Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

I Need Some Help With This One Y'all


conniebky

Recommended Posts

conniebky Collaborator

Since I've been gluten-free, except for my two slip ups, I've been feeling so much better. I've felt like going out, etc.

This morning I went to the Peddlers Mall, saw some people I know (impossible not to in a small town), I LOVE going to vintage shops, Goodwill, thrift stores...anyway, after two aisles, I broke out into a sweat, panicked, sweating like my entire shirt was soaked, I mean THAT bad.

I had three of my Grandbabies with me and they were being Angels. I felt like everyone in there was going to start screaming at me....or the roof was going to fall in. We hightailed it home, I took a valium, after about two hours, I decided to go to the grocery to get all the stuff I'm going to cook this weekend for next week.

I flipped out in there, too! I was going to take a picture cuz my 7 year old, she got one of those little carts and in it was tomatoes, a pineapple, a salad, strawberries, cucumbers...that was her treats that she picked out. Seriously. No chips, no cookies, that's what she likes. And, yes, I have taught all of them that and yes I am proud about that.

Then I felt like the floor was, like, moving up towards me. My Grandbaby asked me a question and I said the "F" word to her :o Then I said honey, we got to get out of her, Nonnie don't feel so good. Well we went through that stupid u scan thing and it kept getting stuck and I kept getting more freaked out and then I yelled at the person who was supposed to be watching the u scan, but she was texting and I wanted to get out of there, so ....then it stopped again cuz my Grandbaby took a bag off the scale thing and put in the cart, so the girl came over and tried to explain to me about that, I said, "she's is TRYING to help me, please woman, Shut the F up".

She looked at me trying to decide about that and I said, "please, I have to get out of here" so then we looked at each other and she goes, "you are really really red in the face"

Know what? We put the groceries in the car, got the air going, and I was fine, right back to myself.

What's your alls opinion of this? My daughter says cuz I've been sick and haven't gone out by myself anywhere since February and I'm not used to it. This was not a gluten thing, this was a total freak out for no apparent reason. I wasn't dizzy, my heart wasn't beating fast, I was only sweating really bad and had like this animal instinct to get OUT ........

what do you all think?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



looking4help Apprentice

I don't have an explanation for you but I can say that I totally GET what you are saying happened. This has happened to me a bit as well.

It's like the world is spinning, the heater is turned on full blast and someone is pouring the sweat all over me b/c I have never sweated like that b4 in my life! I can't breathe, my head pounds, my ears feel like they are going to explode off my head and then things really go black and narrow.

I too have to either get right in front of the A/C in my car or one day I just stripped off my shorts and literally fell in the pool b/c that was where I was standing. Thank goodness we have a privacy fence.

I know what you are feeling. I have been taking things really, really a lot slower. My body has been so sick for so long it's like I just can't do it. I keep being told I need to give it time.

I just want you to know you aren't alone. I hope someone has some suggestions for us. ((((hugs))) for you!

kareng Grand Master

I agree with Sis. You were panicking. Tomorrow, go to a grocery without the kids. Go up and down 4 aisles and buy 2-4 items. Even if you don't need anything, get a bag of frozen green beans and a container of salt or sugar. You can do that, right? You've done that a thousand times.

Here's what I was told to do when you are skiing and you get scared. Sing a silly song. In the store, maybe don't sing out loud. Pick something silly, the theme to Sesame Street, one of those country songs you like about getting revenge on a cheating spouse, ....and sing it in your head.

The other trick is to just get out of the car and rush right in. Hurry up and down your 4 aisles and grab your marshmallows and bag of carrots. Stuff you don't have to stop and read the ingredients. Don't give yourself time to panic.

Also, some of us around here wear light sun glasses in the grocery. The fluorescent lights can trigger migraines and bother a lot of women. Anyone comments, which is unlikely, just say allergies are making your eyes extra sensitive.

You can do this but the key is to get back on that horse soon, soon, soon! I have set the goal this time, you can add to it or keep it the same for a few tries.

Good luck! You can do it!

kimann79 Apprentice

I have OCD and have suffered from panic and anxiety attacks. That's what it sounds like to me.

