Worst pain in the world?
Discussion
When my missus was giving birth, she was moaning like a goodun about how much it hurt.
I said if you remember love, I wanted to stick in the tradesmans but you said oh no, that'll be too painful.
Anyway, the swelling's gone down & the doctor is confident I should get the sight back in my right eye in a few weeks.
I said if you remember love, I wanted to stick in the tradesmans but you said oh no, that'll be too painful.
Anyway, the swelling's gone down & the doctor is confident I should get the sight back in my right eye in a few weeks.
Justin Cyder said:
When my missus was giving birth, she was moaning like a goodun about how much it hurt.
I said if you remember love, I wanted to stick in the tradesmans but you said oh no, that'll be too painful.
Anyway, the swelling's gone down & the doctor is confident I should get the sight back in my right eye in a few weeks.
I said if you remember love, I wanted to stick in the tradesmans but you said oh no, that'll be too painful.
Anyway, the swelling's gone down & the doctor is confident I should get the sight back in my right eye in a few weeks.
SL said:
P-Jay said:
Mrs says it's still nothing on child birth, but she's talking st.
Try having a c-section and having the anaesthetic wear off. It's really not fun.Having a bad ingrowing toenail lanced by your mother with a hot needle and no pain relief - new swearwords were discovered that day.
Jointly painful was having jaw surgery that required me to eat liquid foods for a month (not so much outright pain, just constant mild pain for 8 weeks)
Dislocating my knee, in the process cracking said knee cap and tearing my ACL - that was jolly painful too.
Jointly painful was having jaw surgery that required me to eat liquid foods for a month (not so much outright pain, just constant mild pain for 8 weeks)
Dislocating my knee, in the process cracking said knee cap and tearing my ACL - that was jolly painful too.
ChrisRS6 said:
Gout?
Not sure if ive spelt it correctly....but some of the older guys at work...mens, men..have been reduced to tears due to the pain.
Something to do with acid in the joints i believe?.....some call it a rich mans illness!!!...do to it being caused by rich foods.
I've had gout. The pain is unbelievable, literally unable to walk & had to go upstairs to bed one stair at a time on my arse. No fun at all.Not sure if ive spelt it correctly....but some of the older guys at work...mens, men..have been reduced to tears due to the pain.
Something to do with acid in the joints i believe?.....some call it a rich mans illness!!!...do to it being caused by rich foods.
Cluster headache. They are nicknamed 'Suicide headaches', no prizes for guessing why. It ain't nothing like a migraine. It's been a long time since I've had one, thank god. Want to get an idea of how painful it is, check it out
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNouKvGCqIM
Perosnally I couldn't move when I had an attack, any attempt to go anywhere resulted in vomitting. Spent most of the time screaming.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNouKvGCqIM
Perosnally I couldn't move when I had an attack, any attempt to go anywhere resulted in vomitting. Spent most of the time screaming.
P-Jay said:
Bet that would hurt, background? anaesthetic isn't really an on-off switch type thing, I would like to think only minor sensation would return before someone noticed all was not well.
I was told that I should be able to feel a sensation like "washing up in your tummy". In hindsight, I'm not 100% convinced that I was fully anaesthetised anyway because I had full control of my legs and I could feel things like my waters breaking and apparently that's not normal. (I also had problems with my first c-section and the anaesthetic). The "washing up" just got worse and worse, but I was under the impression I was meant to be feeling what I was feeling and I didn't want to make a fuss. The anaesthetist was obviously a bit worried as he kept asking me if I was OK. Just after my son was born, the surgeon did something and it felt like my spine was being crushed in a vice. At that point, I think I realised the pain wasn't normal so the anaesthetist asked for the operation to be stopped while they gave me some lovely drug which made the world go a bit fuzzy (morphine?!) and then they knocked me out. I would love for my son to have a sibling but I can't go through with another c-section.
Gassing Station | Health Matters | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff