In March of 2010, my daughter was involved in a serious car accident that left her battling the chronic neurological pain disorder Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS/RSD) and changed our lives forever. Follow us along on our journey. Our suitcases have no room for negativity.

31st May 2012

Video reblogged from Project3x5 with 14 notes

project3x5:

I’m having surgery again today, hear why in this Vlog!

Also… y’all deserve a proper explanation as to where I’ve been over the past (yikes…!) 8 weeks.

Lots of love. Be well.

Danielle xxxx

Tagged: CRPSRSDpainillnessChronic IllnessDiseasePainComplex Regional Pain SyndromeReflex Sympathetic DystrophySupportFashion

2nd April 2012

Photo reblogged from Project3x5 with 17 notes

project3x5:

I Flunked the Debunk… 
Yippee!!! Boohoo!!! 
Tomorrow morning, the permanent Spinal Cord Stimulator (SCS) is going to be implanted. I attempted to debunk my feelings on it while flying to Chicago earlier today, but I was unsuccessful in a huge way… 
I’m all over the map. Nope, not just physically - mentally too.
I’m a human mood ring, one moment hot, the next moment cold. Nope, not just physically - emotionally too. 
Tomorrow should be interesting, eh? xx

project3x5:

I Flunked the Debunk… 

Yippee!!! Boohoo!!! 

Tomorrow morning, the permanent Spinal Cord Stimulator (SCS) is going to be implanted. I attempted to debunk my feelings on it while flying to Chicago earlier today, but I was unsuccessful in a huge way… 

I’m all over the map. Nope, not just physically - mentally too.

I’m a human mood ring, one moment hot, the next moment cold. Nope, not just physically - emotionally too. 

Tomorrow should be interesting, eh? xx

Tagged: CrpsRsdComplex regional pain syndromeReflex Sympathetic DystrophySpinal Chord StimulatorSurgeryInvisible IllnessDiseaseFaithGodPrayStrengthInspirationProject3x5

28th February 2012

Photo reblogged from Spiritual Inspiration with 957 notes

spiritualinspiration:

http://www.facebook.com/naeemcallaway

spiritualinspiration:

http://www.facebook.com/naeemcallaway

Tagged: RSDReflex sympathetic dystrophyCRPSComplex Regional Pain SyndromepainIllnessCureAwarenessGodFaithInInvisible illnessHealthDisease

26th February 2012

Photo reblogged from ☼ Elige Neon Skin ☼ with 92 notes


“According to Vedanta, there are only two symptoms of enlightenment.. just two indications that a transformation is taking place within you toward a higher consciousness. The first symptom is that you stop worrying. Things don’t bother you anymore. You become light hearted and full of joy. The second symptom is that you encounter more and more meaningful coincidences in your life, more and more synchronicities. 
And this accelerates to the point where you actually experience the miraculous.”—Deepak Chopra

“According to Vedanta, there are only two symptoms of enlightenment.. just two indications that a transformation is taking place within you toward a higher consciousness.

The first symptom is that you stop worrying. Things don’t bother you anymore. You become light hearted and full of joy.
The second symptom is that you encounter more and more meaningful coincidences in your life, more and more synchronicities.

And this accelerates to the point where you actually experience the miraculous.”
Deepak Chopra

Tagged: anxietyadviceawarenesschronic paincurecrpscomplex regional pain syndromereflex sympathetic dystrophyrsdpainlifehopeHelphealthhealingholisticholistic medicineGodfaithdiseasedepression

25th February 2012

Link reblogged from Project3x5 with 6 notes

BOOK REVIEW: "Defeat Chronic Pain Now!", by Charles Argoff, MD & Brad Galer, MD →

project3x5:

Currently on the way to my mailbox!

I’m sure so many of you (if not all) can relate to the fact that once diagnosed, you had to fish around from books to the internet to pamphlets in order to simply wrap-your-head around what was happening to your body, and in order to become informed about your pain.

Which is why upon reading this book review (click on the headline), I immediately clicked order! Of course, it’s not a miraculous encyclopedia filled with all the information we could ever dream of… but FINALLY it’s an indispensable resource to provide us with a better understanding of our pain and how to defeat it. YAY! 

