The pain between my shoulder blades is my chief fibro complaint. The drug sensititivties are real, are related to the fibro and the doctor who diagnosed my condition was the 15th person to see me and the first to take me seriously. I do know what does well for me because I have spent a considerable amount of time, money, research and just plain old trial and error in finding out what will and won't work for me. Today, when I checked in w/ my body to determine how it really feels, the pain level was only a 4... I'm loving that! Yesterday, it ranked right up there at a 9.... my R ankle and foot were swollen beyond recognition, my neck ached like hell wouldn't have it, and just for kicks, my hands decided to manifest a lot of cramping while I was vacuuming the rugs. But, you're probably right, it's just some manifestation of my mind and not a true medical condition.... and I'm going to be elected governor tomorrow morning! LOL
Try reading Fibromyalgia and Chronic Myofascial Pain Syndrome - A Survival Guide by Starlanyl and Copeland. The first author is an MD the second a pyschologist. BOTH authors suffer both conditions and offer the book as anecdotal evidence and advice for those individuals with these conditions. It's a helpful place for those of us with either condition to start with regaining our lives and our sense of usefulness. The hints on handling the cycles of depression alone were well worth the price of the book. And, there are references to other research and literature that supports their anecdotal materials. Just FYI.
And, bearmassage, if I had really dropped out of life, I wouldn't be enjoying my world so much, in spite of the interesting challenges my body provides for me. Again, I want to thank you for deciding for me that what I have isn't what it is. And as for your professional credentials and reputation, I am glad that you enjoy them as much as I enjoy mine. For ten wonderful years I have thoroughly enjoyed being one of the best LMTs in my county in Ohio. The fibro clients I have in my practice appreciate the fact that I personally understand what is going on with their bodies, accept it as a fact and meet them where they are at the particular moment in time they are in my office. When they inquire about things that will aid their everyday activities I am able to share with them exercises that have worked for me, and those that didn't - they might work for them. I am able to vary their massages to suit their particular needs that day. I can tell them that for me things like eating corn, white potatoes, white bread, and taking meds with certain ingredients set me off in a flare-up of enormous proportions while eating brown rice and roasted root veggies seems to take things down to unbelievably comfortably levels. I even try to help them learn the wonderful pain control methods of biofeed back as best I can. When I stated earlier that I checked in w/ my body, I meant just that. I have trained my body to keep the pain notifications down to a dull roar so that I can function w/o bitching about it every second..... the chronic stuff between my shoulders is always there [some days more, other days less] reminding me to drop my shoulder blades off my ears if I want relief and to let go of the daily stresses and old emotional crud that I tend to keep. The swelling of my ankles and feet is harder to tune out, but, with effort I can and do on a regular basis because life is too short and way to sweet to sit on my butt bellyaching because I have fibro. I encourage my clients to do the same and for the most part, many of them have learned to take charge of their care and get on with living and have decreased their dependency on "outside influences" as one of the termed it to take care of them physically, emotionally, spiritually, etc.
One final word about the chronic pain in the shoulder blades - caused by an old injury from training harness horses. Many cases of fibro are initiated by injuries to certain areas of the body - according to the dear doctor who gave me the diagnosis and believed I wasn't crazy when I said, "Today I hurt here, yesterday, it hurt worse over here, ....." - and according to research studies and other anecdotal evidence. And, personally, I could care less if you believe what I, or anyone else has is fibromyalgia. That's not for you to decide for me, your clients, or anyone else in the world whether you are an LMT alone, or with whatever other credentials you hold.
Good luck with your career.
J