, the chewing, clawing sensation resumed.
I have learned many things during this Time of Pain. Things I never really appreciated until now. I learned that:
- Pain is expensive. During this period of pain, I had to give up hundreds of dollars for concert tickets I had paid for. Nobody on Craigslist or Facebook wanted to see Jackson Browne as badly as I had. Ditto for a triathlon I had registered for (I went, driven by someone else, to cheer on my friends who had signed up to support me). Ditto for a hotel room I had pre-paid to stay in for a friend’s out of town wedding. It has added up big time, all these things I paid for when I assumed I would be active and well.
- Pain is boring.Not only for me, wandering from one horizontal surface to another, but for the kind people who ask me every morning,”How do you feel?” and getting the same tired, dogged answer every time. “Not so great.” I wonder how long these friends will want to stick around when I am not the upbeat, active person I was before that damn trampoline.
- Pain is on its own timeline. It seems like maybe it’s getting better. My husband (who has been a saint, and given new meaning to the words “in sickness and in health”) observes that at least now I am “comfortable at rest” instead of “agonizingly uncomfortable no matter what position.” But two weeks into it, I want to be better than able to lie around on my back all day. I need to get up and out and around. I need to be able to drive my car without crazy discomfort or narcotic wooziness. Pain doesn’t give a shit about my schedule, my calendar, my job or my plans.
- Pain doesn’t show on the outside. After I employ Lamaze breathing techniques to endure a shower, toweling off, getting dressed and drying my hair, numerous optimistic acquaintances have exclaimed, “You look so much better!” But I am cringing from the stabbing red-hot poker that is assaulting that area between my scapula and my thoracic spine. They don’t notice that it doesn’t take longer than me for ten minute to end up on the floor again, seeking out the ball, the foam roller, the ice bag. I know that I looked “fine” when I was cheering my buddies on at See Jane Tri, but I was feeling terrible. I had to stop several times to roll on a picnic bench.
Lily rocked the tri. I rocked the cheering on. Sort of. I had to lie down on the ball every few minutes. - Chronic pain is absolutely debilitating. I am a physical therapist. I used to work primarily with people who had endured years and years of pain. I think about them now. I think about how they used to relay their stories to me and weep. How I didn’t really understand the depth of the mental and emotional exhaustion that pain can exact on a human being. It has only been two weeks for me, but I see that this could be a long road.
- Pain is mysterious. Nobody can explain, really, why it hurts the way that it does. Maybe it is a rotated or twisted thoracic vertebrae, out of alignment with a rib. Maybe it is a neuro-electrical loop that won’t close or stop. Maybe it is muscle spasm. Maybe it is the “moderate narrowing” of my cervical spine, pressing on my spinal nerves. Maybe it just IS. Many people can jump and fling themselves around on a trampoline to no ill effects.
As I write this, I don’t know how or when I will feel “normal” again. When I will be able to effortlessly bathe, or eat a meal, let alone drive around in my car all day and practice as a home health physical therapist. When I will be able to swim in open water, ride a bike or run a 5k race. All of these things are like dreams to me now. All I can do is take each moment, each moment of discomfort, to try and learn someting, try and find a shred of compassion for myself and this situation. All I can do is ask for patience and a bit of relief.


October 8, 2013 at 12:56 am
omg. i am never trampolining. hope you feel better soon. wish i could send a fairy godmother over to sprinkle fairy dust over your pain.
October 8, 2013 at 12:05 pm
As painful as my shoulder episode has been, it is NOTHING like what you describe!! My God…how you’ve been able to keep a shred of humor is testament to your spirit. Hoping you get answers and relief…and soon!!
October 8, 2013 at 12:10 pm
I’m so sorry you are going through this, it sounds so demoralizing. I know from meeting you at FitBloggin’ that you are not the lying-around kind. Sending you a virtual (and therefore pain-free, I hope) hug and lots of love.
October 8, 2013 at 12:36 pm
Ugh. Chronic pain. I’ve dealt with it a lot in the past few years. (thankfully, at the moment it is in the past). The inability to move. The inability to sleep.
The most telling thing for me is your truth #4. Chronic pain doesn’t show on the outside! Nothing tells the world how you are feeling. (and you, Susan, will do your best to put on a good face!) You look perfectly normal and the world doesn’t understand what you’re walking around in.
October 8, 2013 at 1:28 pm
Oh Susan. I’m so sorry 😦 So they don’t actually know what’s wrong with you yet? It’s awful and very very debilitating. My mom’s having chronic pain from a little fall at the beginning of this year and you are right, it’s expensive to be in pain from trying EVERYTHING possible to get rid of it plus all the plans that fall through. I am thinking about you and hope you get some relief soon. xxx
October 8, 2013 at 4:58 pm
you make it too real….i’ sending you hugs and yes, you will get better….si se puede….xxooo
October 8, 2013 at 6:27 pm
Im so sorry. Hope you feel better soon.
October 9, 2013 at 10:38 am
So sorry you are going through this….your points are SO on track…
as with any kind of pain….the part that sucks the most…..
…..we can’t make it go away…sometimes we have to go through it. Maybe it is time for a dragon program and tell the story as it happens of going “through” it. SO MANY would be grateful!
October 9, 2013 at 12:18 pm
Ugh, Susan I’m sorry this is happening. You know I had to write when I saw the post after this one where you said something about having your arm raised and behind your head as the only comfortable standing position. I’m sure you are getting lots of advice right now and I’m going to plunge in too. Feel free to ignore any or all of it!