I agree with the previous poster. Sensitize yourself to going to the grocery store and buying a couple things. Keep doing that until you are able to do a whole trip and than bring a grandchild along. I've learned with my anxiety that you have to keep exposing yourself to those triggers. Little bit by little bit until you are able to handle it without having a panic attack.

conniebky Collaborator

Wow that is bizzare! I thought at one point that I'd feel better if I could put on my sunglasses. There's a Wally World (wal mart) by us that I went in three years ago at Christmas and I've never been back.

It's big, warehouse, all high lighting, I can't take that place. If someone asks me why I have on sunglasses I'll tell them cuz I have pink eye - wanna see it? LOL! There was an old movie called Oh, God with John Denver and oh, who was that old man - George Burns, he played God. So, he appears to John Denver and JOhn Denver's too scared to talk to him, so "God" tells him, just do something normal, it'll take your mind off how big this is. So John Denver starts shaving and it helps.

I was trying to think about that when I started freaking, but that didn't work, so I'll just sing, "you ain't woman enough to take my man"....great advise and I will use it.

YEsterday I went to the Liquor Barn to get my gluten-free beer - Oh, and they had one that was FOURTEEN DOLLARS for six and it said, "guaranteed no more than 6 gluten PPM." the heck with YOU! That means it's gluten! Stupid! Anyway, they were giving out cheese and cracker samples and they would NOT leave me alone about having a sample. I go "I have allergies" he goes, "not to this you wont! It's great!" Seriously? :blink:

Anyway, I will do this tomorrow, good idea about buying things I don't have to read. Like, at the Peddlers Mall, that's ALL browsing, and I want to get back to where I can enjoy it.

K8ling Enthusiast

I have felt like this before too, it was hard for me to go out once I had my baby because I was so afraid something would happen to me and then what would happen to my baby?? I had panic attacks until I was diagnosed. Now I have a medic alert which I can take off and toss at people, and I can usually tell if I am having a bad stomach day in which case I just don't go out. It's gotten tons better. It took time for me to be ok going places with my little boy, but I ma much better now.

The sensitizing is a GREAT idea, I used to panic just going in for a few things and now I can go on a whole grocery shopping trip with my toddler, no problem, I do it 2x a month lol. It'll get better, it'll just take time.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

As someone who has been fighting serious agoraphobis now for a year and a half I have to agree with the little baby steps at first. That's how I have come along the best. Another thing you may want to consider is asking your doctor if it is okay to take a half a valium before you do something that has brought these attacks on. That's called propholactic (sp) use and is how I have been able to go back to college and now most days I can either go without it or only take a quarter tab before I leave for class.

I take alprazolam and when I first started this fight back into the world my doctor told me to take half a one with me (in the script bottle of course) and when the attack would start to put it under my tongue. It would then go very quickly into the bloodstream and directly to the brain. Please ask your doctor if the valium would work the same way before you try it and be aware it will taste awful.

Also have you made sure the valium your taking is gluten free? Here one dentist kept giving me the generic form, or tryed to anyway, and it wasn't gluten-free. Only the name brand was but it was very expensive. That's why my shrink uses the alprazolam for me, in that case the name brand, Xanax is not gluten free but the generic is. If you have gluten issues the Valium may help with the symptoms when you take it but if it is a form that is not gluten free it will keep the process going.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Skylark Collaborator

Connie, luv, I think you're getting really bad hot flashes. You can get soaked with sweat, red in the face, anxious, dizzy, uneasy. If you were out in the heat, this might have triggered a couple. That's why you felt better back in the car with the A/C blasting.

kwylee Apprentice

Perhaps it is a hot flash, but I've run hot all my life. Always hotter than everybody else; so much so that for years I feared going through menopause figuring I'd probably spontaneously combust!!!! - but that came and went and I have yet to have a true hot flash as described by all of my contemporary friends.

Here's the weird thing about grocery stores, big box or high ceiling stores. Since I started symptoms of vertigo and dizziness years back, I feel strange in those places. I'll get up in the morning, feel fine, then walk into the grocery and somewhere along the way, will begin feeling "something isn't right". Sometimes I've been pretty dizzy during those times, like when I was going through gluten/casein withdrawal, but now that's 97% passed, I still detect it, some times worse than others. And some stores are consistently worse than others.

And I'm not alone. My sister in law is not gluten sensitive that I know of but swears that she gets dizzy in our Wal Mart "by the time she gets to the pork and beans", so for her, it's the same place in the store. My husband reports feeling crappy and bizarre in those places as well.

