Domino Effect
About 10 days ago, I had a bit of a wonky transfer. The
person helping me to get from my bed to the chair put her foot half an inch
closer to me than it should have been, blocking my left leg from moving and my
left ankle twisted.
These things happen.
My left leg is my stronger leg. When I was 16, I had a
synevectomythe in my left knee, which subsequently fused. It wasn't supposed to,
but it was a good thing. A fused joint has more stability and blessedly, no
pain. It means my left leg sticks out straight, but it's stable, strong, and
not subject to the vagaries of RA.
The ankle, however, is not fused. And it didn't like the
twist. Thanks to Humira, the sprain. I've been "enjoying" in the last
10 days was a light one, not the colorfully-bruised-and-swollen-extravaganza-lasting-well-over-six-weeks
I’ve experienced in the past after an injury. Nonetheless, it hurt and when one
area hurts, the rest of the body follows like so:
Normally, my left foot is pressed firmly against the
footplate of an elevated foot rest most of the day. I like to believe that this
qualifies as a kind of weight-bearing that can help prevent osteoporosis.
However, more or less standing on a sprained ankle is not comfortable, so I
started bracing my right foot against the left foot rest, serving as support
for my left ankle. Leading to…
This helped the left ankle, but now my right leg started
feeling the strain. Particularly my right knee, which is not fused and
therefore subject to the consequences of placing extra stress on the joints,
muscles and ligaments. Bracing the right leg against left foot rest - not a
natural position - put stress not just on the right ankle and knee, but also on
that muscle that goes along the outside of your thigh from your knee into your
butt. Putting extra strain on any muscle when you have fibromyalgia is not fun.
Between joints and muscles, my right leg was soon on fire, but slightly less on
fire than my left ankle, so there was nothing for it. Leading to…
Placing right foot under the left also required me to
schooch down in my chair a bit. When one's derrière is not as far back in one
seat as it should be, you have an interesting bit of strain being placed on
your lower back. Which was soon screaming. Cindy easing the left ankle was
still a priority, as it is the one that takes most of my weight when I transfer
from chair to bed and so on, there was nothing for it. Leading to…
I have very little mobility in my shoulders. When you're at
the computer, schooched down in your chair, you have to lift your arms higher
to reach the keyboard, mouse and other work accoutrements. When you have very
limited mobility in your shoulders, this means you will essentially move your
arms from your upper back instead of the shoulder joint. Leading to…
Putting this level of strain on your upper back and
shoulders very quickly start poking at the never-ending neck injury, making it even
more irritable. Which is why this weekend, when The Boy imitated a Slow Loriseating a rice ball and making me laugh so hard I cried, my neck seized up.
And that's how my sprained ankle became a pain in the neck.
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