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

Grief


Googles

Recommended Posts

Googles Community Regular

I feel like I'm stuck in the grief process. And I'm back to the anger stage. I really thought that I had accepted my diagnosis and that there was nothing that was going to make it go away. But I am just so angry. And there is no one for me to be angry at. Except myself. It's my stupid body that can't work right. It's my stupid body that causes me to be excluded from social activities that involve food (which is pretty much all of them). Even when I tell my friends to include me, even if I wont be able to eat anything. It's my stupid body that can't eat most of the food at the grocery store. I walked into the small store at school and was overwhelmed by a sense of depression knowing that I couldn't eat my favorite foods. And never will be able to again. Didn't I have enough problems in my life without this?

Every time I travel (which is hardly ever anymore) I'm terrified of getting sick. I'm terrified of going on a trip to a conference that is 11 hours away by car and not being able to get back because I've gotten sick.

I hate this!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I hate my life!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I hate that I have to think about everything that could conceivably end up in my mouth.

I thought it would be easier knowing what was wrong the many months that I waited for all the testing to be done. Because then I wouldn't have to guess anymore. But now I just want to scream. But there is no one to hear me.

I have nightmares about accidentally ingesting the wrong food. Or more tantalizing dreams where some favorite food I can eat again. But then I wake up and am back to my reality.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



srall Contributor

I could be all pollyanna with a reply and say something like "At least you're probably eating a much healthier diet." But I know I know I know.

I was reading a book about Italy and wondering how I'd ever be able to travel to another country, much less one where I can't speak the language. It truly sucks. No other way to put it.

mscan91 Newbie

I have those nightmares ALL of the time.

Sometimes it just kills me. I watch people eating a slice of pizza or grabbing a cheese burger on the go and say "why do I have to struggle?!". And I know it's cliche... but it's really true, things could be a lot worse. I mean there are so many things my body still does for me. It limits me, yes. But I have to give credit where credit is due. I can walk, I can breathe. If you engrave that thought in your mind, the greif will let up.

God bless <3

JennQ Newbie

I just went through that phase again last week and here I sit glutened :(. I am angry that I got glutened off a freaking taco salad with CC (I assume) instead of something I would truly enjoy. These past two days kind of brought me in check.

The anger hits me about every other month. Mostly around the times that there is a lot of gatherings. That's the worst. I HATE people making sacrifices for me, but then feel like total crap when I'm left out. It's a catch 22.

One of the things I try to tell myself, which seems to be pretty common around here, is it could be worse. I watched my mom die of breast cancer. It's horrible to think about that, but when I do, I remind myself that I am cutting down my chances of dying.

I just want that magic shot to come out so I can enjoy just ONE meal without worrying ;)

'lynrn Apprentice

Wish i had some magic answers for you...I don't!!! I am really new to this myself and having a terrible time coping as well. I wish i could say that being older, wiser more educated etc...made it a lot easier...I am not certain that is true either. Experience and, I think time helps...what REALLY helps...is planning!!!!! Advance planning. I work on call, on the road, for several days at a time. i started checking out every fast food restaurant and grocery store and convenience store...planning just what I could grab. I have become pro active in eating out. I check out places in advance. I am now the person who suggests where we eat. I have phoned sooo many places and asked if they can do gluten free. I have had some real surprises too. A couple of places have been more than willing to work with me. One actually knew all about it although didn't advertise it. Yeh and I carry stuff with me. Ideal???? No but it sure beats being sick and the diarrhea etc that went with it.In most places there are safe alternatives to eat. Not what you were used to but safe. I know it is not a Big Mac but there might be a great place with stir fry and rice noodles???

ravenwoodglass Mentor

But now I just want to scream. But there is no one to hear me.

We are here, we hear you, go ahead and scream.

The fear that can come with this disease and strong gluten reactions can be so isolating. I know I have been there and am still struggling myself even after 8 years. Talking to a counselor has been helpful for me. You may want to see if you can link up with one. They can't make everything go away but perhaps they can help you to learn how to cope with it.

GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

I want to say it gets better, but I'm not sure if it ends. I'm 8 months without gluten. I still have days where I realize something else I can't have and it starts again. The thing that has helped me the most has been to focus on what I CAN have rather than what I can't and to look for substitutes for my former favorites. I know that's really hard when other people around you are shoveling in food without a care in the world. I find it helps to keep my favorite gluten free snacks on hand (as I discover what they are of course). The longer you do this the more you will find things you like to eat and it won't seem so bad. If gluten is your only restriction there are a ton of mainstream foods you can have. And even without gluten, dairy and soy I've found a way to cope in some situations. Just this week I was stuck at a car dealer getting my car worked on. I was only supposed to be there for less than an hour. Well the hour turned into 4 hours when they found other things that needed fixing. So I had to buy some Fritos out of the vending machine. A few months ago I would have just starved or had to call my DH to leave work and bring me food because I wouldn't have known that Fritos are, for the most part, safe (just corn and corn oil). But I had read it here on the board that they are. Surveying the vending machine there were several other gluten free snack options like Lays chips and Snickers. Not healthy of course, but better than being hungry or getting sick. I guess what I'm trying to say is that the longer you do this you will start to know what your "safe" options are and there will be fewer situations where you are left frustrated, hungry or sickened by hidden gluten. Until then continue to vent here. It helps to get the frustration out. We have been there and many of us are still there.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Lindsay630 Rookie

I came on here to write the exact same post! I obviously don't have an advice, but if you need a venting partner, I am willing to listen as long as I can vent back :) Hang in there!

Lindsay

notme Experienced

I just went through that phase again last week and here I sit glutened :(. I am angry that I got glutened off a freaking taco salad with CC (I assume) instead of something I would truly enjoy. These past two days kind of brought me in check.

The anger hits me about every other month. Mostly around the times that there is a lot of gatherings. That's the worst. I HATE people making sacrifices for me, but then feel like total crap when I'm left out. It's a catch 22.

One of the things I try to tell myself, which seems to be pretty common around here, is it could be worse. I watched my mom die of breast cancer. It's horrible to think about that, but when I do, I remind myself that I am cutting down my chances of dying.

I just want that magic shot to come out so I can enjoy just ONE meal without worrying ;)

ha I am already contemplating ruining my annual trip to nj b/c I don't know if I can resist the pizza and rationalizing it with 'well, I'm probably gonna get glutened anyway, might as well enjoy it' :)

just this past weekend we stayed overnight at our friends' house overnight. not only did they try sooo hard to feed me only for them to name a certain ingredient (wheat, milk, blah blah...) and me to tell them ' sorry ' ughhhhh I HATE that too!!! but they are good friends (and they think their daughter needs to be tested) so I imagine they will do some research:) and things will be better. anyway, besides that I had major panic over the whole staying overnight thing. this never bothered me before!! I'm a gypsy, husband is a trucker so I'm used to being packed and ready to go. argh, I can't imagine trying to find gluten-free AND truck parking.... :(

my mom also died of cancer :( and it runs rampant in my family...

my son is a type1 diabetic and HE feels sorry for ME. I'm all about hating that, too.

scream away, sweetie... I'm in a great mood today or I'd be right there with you!

Skylark Collaborator

I feel so bad for you. I went through all this with childhood food allergies. If you think it's hard as an adult, imagine having to bring a rice flour cupcake to birthday parties because you can't have the wheat cake or dairy ice cream.

My parents got me some counseling, and a really sweet child psychologist helped me a lot. He taught me to focus on the playing, the games with other kids, and all the other things my friends had to offer besides food. After the counseling, I became the kid leading the charge away from the table and out the door to play party games. ;)

I guess what I'm trying to say is focus on what you have, not what you lost. There is grieving when you give things up, but it can subside more quickly if you go looking for other things to fill the void. I look at shopping as a challenge, not a stress. It's sort of like my own game of Iron Chef where I make great food with an ingredient limitation. Healing will come when you find a whole new set of favorite foods. Just remember that lobster, caviar, steak, truffles, brie, and fine wine are all gluten-free!

