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Jenna Bush Hager reveals topless sunbathing once left her chest green — dermatologist reveals why

Jenna Bush Hager reveals topless sunbathing once left her chest green — dermatologist reveals why

New York Post19-06-2025
Here's another reason to slather on some SPF this summer — especially if you're planning to bare it all.
Jenna Bush Hager revealed this week that a trip to a topless beach in Spain during high school left her so scorched, her chest turned green.
'If you get burned, it's not pretty,' the 43-year-old 'Today With Jenna & Friends' co-host told actress Leslie Bibb on Tuesday's episode.
5 Actress Leslie Bibb appeared on the June 16 episode of 'Today With Jenna & Friends.'
NBC
When Bibb, 51, asked if her chest peeled, Bush Hager nodded — but then took things in a bizarre turn.
'They may have turned green,' the TV personality said. 'The opposite of the color wheel!'
'They turned green? Are you for real life?' the White Lotus star gasped.
'Oh, I don't think that's good,' Bibb added — and she's probably right.
Sunburns happen when you're exposed to too much ultraviolet (UV) light, which can penetrate into deep layers of the skin and cause cellular damage, according to the Mayo Clinic.
The body responds by increasing blood flow to the area, leading to inflamed skin we know as a burn.
'Signs that your burns are significant include painful redness, peeling and blisters,' Dr. Lauren Taglia, a dermatologist, told Northwestern Medicine.
In Bush Hager's case, her Elphaba-esque chest may have signaled something more serious going on beneath the surface.
5 Bush Hager's chest 'turned green' after a bad sunburn.
NBC
5 'Green!' Bibb exclaimed. 'That… makes me sick.'
TODAY with Jenna & Friends / TikTok
'When the skin barrier is significantly damaged from a bad sunburn, it's possible to develop a secondary bacterial infection,' Dr. Adarsh Vijay Mudgil, medical director of Mudgil Dermatology, told The Post.
Mudgil hasn't treated Bush Hager personally, but he speculated that her symptoms could be caused by impetigo, a common and contagious bacterial skin infection.
'This can lead to the formation of yellowish-green crusts, which would explain the green color she described,' Mudgil explained.
'Impetigo can be painful and requires antibiotics for treatment, either topical or systemic, depending on how widespread the infection is,' he noted.
Gross? Bush Hager agrees.
5 All skin types can burn, though those with a lighter complexion are more at risk.
Evgen – stock.adobe.com
The former first daughter said the experience was enough to scare her away from sunbathing for good.
'I try not, but this is years of sun damage,' she admitted, rubbing her arms and adding that she now gets regular skin checks.
She also offered some sage advice for viewers: wear sunscreen, especially when you're young.
'SPF babies, SPF! Get hip with it!' Bibb chimed in.
Dermatologists agree. For daily use, most experts recommend using sunscreen with an SPF of at least 30. If you're spending extended time outdoors, SPF 60 or higher is smart, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.
For full-body coverage, aim for about one ounce of sunscreen — roughly a shot glass. And don't forget to reapply every two hours, or more if you're swimming or sweating.
Even if you're inside, you're not off the hook.
5 Hager Bush, a mom-of-three, wishes her younger self hadn't tanned so much.
Instagram/jennabhager
'Most ultraviolet (UV) rays can penetrate glass, so if you're working or relaxing near a window, you're receiving sun exposure,' Dr. Elisabeth G. Richard, a dermatologist, told the Skin Cancer Foundation.
The bright side: you won't have to reapply as frequently as you would outdoors, likely every four to six hours.
'Sun damage is cumulative,' Richard noted. 'So even if you're only exposed for a short time, it's important to have protection.'
Experts also recommend doubling up with wide-brimmed hats, sunglasses and protective clothing for extra coverage. When the sun's at its peak — between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. — your best bet is to head for the shade.
And if a green chest isn't warning enough, don't forget: Every sunburn — even a mild one — increases your risk of skin cancer, including melanoma, the deadliest form of all.
In fact, just one blistering burn in childhood or adolescence more than doubles your risk of melanoma later in life, according to the Skin Cancer Foundation.