I agree those places are setting off some type of panic/anxiety response, but could it be more than gluten particles? Florescent(sp?) lighting? Subliminal suggestions coming over a loud speaker? High electro-magnetic fields? Weird frequency? I don't mean to sound like a nut case, but I was in a Wal Mart a couple years ago and witnessed a glass tumbler explode on the shelf before me, all by itself. I ran and got an employee and explained that I hadn't touched it, and she told me that she knew because she had seen it happen or heard others speak of it on numerous occasions. The shelf was sitting right next to one of those large columns and I wondered if massive electrical conduit was run through those pilasters, but my husband suspected it had more to do with unheard sound frequency.

Gluten (and for me, casein) affects my nervous system. It seems logical to think that my system would be really sensitive inside AND out.

gabby Enthusiast

I have sort of similar problems with big stores that have lights waaaaay up high.....and don't have lots of natural light. Never really figured it out, but I read somewhere that fluorescent lighting coupled with bad air circulation can affect sensitive people in all sorts of weird ways. One thing that was recommended was to wear brown tinted sunglasses indoors. The brown tint is supposed to block a certain part of the light spectrum (I think it is the blue spectrum) which helps to filter out the crazy flicker from various types of lighting. I tried it myself and it helps a lot. My problem is that I feel incredibly tired and lose all my energy. When I wear my brown tinted sunglasses, I don't feel tired.

Another thing that makes me feel awful and makes me have to leave a place immediately are these triggers: oranges, fertilizers in plastic bags at garden centers, any kind of weed killer or bug killer in the gardening section of the store, the perfume department, and anywhere where they are cutting up cardboard boxes.

Hope you get to the bottom of your triggers.

BethM55 Enthusiast

I have sort of similar problems with big stores that have lights waaaaay up high.....and don't have lots of natural light. Never really figured it out, but I read somewhere that fluorescent lighting coupled with bad air circulation can affect sensitive people in all sorts of weird ways. One thing that was recommended was to wear brown tinted sunglasses indoors. The brown tint is supposed to block a certain part of the light spectrum (I think it is the blue spectrum) which helps to filter out the crazy flicker from various types of lighting. I tried it myself and it helps a lot. My problem is that I feel incredibly tired and lose all my energy. When I wear my brown tinted sunglasses, I don't feel tired.

Another thing that makes me feel awful and makes me have to leave a place immediately are these triggers: oranges, fertilizers in plastic bags at garden centers, any kind of weed killer or bug killer in the gardening section of the store, the perfume department, and anywhere where they are cutting up cardboard boxes.

Hope you get to the bottom of your triggers.

Interesting! Maybe that's why I've always preferred amber lenses in my sunglasses. I, too, feel odd, stressed, sometimes dizzy, in big stores with fluorescent lighting and lots of noise. I'll try wearing my sunglasses in those sorts of stores, see if it helps. I have reading lenses in my sunglasses, so that's my excuse, if anyone asks! B)

mushroom Proficient

I have reading lenses in my sunglasses, so that's my excuse, if anyone asks! B)

Me too. I quite often wear sunglasses in there (unless I have to actually read something, in which case it's usually to dark to see with them :rolleyes: ) But I usually wear them in those huge malls where there are three floors and you look down from the top and see all the lines of people walking around like ants in a trail, and I get the heebies. Only good for about an hour in one of those places :huh:. But in the supermarket, it must be looking at all that gluten because I nearly always get diarrhea, the only time I do nowadays :lol:

sandsurfgirl Collaborator

I had horrible gluten induced panic attacks. When I went gluten free they nearly went away, but not completely.

I get dizzy, short of breath, my throat is tight, feel like I can't swallow, feel like the room is spinning and I might pass out.

My first grocery store trip after diagnosis I had a major anxiety attack and I left my entire cart of groceries in the aisle and ran out to my car crying hysterically. I barely made it the few blocks home because I thought I would pass out and have an accident. I cried like a crazy woman for about half an hour.

It didn't take long to get used to the lifestyle and shopping is fine now.

One thing that helps is to focus on blowing OUT not sucking air in. You feel like you are short of breath but in reality you are over breathing or hyperventilating. Take a small breath in and then slowly blow it all out until you have no air left in your lungs. Squeeze your stomach in so you force all the air out. After a few of these breaths the tightness in your chest will open up and you'll feel better.