Googles Community Regular

Thank you everyone for listening to me scream. I know this could be worse. And I was doing quite well for a while. But this has all just popped up again. I even wen tout to eat at a restaurant with friends for the first time. But I think this conference is terrifying me. I don't want to end up sick in another country. Ugh.

CarolinaKip Community Regular

I spent the first weekend on the couch after being dx Celiac : ( I was so sad at first, then angry. I get sad, angry or anxious from time to time. My extended family doesn't get it much. While they had deluxe subs, I had my gluten-free sammy. I couldn't use the veggies they had because they already had pre cut on a cutting board, emptied the bag etc. I am back at work at school, teacher workdays are hard. They went out to eat at Olive Garden yesterday. Even though they have a limited gluten-free menu, it was 12:30, there was no way I was going to risk it. I ate the food I brought. It makes me very sad at times, but I don't want to miss the socializing. Smelling their Subway subs has been hard too. When they placed breadsticks in front of me yesterday I almost freaked! I had one teacher to be so nice to remove them, however my teacher doesn't want me to talk about celiac at all.

Long time gluten-free eaters, does it come a time you accept this and don't look at others food and long for it? I know I feel better gluten-free and it's posion to me, but I still have my mouth water at certain foods.

Googles Community Regular

When people respond with "well it could be worse" it makes me angry. It makes me feel invalidated. It makes me feel that my feelings don't matter. I'm sorry that person X suffered from disease Y. That sucks. But that doesn't mean that my distress is any less. And this just comes on top of my other health issues. It just happens to be the newest one. The one I can't hide from others since so much stuff surrounds food. Or food surrounds so much stuff. I'm told I can vent and that people understand. But then I'm also told to just 'suck it up' because it could be worse. I try to reach out for support from people who have been there too. But I feel like I'm getting my hand slapped for asking for help. Yes some people are further along in the acceptance process. And I feel like I have back slid in that process. I was dealing with it really well for a while. Now I just want to hide from the world.

Skylark Collaborator

Long time gluten-free eaters, does it come a time you accept this and don't look at others food and long for it? I know I feel better gluten-free and it's posion to me, but I still have my mouth water at certain foods.

I'm five years gluten-free. My gluten reactions are pretty unpleasant and at this point gluten-containing things are not tempting in any way, shape, or form. I don't mind the smell of gluten things (in fact I rather enjoy the smell of Cinnabon in the mall) but there is no more temptation than there would be to eat those black, shiny, tasty-looking deadly nightshade berries out in the yard.

"It could be worse" is such a double-edged sword. It's powerful when you say it to yourself, because gratitude in any form usually feels better than anger and frustration. Problem is, it feels dismissive when someone else says it.

Googles I hope you don't mean you're getting your hand slapped here on the board. If you found my post not what you were looking for, please remember that I was desperately mentally ill from the effects of gluten on my mind and body. My anger is in a different place, at all the damn doctors who misdiagnosed me all of my life and made me horribly sick with psych meds. I had to grieve for the loss of about twelve years of my life and there is no way I can get them back.

Marz Enthusiast

I have nightmares about accidentally ingesting the wrong food. Or more tantalizing dreams where some favorite food I can eat again. But then I wake up and am back to my reality.

You're not the only one. :/ They're not nightmares, but I have disturbing dreams where I accidently eat gluten, or I'm just innocently eating pizza in a restaurant and sort of become "lucid" and say to myself "hey, I can't eat this!" - like what the hell! And then in the dream I'm all p-d off with myself for letting myself down, and when I wake up I'm so relieved it was just a dream because holy hell I wouldn't want to have a week of feeling awful.

I also hate going to the grocery store, or the cafe's and watching people buy/eat all sorts of gluteny awesome treats.

I don't know what to suggest, except that you should try to focus on what you can eat. I've told myself I can eat any fruit I like! I go to the fruit/vege market and just buy everything in sight! Try find some non-glutenous food you can eat that you love, and spoil yourself when you feel down about not being able to eat gluten.

Hoping some others here have better suggestions :/

Marz Enthusiast

I look at shopping as a challenge, not a stress. It's sort of like my own game of Iron Chef where I make great food with an ingredient limitation.

