I pray to my lord and salvation for you my friend I know it is hard and Ill be honest I dont have it as bad as you mine seems to be getting worse lately and my 3 year old is now seeing me sick for the first time and I hate it but soon very soon Jesus will return to take away our pain and we wont even remember why we cryed
Hey Jennifer. I can relate to your situation so much!
I had Crohn's diagnosed when I was 11 and had a resection then. I have since had many more and now have a stoma too. Not a reversible one but, it saved my life! I wish you well and, regards when it will end, it will always be with you, unless they do find a cure (I see research going so fast these days that I wouldn't be surprised!) so the best you or I can do is just keep finding ways to deal with it. I wish you all the best.
@SeiShoenagon That's not a very nice tone to take mate.
I have a permanent colostomy due to Crohn's and I wasn't offended by anything in this video. Stop presuming to speak on behalf of me and others. Having a stoma becomes as normal as anything else in your life after a while. Humans are very adaptable.
I wasn't offended, either. And I have a permanent ileostomy (surgical tretment of ulcerative colitis). I know from my experience: one gets used to it. I just wanted to point it out to the author that it could have been worse (let's face it: a normal anus is a little better than an artificial one). But even then, it would still be all right. So there's no need to be overly upset.
Hi Jennifer. That is quite a story. You are obviously a very strong person. I was diagnosed with Crohns over 25 years ago. I have completely abandoned standard medicine as a way to deal with our condition. I was in the hospital for over 2 months, half of that on TPN. I was not operated on. As we speak, I have been laid off from work. I have hopes. I would suggest that you look at the additive free diet. It basically means that we do not eat processed foods at all. I would also look at EFT.
hang in there! i know what your going through...i was diagnosed with crohns when was 7 years old. im 17 now and am currently in the hospital as we speak. i have had over 15 surgeries including that embarrassment you call an illeostomy. steroids, pills, and procedures suffocated me. im still here and im not letting crohns take over my life! hand in there and dont let this illness get the best of you ok? ;) love you lots!
keep goin girl im 19 and take athioprine 3 tablets a day been good for 2 years and have put on weight but haveing problems this weak and im scard about it strating again i feel for you and just want to give u a big hug thinking of you its unfair people like u have this it should only happen to bad people good luck and all the best james
I pray to my lord and salvation for you my friend I know it is hard and Ill be honest I dont have it as bad as you mine seems to be getting worse lately and my 3 year old is now seeing me sick for the first time and I hate it but soon very soon Jesus will return to take away our pain and we wont even remember why we cryed
andrewmarcus91 1 year ago
Cheer up, love. It can only get better.
H41TCH41TCH41TCH 1 year ago
Hey Jennifer. I can relate to your situation so much!
I had Crohn's diagnosed when I was 11 and had a resection then. I have since had many more and now have a stoma too. Not a reversible one but, it saved my life! I wish you well and, regards when it will end, it will always be with you, unless they do find a cure (I see research going so fast these days that I wouldn't be surprised!) so the best you or I can do is just keep finding ways to deal with it. I wish you all the best.
HitMeWithIt 1 year ago
At least you've got your stoma reversed.. Think of the people whose stomas will remain with them for the rest of thei lives(
SeiShoenagon 2 years ago
@SeiShoenagon That's not a very nice tone to take mate.
I have a permanent colostomy due to Crohn's and I wasn't offended by anything in this video. Stop presuming to speak on behalf of me and others. Having a stoma becomes as normal as anything else in your life after a while. Humans are very adaptable.
HitMeWithIt 1 year ago
@HitMeWithIt
I wasn't offended, either. And I have a permanent ileostomy (surgical tretment of ulcerative colitis). I know from my experience: one gets used to it. I just wanted to point it out to the author that it could have been worse (let's face it: a normal anus is a little better than an artificial one). But even then, it would still be all right. So there's no need to be overly upset.
SeiShoenagon 1 year ago
@SeiShoenagon OK mate. I'm pretty ill as it goes so I was a bit hasty there, I can see now.
:)
HitMeWithIt 1 year ago
@HitMeWithIt
Well, I shouldn't have put that backward smiley at the end, though...
SeiShoenagon 1 year ago
Hi Jennifer. That is quite a story. You are obviously a very strong person. I was diagnosed with Crohns over 25 years ago. I have completely abandoned standard medicine as a way to deal with our condition. I was in the hospital for over 2 months, half of that on TPN. I was not operated on. As we speak, I have been laid off from work. I have hopes. I would suggest that you look at the additive free diet. It basically means that we do not eat processed foods at all. I would also look at EFT.
stevenovastar 2 years ago
hang in there! i know what your going through...i was diagnosed with crohns when was 7 years old. im 17 now and am currently in the hospital as we speak. i have had over 15 surgeries including that embarrassment you call an illeostomy. steroids, pills, and procedures suffocated me. im still here and im not letting crohns take over my life! hand in there and dont let this illness get the best of you ok? ;) love you lots!
LivingDeadGurlXXX 2 years ago
keep goin girl im 19 and take athioprine 3 tablets a day been good for 2 years and have put on weight but haveing problems this weak and im scard about it strating again i feel for you and just want to give u a big hug thinking of you its unfair people like u have this it should only happen to bad people good luck and all the best james
ceely9849 3 years ago