The American Cancer Society estimates that in 2025, 104,960 new melanoma cases will be diagnosed in the US — and 8,430 Americans will die from it.
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Ozempic didn't work for me. I was furious
Ozempic didn't work for me. I was furious

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ozempic didn't work for me. I was furious

I'm 46 years old and I have been on a diet since I was 11. For as long as I can remember, eating has given me comfort. As a kid, I lied to my friends' parents so I could eat a second dinner at their house. I've never wanted just one cookie – I'd eat 12 and only stop when I felt physically ill, and sometimes not even then. In nearly every photo of me as a teenager I'm wincing, sucking in my stomach, trying to pose. I never really enjoyed the taste of these foods, nor was I happy with myself after eating them. They came with a side of guilt: you don't deserve this. This relentless food noise trapped me in a cycle of wanting to eat, then shaming myself for doing it. I spent inordinate energy hating my too tall, too big body. I always felt simultaneously like not enough and too much. Now, GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro are being hyped as an easy fix to obesity. Their manufacturers have experienced significant revenue growth credited to the drugs' popularity; for instance, Eli Lilly recently announced 38% yearly growth, credited in part to sales of Zepbound and Mounjaro. Media headlines tout the changes in weight and appetite for those who take them. But what if the 'miracle' doesn't work for you? *** Being diagnosed with diabetes at age 27 threw me deeper into a shame spiral. At the time, my doctor clinically defined me as obese. That, along with the prognosis of a deficient pancreas, felt like punishment for decades of failing to control my overeating. Given my family history of diabetes – my grandpa had it – the doctor diagnosed me as type 2 and recommended dramatic lifestyle adjustments, including carb counting and daily exercise. She also did an A1C test, which measures average blood sugar levels for three months. A non-diabetic's result would be under 5.7%. Mine was 7.7%. This diagnosis felt like being sentenced to lifelong obsession. Food already controlled me, and now it had even more power. Over the next five years, I worked with a nutritionist and psychotherapist. I trained for a 200-mile relay race with friends. I did Weight Watchers, went to Overeaters Anonymous, worked the 12-step program, and used apps like Noom and My Fitness Pal. I lost 50lb. Still, I remained overweight according to the BMI chart, and my A1C didn't budge, which confounded my primary care doctor. Related: I'm not diabetic – should I be using a glucose monitor? She referred me to an endocrinologist who specialized in metabolic health. Six months later, when my appointment finally arrived, my A1C had shot up to 9.1%. That should not have happened while I shed pounds. She declared I was misdiagnosed: type 2 diabetics' bodies make insulin, which helps regulate blood sugar, but don't use it effectively. But I was actually type 1, an autoimmune condition where the body stops producing insulin. I would be dependent on insulin injections from that point forward. Living with diabetes was taxing. I had to order a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), pen needles, insulin vials and other items – but via a specialty supplier rather than a standard pharmacy, for insurance purposes. I had to procure pre-authorization forms for medication and attend required half-day training sessions every time I wanted to try a different insulin pump or when my insurance changed. But in 2018, after five years of effort, my A1C settled in at 5.9% – a happy result for me and my doctor. But to get to a weight my doctor would approve, I still had to lose 30lb. She started me on a new drug called Ozempic. Like most people at that point, I'd never heard of it. She said it was only technically approved for type 2 patients – but some who were overweight with type 1, like me, were taking it to help with weight loss. Over the next four years, my doctor and I gradually increased my Ozempic dosage and eventually were pleased with the results: when I woke in the morning my fasting blood sugar reading was finally within the recommended range of 80-120 on my CGM. I was able to reduce my regular insulin usage. But my weight didn't change. I continued my healthier eating habits and exercised regularly with cycling, yoga and running. Still, the scale didn't move. *** In 2022, when Ozempic was becoming a household name, I suddenly had two problems. First, my doctor confirmed I was already on the highest available dose, so taking more wouldn't help me lose weight. Second, because the drugs were now approved for general weight loss, I might have trouble filling my prescription. A global shortage followed, and I went four months without, eventually switching to Mounjaro because it was available. The meds are highly effective for a majority of patients but there is still a percentage who don't lose … body weight Veronica Johnson My already-thin friends started taking GLP-1s, and I couldn't avoid chatter about the 'skinny shot'. 