I think this is a good suggestion. I've also found it interesting coming up with new ways to mimic my favourites, and some relief from the "Grief" in being able to make my own corn pizza base, rice biscuits etc. I'm working up to bread ;) Now I just need to find a gluten-free flour mix that doesn't affect me...

For example, toasted sammies - I found some gluten-free crunchy corn "thins", I put exactly the same toppings on this and put it in the oven to grill a bit. Tastes pretty close to a toasted sammie, if not identical. Corn base pizza's - I've got a pretty good recipe, just takes some extra time to make the bases. I can put on all the same gluten-free toppings I used before, and it tastes pretty good.

I think the hardest part is not being able to pop into a bakery/restaurant/cafe and just order whatever looks yummy on the menu :( Feeling a ton better does help somewhat with everything. I try to keep that in mind when I feel deprived.

Hope you feel better soon, Googles. I find I get even more depressed when I get accidently glutened, which really doesn't help!!

Gemini Experienced

I could be all pollyanna with a reply and say something like "At least you're probably eating a much healthier diet." But I know I know I know.

I was reading a book about Italy and wondering how I'd ever be able to travel to another country, much less one where I can't speak the language. It truly sucks. No other way to put it.

Italy has an extremely high awareness of Celiac and accommodate people to an unbelievable level. Unless you are in some remote village where no one speaks English, travel is not hard at all with Celiac and I am an extremely sensitive Celiac. I am headed off to England and Scotland next month and have never had any problems traveling with this disease. Really....it can be done successfully. As you travel more, you become more confident. I may have to do things a bit differently like rent an apartment vs. staying in a hotel so I have a kitchen to cook breakfast in but as an apartment doesn't cost any more than a hotel and you get much more room, that works out well. Dinner is easy to do and Europeans all seem to know what celiac is.....it's not like here in the States.

If someone is stuck in the anger phase too long, a good counselor may be able to help become unstuck. I also found that when I had to be referred to a hematologist for additional testing that turned out to be nothing, all it took was one visit in a roomful of people who were being treated for cancer and may well die to cure me of any feelings of being sorry for myself. Sounds trite and I am not trying to belittle anyone's feelings BUT that's how it worked with me.

precious831 Contributor

I've been gluten-free for about 9 months, or maybe 10 gosh I should have written the day I started. Initially I was just so happy to find out what's been ailing me. Then this year, around spring, I had some type of breakdown. I just cried for days and felt so depressed about this whole issue. I'm gluten and dairy-free and I think I'm now reacting to soy too. I don't know why it took long for it to really dawn on me, I guess feeling like an outcast at parties did it.

I'm also sad for my DD, she's not even 3 and she's got multiple foods she's avoiding, gluten included on the list. She's one of those kids who has to bring her own cupcake at b'day parties. Now that she's getting older, she's understanding it more and it breaks my heart when she gets upset or cries when she can't have what other kids are eating. I think this bothers me more than my own issues w/ gluten/dairy/soy. I'm better now(emotionally), just taking each day at a time. I haven't had communion in a long time, I've been getting the nerve to talk to the pastor, I know it's nothing, it's just that I just don't feel like talking to him about celiac disease right now.

Sorry this is long and winded, you're in good company. It'll get better, get your anger out now, and we're all here for you, we're gonna get through this together.

srall Contributor

Italy has an extremely high awareness of Celiac and accommodate people to an unbelievable level. Unless you are in some remote village where no one speaks English, travel is not hard at all with Celiac and I am an extremely sensitive Celiac. I am headed off to England and Scotland next month and have never had any problems traveling with this disease. Really....it can be done successfully. As you travel more, you become more confident. I may have to do things a bit differently like rent an apartment vs. staying in a hotel so I have a kitchen to cook breakfast in but as an apartment doesn't cost any more than a hotel and you get much more room, that works out well. Dinner is easy to do and Europeans all seem to know what celiac is.....it's not like here in the States.

If someone is stuck in the anger phase too long, a good counselor may be able to help become unstuck. I also found that when I had to be referred to a hematologist for additional testing that turned out to be nothing, all it took was one visit in a roomful of people who were being treated for cancer and may well die to cure me of any feelings of being sorry for myself. Sounds trite and I am not trying to belittle anyone's feelings BUT that's how it worked with me.

Thank you. This is very nice to know (about Italy). The only trip now I have on the horizon (besides family homes) is Disney World in the spring. I know if was just discussed in another thread, but I'm sure I'll be on posting many questions before we go. But yeah, figuring that I'd never be able to go to Europe again, that was too depressing to think about. Good to know it's in my future again!

Gemini Experienced

Thank you. This is very nice to know (about Italy). The only trip now I have on the horizon (besides family homes) is Disney World in the spring. I know if was just discussed in another thread, but I'm sure I'll be on posting many questions before we go. But yeah, figuring that I'd never be able to go to Europe again, that was too depressing to think about. Good to know it's in my future again!

I am sure you have heard that Disney is very gluten free friendly also so you should have no worries there! Many people with Celiac kids oft for Disney and have been very pleased with their vacations. :D

sandsurfgirl Collaborator

I am sure you have heard that Disney is very gluten free friendly also so you should have no worries there! Many people with Celiac kids oft for Disney and have been very pleased with their vacations. :D

We live pretty close to Disneyland in CA and go there a lot. At the City Hall they will give you a printout of the gluten free options in the park. Also there are generally more at individual restaurants that aren't even listed. TONS of options at disney. Gluten free hot dog buns, pasta, etc. And they are well trained for Cc. some of the restaurants even have a separate gluten free menu they hand you.

GFinDC Veteran

Hi Googles,

I think your feelings are perfectly normal. Being different is, well being different. It takes some getting used to, especially when it is thrust on you all of a sudden. It kind of reminds me of those dreams where you are going around doing all kinds of things and suddenly realize you are nekked, and nobody said anything. Except we aren't nekked, we just can't eat all the things "normal" people eat. Realizing that difference is permanent and adapting to a new way of life is something that takes time to digest (pun intended). I mean, one day you are just like any other happy go lucky sap on the street, and the next you have a chronic, incurable disease that affects your life in many ways. One day you can eat anything you want, and the next day you find out licking stamps can be dangerous for you. It's a big change.

Anyhow, after a while things can get better though. People can learn new ways of doing things, thinking about things, living and so can you. So keep going and get better, dang it! :)

I like Romans 5:3-5. Maybe you'd like it too.

Aphreal Contributor

Sometimes when I am feeling sensitive about it all, I feel actually betrayed by my body, betrayed by food. I was estatic when I learned how to cook breads gluten free... until I started making them and having reactions. It was then I learned that I have issue with how grain carbs react in my body. So I had to back off. Find that balance. I eat carb light, no gluten, I cut the biggest sugar offenders and I am back to feeling physically great. The meds I am on make me loopy but damn, I mean I guess I can't have it all.

My celiac bloodtest came back negative. DUH! I told her it would, Ive been gluten-free for 6 weeks but it means nothing. Going gluten free has taken my migraines away, my muscle pain and my arthritis pain. The glutenfree/carb and sugar light have really made a difference in my gut.It has taken some of the fog away too.

My point is, you have to find a balance and that is not fun. You have to get to a point where you can do that though. I think this stage in the game has a purpose. You need to grieve. Then it's time to do what needs doing to figure out what will work for YOU so you can have a better quality of life.

Hang in there, work with these feelings then deal with them and head on into the next phase. I am still new at this so please understand these are my thoughts only.

notme Experienced

I haven't had communion in a long time, I've been getting the nerve to talk to the pastor, I know it's nothing, it's just that I just don't feel like talking to him about celiac disease right now.

my plan: to bring my own lil piece o bread in a lil ziplok. need to make sure the 'wine' is gluten-free. lol contemplating bringing real wine haha that way ill be *sure* :D kidding! I don't have enough for everybody :P

mushroom Proficient

I no longer crave gluten (only the sensation of crusty sourdough french :rolleyes: ) When I see plates of gluten-laden food I feel physically ill, especially the fast food which makes me want to puke. My husband, who gets DH, and I make yummy things together and try to make the best food ever. When I make a mac 'n cheese, for example, I buy really good cheese and dress it up with breadcrumbs and melted butter on top, and then say, OMG, this is Sooooo good! When I make a pizza (no tomato, mind you) I encase the pepperoni and olives in mozzarella, and then pile on sauteed mushrooms, garlic and onions, some provolone and artichoke hearts, then parmesan, and say yum, this is the bestest pizza evah! (Don't do it often because of the calories, but I go all out, not just ho-hum pizza :lol: ) If we do Christmas with family, we will do a Christmas dinner on our own some other day and spend the whole day cooking wondrous things we love, and not worry about what everyone else is eating.