According to the review: written in user-friendly language, it has sections on back and neck pain, headaches, arthritis, cancer pain, fibromyalgia and neuropathic pain (including CRPS/RSD). Among many other things, you can learn about nutritional supplements, the importance of different therapies, medications and side-effects, the benefits of multidisciplinary treatments, interventional treatments (ex: nerve blocks), and psychological treatments, etc.

Oh, and did I mention it’s being endorsed and recommended by the Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Association (RSDSA)? 

Happy Reading! xx

Tagged: chronic painchronic illnessreflex sympathetic dystrophyrsdcurecomplex regional pain syndromechronic illnesscrpsCRPS/RSDpainillnessinvisible illnessmedicalmedsadviceawarenesssufferingdiseasedonateGodfaithhopeHelphealthhealingholisticholistic medicineproject3x5fibrobackpain

19th February 2012

Photo reblogged from Genuine Happiness with 11,098 notes

Tagged: rsdreflex sympathetic dystrophycurechronic paincomplex regional pain syndromeCRPS/RSDpainparadiseadviceawarenessdiseasedonatefaithGod

Source: soulhunting

18th February 2012

Link reblogged from Project3x5 with 22 notes

Project3x5 Guest Blogs Over at RamshackleGlam... →

project3x5:

Yay! Check out Project3x5 as a guest blogger over on Ramshackle Glam.

What’s the etiquette on reblogging oneself? Am I doing this all wrong? Meh. Whatever. I’m very excited and honored as Ramshackle Glam is a site I very much enjoy. I couldn’t be more thankful to have been given such a great platform to spread the word for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (or Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy)

Head on over to read the story of my accident, learn more about CRPS/RSD and to find out how you can donate to this awful chronic illness through the Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Association (RSDSA). x

ramshackleglam:

Someone I’d Like You To Meet

I’m about to introduce you to one of the bravest women I’ve ever come across.

In the few weeks that I’ve been corresponding with Danielle, I’ve been struck by one thing above all: this girl is joyful. She’s lived through an unimaginably horrific accident in the Middle East, months and months of excruciating surgeries and rehab, and a chronic condition that was named one of the “5 Craziest Diseases” by FOX News…and her attitude - the joy with which she lives her life, and the peace that she radiates - is an inspiration. This woman is an inspiration.

You need to meet her.

Here’s Danielle’s story.

There’s nothing I can really do but smile when I think how it’s the most clichéd of statements - “a moment can change your life” - that has come to best explain the most un-clichéd of situations, and the one that has most defined my life.

In March of 2010, while studying at UCL for my Masters in Human Rights, I took a vacation to Qatar (in the Middle East) for a friend’s wedding, and what was to be week of traditional festivities. Day Two’s itinerary called for a camping trip hours into the desert. So, after loading up the SUVs we headed off to a place so far from the city it now placed us in view of the Saudi Arabian border patrol.

I’m tempted to spend this section babbling on about Qatar’s natural beauty, but I think that’s what trauma counselors would call avoidance. So, long story short: the vehicle I was traveling in flipped, rolled, and ended up landing on the passenger (or in other words: my) side, crushing me underneath it. Of course I had many injuries, but my poor little left leg got the brunt of it. And by “brunt”, I mean that in order to even get me out from underneath the wreckage they decided that they would have to amputate.

Go figure: all of this was happening miles into the desert with no painkillers, right?

Anyway, after an excruciating several-hours’ wait and the fight of my life (a girl needs her feet! a girl needs her heels!), the powers that be were finally able to get a helicopter and an angel of a paramedic out to me (but still no bloody painkillers!). Successfully, they managed to remove the muscles from the top of my foot and free me - mangled bits and all - from the damage.

Disgusting? Yes. Exciting? Very. Once at the hospital, they performed the first in what has now come to be 18 (soon to be 19) procedures.

It may sound airy-fairy to some, but I’m a huge believer in the power of positive thinking. The doctors on-site told me that there was absolutely no medical way they could save my foot. Every doctor I’ve met since who sees the x-rays or hears my injuries looks down at my still-there (but scarred, obviously) foot in absolute disbelief and awe.

Much too wounded to fly, I initially remained stuck in a Qatari hospital bed. Now, don’t get me wrong: I usually love the Middle East, but this version was “Locked Up Abroad”. Grim, to say the least.

