Opioids are instrumental in the treatment for chronic pain. and most pain patients do not become addicted.

How access to opioids changed my life

I’ve shared before how I came to be on opioids for chronic pain. My pain levels had basically gotten so high I was almost bedridden. I couldn’t take care of my kids, I couldn’t work, I couldn’t do anything that required walking or standing of any sort. Luckily for me, I was a patient of my doctor for some time before I broached the subject of pain relief. She knew me well by then and had no problem prescribing a low dose of Hydrocodone.

This changed my life.

Opioids for chronic pain

Last week I went camping with a bunch of teenage girls. I was walking miles and miles every day. I was staking down tents in rainstorms, I was frantically running around trying to stop a tent from flooding, I was playing physical games, and I was sleeping on an uncomfortable cot without my heating pad. I was in a lot of pain, by the end of the week I couldn’t even walk normally because my muscles were so stiff, but I did it and I had a blast. The reason that I could do it was that I took 1 pain pill each night so I could sleep and avoid painsomnia. Without that pain pill I never would have made it. My pain level would have gotten so high I wouldn’t have been able to sleep, especially in such uncomfortable conditions. I would have lost sleep and as I lost sleep my pain levels would have climbed even higher. Once the painsomnia cycle begins there’s no ending it.  Painsmonia’s an endless cycle of misery.

Opioids for my chronic pain changed my life

My camping experience is only one small example of how pain medication has changed my life. Two weeks after my camping trip I’m going on vacation with my family. We’re going to 5 different National Parks and we’re going to do a lot of hiking.  I love being outdoors and I love exposing my city kids to nature. I’m still limited in what I can do (I won’t be rock climbing or going on 12-mile hikes anytime soon), but I could never have done even a little of this before pain medication.

Denying medication to people in pain will not stop drug abuse. All it will do is stigmatize people in pain and prolong their suffering

Some might consider these activities optional. After all, I don’t need to be a camp counselor and I don’t “need” to go on vacation. Is it really worth the “risk of addiction” just so I can have fun once in a while?

Anyone with common sense would say yes it is.

For those who have no common sense, they can read my story and realize I’ve been on the same dose of pain medication since 2014 so clearly I’m not addicted. And for those who have no common sense and no empathy and still think I don’t need pain medication, I would point out that I can actually be a productive citizen when I have access to pain medication. Instead of being bedridden, I have a life.

On pain medication I can actually be a productive citizen and have a life. Without it, my bedridden, tortured, existence barely matters. Click To Tweet

Chronic pain isn’t something you can just “get over”

I am exceptionally lucky that I have a doctor with some common sense. She has never told me that pain isn’t that big of a deal and that I should just get over it. She’s actually well aware that constant pain has some serious side effects and there’s no point in keeping me bedridden for the rest of my life just to satisfy a fake moral standard that pain medication is bad. She realizes that pain medication isn’t bad, it allows millions of people to live normal lives. So why is society so intent on taking that away? Because they buy into the inaccurate myths and hysteria perpetuated by the media and the CDC.

I’m well aware that my time is limited. Any day I could be deprived of the life I have by losing access to pain medication. If anything happens to my doctor no other doctor will take me on, I’m screwed just like every other chronic pain patient who is treated like an addict. At any time I could lose my ability to work, play with my kids, socialize with my friends,  clean my house, and go on vacation. I live every day with this knowledge. I live every day knowing that I have no control over my own quality of life. It’s a heavy burden, but until there’s a medical cure for my condition it’s all I have.

 

UPDATE:

It’s been years since I wrote this post, and yes I did lose my access to pain treatment. Not because my doctor decided I didn’t need them, but because the state medical board was threatening to take away her license if she kept prescribing. I voluntarily quit cold turkey with no issues besides the neverending pain. To read more about the “opioid crisis” and chronic pain, here are some of my other popular posts:

How the Opioid hysteria and moral panic worsened the opioid crisis

How the opioid crisis can lead those with chronic pain to suicide

Chronic pain and the opioids crisis: How a myth defines treatment for pain patients

People with chronic pain did not cause the opioid epidemic


 

Opioids are instrumental in the treatment for chronic pain. and most pain patients do not become addicted.

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14 thoughts on “How access to opioids changed my life

  1. Fantastic! Thanks for sharing. The public needs to understand that intractable pain patients have nothing to do with other folks abusing drugs. Logic would also state that if you refuse to treat someone living in pain, that person will be forced to secure their needed medications on line or by other more dangerous ways.

  2. I so agree. I have been taking hydrocodone 7.5 for years my doctor had me up to 3 a day. Which sounds like a lot, but it worked for me. My doctor of 20 years retired two years ago and my current doctor has cut me down to two a day. So here it is in a nutshell. I get to pick which part of my day that I want to be miserable. Morning, noon , or evening. And done get me wrong, when I have good days I didn’t even take them. Those days have become few and far between. I stay in pain now because I try to save my meds for when I can’t function at all. I have tried 3 new doctors in the past 2 years. They make me feel like a drug addict. I would like nothing more than to never have to take another pill.

  3. I would love to chat with someone who has chronic pain like myself. It can be so hard to get doctors to understand what is going on with your body. It seems they want a quick fix. I hope I found a site for that. Thank you Allison

  4. I worry every month that something will happen where I can’t refill my pain medication. I know that I will not be able to handle the pain and my life will be over. This is a terribly dark cloud to live under. I have seen numerous doctors and I have had every test\surgery that is available. What happens if my doctor retires or the government decides to deny meds? W

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