I am glad to have finally arrived in this space because it does make life easier. Instead of spending the money on eating out, we spend it on fine ingredients we make into delicious food we can eat in. And we don't envy the food other people are eating because we know the yummy stuff we have at home.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,857
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    LowellFrancis
    Newest Member
    LowellFrancis
    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

    • Rogol72
      Some interesting articles regarding the use of Zinc Carnosine to help heal gastric ulcers, gastritis and intestinal permeability. I would consult a medical professional about it's use. https://www.nature.com/articles/ncpgasthep0778 https://www.rupahealth.com/post/clinical-applications-of-zinc-carnosine---evidence-review https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7146259/ https://www.fallbrookmedicalcenter.com/zinc-l-carnosine-benefits-dosage-and-safety/
    • Jillian83
      He is. Which makes everything even more difficult. I’m not a believer in “staying for the kids” but I have nowhere to go and it’s not just me, it’s me plus my babies. We live in a beautiful place, lots of land in the country and me and the kids love the place we’ve called home for their entire lives. But Im seeing that he’ll never change, that my kids deserve a happy healthy Momma, and that staying in this as is will be the early death of me. Then I look at the scars covering my entire body…this disease and the chronic stress I’ve been enduring for years that tell me I’m no longer beautiful and no one will ever look at me with interest again. I try self care, try to give myself grace so I can just start loving myself enough to gain strength but the slightest sparkle in my eye and skip in my step attracts his wrath and it all comes crashing ten fold. Life is just absolutely railing me from every single direction leaving me wanting to wave that white flag bc I don’t feel like there’s much hope no matter what happens. 
    • trents
    • Jillian83
      Hi, I was recently diagnosed with Celiac and dermatitis herpetiformis after years of suffering without answers. I lost my mind. I lost my job. I lost so much time. I lost Me. Conventional doctors are opulent come near me and the one who did sat across the room, misdiagnosed me, pumped me full of steroids which collapsed my entire hip for 6 months. So without answers I began my holistic journey. Fast forward a couple of years and still struggling with a mysterious whole body itchy, crawling “skin hell”, perfect teeth now deteriorating, thick hair now thinning rapidly and no more than a day or 2 at most relief….An acquaintance opened up a functional medicine practice. Cash only, I found a way. Within a month tests clearly showing my off the charts gluten allergy/sensitivity as well as the depletion of vital nutrients due to leaky gut and intestinal damage. dermatitis herpetiformis was more than likely what I was experiencing with my skin. I was happy. I thought this is easy, eat healthy Whole Foods, follow the diet restrictions and I finally get to heal and feel confident and like myself again very soon! 😔 Supplements are very pricey but I got them and began my healing. Which leads to the other major issue: not working, stay at home Mom of young kids, entirely financially dependent on my man of 7 plus years. He’s never been supportive of anything I’ve ever done or been thru. He controls everything. I’m not given much money ever at a time and when he does leave money it’s only enough to possibly get gas. His excuse is that I’ll spend it on other things. So my “allowance” is inconsistent and has conditions. He withholds money from me as punishment for anything he wants. Since being diagnosed, he’s gained a new control tactic to use as punishment. He now is in control of when I get to eat. He asked for proof of my diagnosis and diet bc he said I made it up just to be able to eat expensive organic foods. Then after I sent him my file from my doctor he then said she wasn’t a real doctor. 