Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My top tip is to avoid the temptation (borne out of understandable frustration) to spunk a load of cash on various practitioners who promise to improve your condition within a certain number of s?ssions.


In most cases (unless particularly serious - obvs you don't say exactly where yours is at) it just gets better when its ready to get better, so wait it out and try not to get too demoralised during the wait. One week you'll be unable to get off the floor - some other week you'll have forgotten it was there. When it does get better, try to remember what it was like when it was bad - instead of just carring on like you did before - and do some exercise to strengthen the bits of the body that can lessen the chances of a future relapse.

Keep moving, lie on your side with a pillow between your legs, lose weight - if necessary, do Pilates often, go to Back 2 Basics for good treatment at Shad Thames. An ice pack is useful, but for no more than ten minutes or so. Alternate it with a warm pack.

I had two burst - next to each other - about two months apart and was crippled. I really think about how I move, sit and sleep now.

Ditto above. I have degenerated and bulging discs. Eventually got my GP to actually examine me and not just prescribe codeine which identified it after a scan.


I do gentle pilates type exercises to strenghten my core and pelvic floor. There are some gentle exercises on Youtube for it. I was getting physio at Kings for a bit which gave me exercises to do. Really need to keep them up and get into the habit of doing them - even 10 mins before going to bed. As *Bob*/Steveo says its worth those 10 mins rather than the pain generated by being lazy (In my case!).

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • While they struggle with economics of UK plc, collectively we all suffer as a result of their ineptitude. 
    • I’ve tried to find details of surgeries being held before but not found any. The section of the Southwark website that details councillors’ surgeries says that: Your locally elected Councillors will be holding a roving surgery programme in the Dulwich Hill area to enable residents to raise any local issues. Residents will be notified by letter in advance of the date, time and specific streets/roads where the surgery will take place.  Surgeries are not held in August, on Bank Holidays, Easter or in Christmas Week.  Dulwich Hill Ward Councillors I’ve never seen any notification of surgeries being held, including on the DH councillors’ social media accounts. I don’t know if any other residents of Dulwich Hill have? Neighbouring wards all seem to have times and places posted for surgeries.   
    • I wouldn't feel too bad about that. It's one of the few degree areas that you can do a BA or a BSc in, so it's a fairly wide-ranging and complex subject. Certainly Truss, Kwasi and Reeves seem to struggle with it.
    • I can't access the article - what's the gist?  I took the markets getting jittery when she was crying at PMQs to be a sign that they trusted her. But maybe it was because they were simply worried about any form of instability.  The NIC hikes have stymied the economy, which we could all see a mile off. Will a wealth tax improve things? Does anyone here think the trickle down has any impact and that chasing out the super rich will help things? Or are we just seeing off the biggest contributors to the economy? And has the Kwasi approach ever worked anywhere else?  Economics is not my strong point at all, I'd love to know others' opinions, but it seems to be she has few options, especially as the party is so divided. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...