A couple of years ago my dear hubby, Peter, experienced an excruciating episode of neck, shoulder, arm pain. Diagnosis: bulging disk and the spinal “narrowing” that you mentioned. It had probably been building for years and finally just gave out. He was in that same pacing, panting pain for days and that was with prescription strength NSAIDs, muscle relaxants, vicodan, yada, yada. It did almost nothing. I told his doctor I had never seen him in so much pain. At that he prescribed about 6-7 days of steroids. The number of pills tapered down with each day. Within 24-36 hours he had gone from squirm to tolerable. The stuff makes you shaky and hyper but it did work. I don’t know if this is an option for you or if it has already been tried but I want to let you know about our experience. It made a huge difference. Oh, and when his pain was really bad — he had to put his arm up behind his head. Exactly like your picture. It gave me the chills to see that. When he did it, I called it the “Michelangelo’s David” position.
Second piece of unsolicited advice: At the recommendation of a friend, Peter started to see a chiropractor. Claire Marie Holman, she is on Solano Avenue in Berkeley and she is absolutely wonderful. Very gentle, very thorough and very kind. She saw him frequently (every week or two?) when he was in crisis mode and now he goes religiously every month. It wasn’t necessarily like instant results but with regular visits she keeps everything calm and in alignment. He has learned various techniques for managing his degenerating disk (he wears a cervical collar when he works on the computer or is a passenger in a car). I was so impressed with Dr. Holman, I started going with Peter for half hour sessions for myself. I felt like it was a good idea since I spend a fair amount of time staring at a computer. I do feel like my body has fewer aches, pains, and tension spots.
There. Advice giving is over! But I do wish you a good and lasting recovery. If this blog of yours has proven anything it’s that you are one strong and resilient woman! Peace out, Tilly
October 9, 2013 at 12:46 pm
Oh, Tilly, thank you so much for your response! I didn’t think that the “moderate” narrowing was enough to cause this degree of disability/pain, but maybe it is…. and YES the “Michelango’s David” position is truly the only one I can tolerate. It’s crazy! I AM taking a course of steroids (day 4 now) and I have not noticed any appreciable difference except that I can now sleep through the night, which was impossible last week. But getting up and about it a different story. It’s horizontal or “over the head” position only. I’m also seeing a chiropractor AND a physical therapist. I just want to be functional again. Wahhhh… Thank you for chiming in. It really helps to know I’m not alone/crazy.
October 9, 2013 at 6:37 pm
You are doing everything you can to help yourself heal. Maybe being able to sleep through the night is the first step, healing power of Zzz and all. I think nerve injuries are some of the most painful (and can be frustratingly slow to heal) and they refer pain to all sorts of strange places. Peter had a lot of pain in his bicep even though the problem was in his cervical spine. So weird. Hang in there!
October 9, 2013 at 6:11 pm
Ok, so I’m at my goddaughter’s PUMP IT UP party in Oakland and climbing all these big blow-up toys and sliding down, having a blast when I felt my leg burn as I hoisted myself up the blow-up mountain. But of course I had to prove I COULD do it, so I pushed up there. That night I was in a lot of discomfort–back, leg, and hip pain. At the chiropractor, he said no one over ten should go on those things. He said he sees all kinds of misalignments from adults bouncing around on stuff. Ok. Well, yeah, he did electric stim and I’m icing and using a heating pad. My pain isn’t as bad and persistent as yours, but it’s an old somatic flare-up, a protective somatic pattern that is always active unless I’m body aware and relax it consciously. Frustrating!!!! I don’t know the source of your affliction and pain, but my chiropractor’s words helped me. He told me to view my situation as a “temporary ailment.” So Ito, please if you can, stay away from the fears of permanent disability. Yes, certainly a time of “learning.” Me, too. Going slower and paying my body more attention. Sending you sympathetic loving thoughts as we both heal.
October 11, 2013 at 12:43 am
Susan, this is the best essay I’ve read about chronic pain. As I lie in pain myself tonight, having given in to the strongest dose of oxycodone that I have, I feel like you hit the nail on the head: you spoke my truth and the truth of hundreds of thousands sufferers of chronic pain. Thanks for your insight and the amazing strength that you’ve shared via your words and photos. I hope your injury will soon heal and that you’ll be back to doing the things you love. Blessings, Laura
October 11, 2013 at 2:22 am
Laura, thank you. I know you have had to endure this for much longer than I. I wish for you relief and comfort as well.
October 11, 2013 at 6:06 pm
Sending you lots of love, healing thoughts and positive vibes. I know you will get through this. You are such an amazing lady. Your words touch me so much I wish I could help in some small way. You are in my prayers. Xoxo
October 13, 2013 at 11:14 pm
Susan, I’m so sorry you’ve been in so much pain! This is a good reminder for me that we are getting older and cannot do all the things we could as kids (I still love trampolines and diving boards.) What’s so maddening is that they can’t figure out what’s causing your pain! ARGH! My one experience with pain like this went away after a few days. I hope yours goes away soon too. On another note, maybe slowing down will give you an opportunity to write more? Or does it hurt to sit very long?
October 13, 2013 at 11:39 pm
I love that quote from Eleanor; maybe it still can ring true for you? Maybe, the thing for you is to relax and let the healing take place. Don’t rush it, be the patient now.
The thing you have done is INSPIRE many people to start their own health journey and become healthier for themselves. You have for me.
I wish I could do more for you, take some of the pain away. What I can do is offer a laugh, a smile and just be all around silly. Oh yeah, I can also bring you groceries. Just say the word.
My new tattoo will be because of you inspiring and challenging me. It will be a bicycle chain ring, supported by a trio of words that came to me as I pushed MY body to new limits on October 5, 2013. Challenge – Inspire – Success All 3 of these parts can mean something on their own, together, they are more powerful and can be read in any order.
Thank-you Susan!
October 23, 2013 at 3:47 am
This is wonderful writing – authentic and true. Keep writing. So very few people who go through something like this can express it – no one can express it like you. Please write more so other people can understand.