It would have been so simple to slip into a dark hole, and I’m 100% sure that had I gone this route my body would have reacted, an awful infection would set in (I was in the desert for hours with no skin on my foot - sorry! so gross! - there was so much sand and grime in there it’s literally a miracle that this didn’t cause an amputation in itself) and my absolutely fabulous heel-wearing days would have been history. However, thanks to the power of positive thinking, the opposite happened.

In fact! Ramshackle Glam should be credited here! Blogs have become a massive part of my life as a patient, and I read Jordan’s for positivity, hope, fun and inspiration. Perhaps it was in combination with the morphine, but she really did lift my spirits at time when I needed it most.

I’ve since returned to the States, and my bones, etc. have healed up nicely. I began re-learning how to walk in January of 2011, and I’m starting to tentatively walk more and more without my cane as we speak. It’s pretty fabulous! I’m the luckiest, happiest girl in the world.

Unfortunately, due to the massive amount of nerve damage, I was left with a debilitating chronic neurological disease called Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, or Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (CRPS/RSD) - which is also widely known as the most painful condition in the world. I find it impossible to explain so I’ll simply say that it is considered by the McGill Pain Scale to be above the pain caused by the amputation of a digit, cancer, and even… childbirth. Yup!

Ranked one of the ‘5 Craziest Diseases’ by Fox News, it was described as “being tormented every waking moment of every day by searing pain in your limbs.” Needless to say, CRPS/RSD is not very fun and entails many medical procedures and some ketamine infusions, whereby I’m flooded with horse tranquilizer for 3 days in a row. Nevertheless, I get by with a little help from my blogs :).

Never heard of this horrifying condition? Neither had I! There’s a shockingly low awareness level that desperately needs to be remedied. Go to the Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Association’s (RSDSA) website to both learn more and (if you’re able and should so desire) to donate.

I’m excited to now be able to say that you can also learn more about this chronic illness on a more personal level through my blog, Project3x5. There’s a lot of negativity towards the condition from many other sufferers (and who can blame them, really?), so Project3x5 aims to be a source of hope, positivity, fun, and possibly even inspiration through the daily happenings of my own life. We also hope to raise that staggeringly low awareness level for this debilitating condition.

I may be in pain, but with all of this going on I am definitely very content in my mission. So, in keeping with the starting theme of clichés: your life can change in an instant, but funnily enough you’ll always end up right where you need to be.

And with that realisation…I just have to smile.

Lots of Love,

Danielle x

Links:

Follow Project3x5

RSDSA website

Donate to CRPS/RSD

- Any questions/comments can be sent to theproject3x5@gmail.com

Tagged: rsdreflex sympathetic dystrophyYahamarhinoaccidentawarenessadvicesufferingdanielledonatediseasedepressionfaithGodhealthhopehealinglifecurechronic paincomplex regional pain syndromecrpschronic illnesschronic illnessnewsmedicallifeproject3x5painpersonal

Source: ramshackleglam

17th February 2012

Photo reblogged from Positivity In Recovery with 1,430 notes

Tagged: diseasecomplex regional pain syndromecrpsrsdreflex sympathetic dystrophyinvisible illnesspainlifehopeHelphealthhealingGodfaithadviceanxietysufferinginspirationalillness

Source: ocean-spray

13th February 2012

Photo reblogged from Find hope here with 25 notes

esteemteen:

(via http://weheartit.com/entry/22903411)

esteemteen:

(via http://weheartit.com/entry/22903411)

Tagged: rsdreflex sympathetic dystrophychronic paincrpschronic paincomplex regional pain syndromechronic illnesspainpersonaladviceawarenesssufferingsupportdiseasedonatefaithGodfreedomhealthhealingholistichopeh

12th February 2012

Photo reblogged from Recovery is Beautiful with 90 notes

artjournaling:

universe (by paulateachstm)

artjournaling:

universe (by paulateachstm)

Tagged: reflex sympathetic dystrophyrsdchronic paincurecomplex regional pain syndromechronic painsupportawarenessanxietyadvicepainlifeloveGodfaithfreedomdiseasesufferingreflex sympathetic dystrophyrsd

Source: flickr.com