😡. I go days upon days starving, sometimes breaking down and eating things I shouldn’t bc I’m so sick then I pay horribly while he gets annoyed and angry bc I’m not keeping up with all the duties I’m supposed to be doing. His abuse turns full on when I’m down and it’s in these desperate times when I need his support and care the most that I’m punished with silence, being starved, ignored, belittled. He will create more of a mess just bc I’m unable to get up and clean so that when I am better, I’m so overwhelmed with chores to catch up that the stress causes me to go right back into a flare from hell and the cycle repeats. I’m punished for being sick. I’m belittled for starving and asking for healthy clean water. I’m purposely left out of his life. He won’t even tell me he’s going to the grocery or to get dinner bc he doesn’t want me to ask him for anything. I have no one. I have nothing. Im not better. My supplements ran out and I desperately need Vitamin D3 and a methylated B complex at the very minimal just to function….he stares at me blankly…no, a slight smirk, no words. He’s happiest when im miserable and I am miserable.  this is so long and im condensing as much as I can but this situation is so complicated and disgusting. And it’s currently my life. The “IT” girl, the healthy, beautiful, perfect skin, perfect teeth, thick and curly locks for days, creative and talented IT girl….now I won’t even leave this house bc Im ashamed of what this has dont to my body, my skin. Im disgusted. The stress is keeping me from healing and I think he knows that and that’s why he continues to keep me in that state. He doesn’t want me confident or successful. He doesn’t want me healed and healthy bc then how would he put the blame of all his problems on me? This journey has been hell and I’ve been in Hell before. I’ve been killed by an ex, I’ve been raped, robbed, held hostage, abused beyond nightmares but the cruelty I’ve experienced from him bc of this disease is the coldest I’ve ever experienced. I’ve wanted to give up. Starving and in tears, desperate…I found a local food pantry in our small town so I reached out just saying I had Celiac and was on hard times. This woman is blessing me daily with prepared gluten free meals, donations, educational info, people who know this disease and how they manage life and the blessings just keep coming. But it’s overwhelming and I feel like I don’t deserve it at all. He just glared and I know he’s going to sabotage it somehow. I don’t even know what to do anymore. I’m so broken and just want peace and healing. 
    • cristiana
      @Colleen H   I am just curious,  when you were tested for coeliac disease, did the doctors find out if you had any deficiencies? Sometimes muscle pain can be caused by certain deficiencies, for example, magnesium, vitamin D, calcium, and potassium.   Might be worth looking into having some more tests.  Pins and needles can be neuropathy, again caused by deficiencies, such as iron and B12,  which can be reversed if these deficiencies are addressed. In the UK where I live we are usually only tested for iron, B12 and vitamin D deficiencies at diagnosis.   I was very iron anemic and supplementation made a big difference.  B12 was low normal, but in other countries the UK's low normal would be considered a deficiency.  My vitamin D was low normal, and I've been supplementing ever since (when I remember to take it!) My pins and needles definitely started to improve when my known deficiencies were addressed.  My nutritionist also gave me a broad spectrum supplement which really helped, because I suspect I wasn't just deficient in what I mention above but in many other vitamins and minerals.  But a word of warning, don't take iron unless blood tests reveal you actually need it, and if you are taking it your levels must be regularly monitored because too much can make you ill.  (And if you are currently taking iron, that might actually be making your stomach sore - it did mine, so my GP changed my iron supplementation to a gentler form, ferrous gluconate). Lastly, have you been trying to take anything to lessen the pain in your gut?  I get a sore stomach periodically, usually when I've had too much rich food, or when I have had to take an aspirin or certain antibiotics, or after glutening.  When this happens, I take for just a few days a small daily dose of OTC omeprazole.  I also follow a reflux or gastritis diet. There are lots online but the common denominators to these diets is you need to cut out caffeine, alcohol, rich, spicy, acidic food etc and eat small regularly spaced meals.   When I get a sore stomach, I also find it helpful to drink lots of water.  I also find hot water with a few slices of ginger very soothing to sip, or camomile tea.  A wedge pillow at night is good for reflux. Also,  best not to eat a meal 2-3 hours before going to bed. If the stomach pain is getting worse, though, it would be wise to see the doctor again. I hope some of this helps. Cristiana    
×
×
  • 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.