Also recognizing that it's a panic attack and doing self talk in your head helps a lot.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,543
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    yfuvhg
    Newest Member
    yfuvhg
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Beverage
      I had a very rough month after diagnosis. No exaggeration, lost so much inflammatory weight, I looked like a bag of bones, underneath i had been literally starving to death. I did start feeling noticeably better after a month of very strict control of my kitchen and home. What are you eating for breakfast and lunch? I ignored my doc and ate oats, yes they were gluten free, but some brands are at the higher end of gluten free. Lots of celics can eat Bob's Red Mill gluten-free oats, but not me. I can now eat them, but they have to be grown and processed according to the "purity protocol" methods. I mail order them, Montana Gluten-Free brand. A food and symptoms and activities log can be helpful in tracking down issues. You might be totally aware, but I have to mention about the risk of airborne gluten. As the doc that diagnosed me warned . . Remember eyes, ears, nose, and mouth all lead to your stomach and intestines.  Are you getting any cross contamination? Airborne gluten? Any pets eating gluten (they eat it, lick themselves, you pet them...)? Any house remodeling? We live in an older home, always fixing something. I've gotten glutened from the dust from cutting into plaster walls, possibly also plywood (glues). The suggestions by many here on vitamin supplements also really helped me. I had some lingering allergies and asthma, which are now 99% gone. I was taking Albuterol inhaler every hour just to breathe, but thiamine in form of benfotiamine kicked that down to 1-2 times a day within a few days of starting it. Also, since cutting out inflammatory seed oils (canola, sunflower, grapeseed, etc) and cooking with real olive oil, avocado oil, ghee, and coconut oil, I have noticed even greater improvement overall and haven't used the inhaler in months! It takes time to weed out everything in your life that contains gluten, and it takes awhile to heal and rebuild your health. At first it's mentally exhausting, overwhelming, even obsessive, but it gets better and second nature.
    • Jsingh
      Hi,  I care for my seven year old daughter with Celiac. After watching her for months, I have figured out that she has problem with two kinds of fats- animal fat and cooking oils. It basically makes her intestine sore enough that she feels spasms when she is upset. It only happens on days when she has eaten more fat than her usual every day diet. (Her usual diet has chia seeds, flaxseeds, and avocado/ pumpkin seeds for fat and an occasional chicken breast.) I stopped using cooking oils last year, and when I reintroduced eggs and dairy, both of which I had held off for a few months thinking it was an issue of the protein like some Celiac patients habe mentioned to be the case, she has reacted in the same fashion as she does with excess fats. So now I wonder if her reaction to dairy and eggs is not really because of protein but fat.   I don't really have a question, just wondering if anyone finds this familiar and if it gets better with time.  Thank you. 
    • Chanda Richard
      Hello, My name is Chanda and you are not the only one that gose through the same things. I have found that what's easiest for me is finding a few meals each week that last. I have such severe reactions to gluten that it shuts my entire body down. I struggle everyday with i can't eat enough it feels like, when I eat more I lose more weight. Make sure that you look at medication, vitamins and shampoo and conditioner also. They have different things that are less expensive at Walmart. 
    • petitojou
      Thank you so much! I saw some tips around the forum to make a food diary and now that I know that the community also struggles with corn, egg and soy, the puzzle pieces came together! Just yesterday I tried eating eggs and yes, he’s guilty and charged. Those there are my 3 combo nausea troublemakers. I’m going to adjust my diet ☺️ Also thank you for the information about MCAS! I’m from South America and little it’s talked about it in here. It’s honestly such a game changer now for treatment and recovery. I know I’m free from SIBO and Candida since I’ve been tested for it, but I’m still going to make a endoscopy to test for H. Pylori and Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE). Thank you again!! Have a blessed weekend 🤍
    • knitty kitty
      Yes, I, too, have osteoporosis from years of malabsorption, too.  Thiamine and magnesium are what keep the calcium in place in the bones.  If one is low in magnesium, boron, selenium, zinc, copper, and other trace minerals, ones bone heath can suffer.  We need more than just calcium and Vitamin D for strong bones.  Riboflavin B 2, Folate B 9 and Pyridoxine B 6 also contribute to bone formation and strength.   Have you had your thyroid checked?  The thyroid is important to bone health as well.  The thyroid uses lots of thiamine, so a poorly functioning thyroid will affect bone heath.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.