Difference between revisions of "Today's Featured Success Story/2"

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{{TFSS
 
{{TFSS
|Name=Forest
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|Name=MlleButtercup
 
|Symptom=Chronic Pain and Fibromyalgia
 
|Symptom=Chronic Pain and Fibromyalgia
 
|Contents=In April 2019, I made a momentous decision; I would take a medical leave of absence from work to try one last time to get well. I couldn’t keep the pretense that I was managing. I was no longer able to sit in a chair to work. I was laying on my stomach on my students’ desks after school to grade papers and plan lessons. ... Now that I am mostly pain-free, I feel optimistic about life in general and am living abundantly again. My twenty-four year chronic pain journey is finally ending. I am excited about my future and looking forward to an active and enjoyable retirement.
 
|Contents=In April 2019, I made a momentous decision; I would take a medical leave of absence from work to try one last time to get well. I couldn’t keep the pretense that I was managing. I was no longer able to sit in a chair to work. I was laying on my stomach on my students’ desks after school to grade papers and plan lessons. ... Now that I am mostly pain-free, I feel optimistic about life in general and am living abundantly again. My twenty-four year chronic pain journey is finally ending. I am excited about my future and looking forward to an active and enjoyable retirement.
 
|url=https://prtrecovery.org/threads/mllebuttercups-recovery-story-24-years-chronic-pain-and-fibromyalgia.3/
 
|url=https://prtrecovery.org/threads/mllebuttercups-recovery-story-24-years-chronic-pain-and-fibromyalgia.3/
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 23:32, 3 November 2021

Meet MlleButtercup

Overcame Chronic Pain and Fibromyalgia using PRT

In April 2019, I made a momentous decision; I would take a medical leave of absence from work to try one last time to get well. I couldn’t keep the pretense that I was managing. I was no longer able to sit in a chair to work. I was laying on my stomach on my students’ desks after school to grade papers and plan lessons. ... Now that I am mostly pain-free, I feel optimistic about life in general and am living abundantly again. My twenty-four year chronic pain journey is finally ending. I am excited about my future and looking forward to an active and enjoyable retirement. Read the full recovery story