'I'm not even hungry! I don't even think about food!' they'd say. But I didn't experience this quieting of the voices in my head telling me I was hungry all the time, and I wondered why. I was furious. As my friends celebrated their new bodies, I wondered, again, what was wrong with mine. My diabetes was under control, but I was also existing at the margins of a miracle. An estimated 15% of all GLP-1 users are so-called 'non-responders' to the weight loss effect, according to Atlanta-based physician Dr Cristina Del Toro Badessa. Lucas Veritas, a GLP-1 user from Montreal and author of The GLP-1 Effect newsletter, highlighted clinical trials showing that approximately 13% of people taking semaglutide (the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy) and about 9% of those taking tirzepatide (found in Mounjaro and Zepbound) did not lose more than 5% of their body weight. 'The meds are highly effective for a majority of patients but there is still a percentage who don't lose a clinically significant percentage of body weight. Everyone's physiology is a little different,' said Veronica Johnson MD, an obesity medicine specialist in Chicago. Recent research has identified a gene that may help predict who will successfully lose weight with GLP-1 medications. Related: The radical practice of eating what you want Additionally, according to a recent study comparing GLP-1 medications to bariatric surgery, 'real world' cohorts lost less weight than what drug companies reported in their trials: about 5% of their body weight, compared with the 15% reported for semaglutide and the 20–25% for tirzepatide in pharma-funded studies. Nicoletta LaMarca-Sacco, 56, a former Ozempic user in New York, also didn't lose weight after a year of use. 'I've always been a squishy mom and will continue to be,' she said. 'It just didn't work for me.' She expected the drug would quiet more of the internal chatter telling her she needed to snack. 'It did help, but only to a small degree,' she said. 'When we consider these drugs, they need to be combined with other markers of good health like diet, exercise, even stress management,' said Dr Raj Dasgupta, an ABIM Quadruple board-certified physician in Los Angeles. He said his patients sometimes had unrealistic expectations about how quickly and dramatically they will drop extra pounds. He explained that for someone who is overweight, shedding even a small amount of weight can improve heart and kidney function, adding: 'The bar has been set too high for weight loss.' 'What's dangerous,' Badessa said, 'is the dominant societal narrative that these are 'magic shots' for weight loss.' Veritas agreed: 'Expectations are sky-high. People see all the before/after photos and expect an easy ride.' 'It feels similar to any other time the diet industry has thrown marketing momentum behind one particular 'fix',' Virginia Sole-Smith, author of Fat Talk, told me about the current hype. 'There's excitement that we've found a 'silver bullet', then it silences any other narratives and experiences about it.' Related: What is metabolic syndrome – and do we really need to worry about it? I had definitely been looking for an elixir to rid me of body mass. Then I discovered that diabetes itself might be the reason I wasn't losing weight. Andrew Koutnik, a metabolic research scientist, said that GLP-1s typically lead to significant weight loss for people with obesity (15-25% of their body weight). However, people with diabetes generally lost less weight, proportionally: for type 2, an average of 8-11%; for type 1, about 8-12%. 'While we don't know why this is occurring, prior data suggests the drug's metabolic effects may be tied to how well the body manages glucose,' Koutnik said. GLP-1s are designed to coax the body into making and using insulin more efficiently, he explained. But for someone with type 1 diabetes, meaning their pancreas cannot make insulin, that's like installing a turbocharger on a car with no engine – there's nothing to boost. That said, he clarified, these drugs aren't entirely useless for people with type 1. GLP-1s slow digestion and suppress appetite, which can lead to fewer snacks and less carb-heavy meals. That might nudge blood sugar in the right direction, but it's more of a side-effect. 'The actual impact on blood sugar control is minimal: less than a 1% drop in A1C,' Koutnik explained. *** The psychological fallout of being a non-responder can be devastating. It was more fodder for my destructive inner dialogue: Why won't my body just comply? Alyson Curtis, a therapist based in New York, works with patients who feel isolated as they see others losing weight and don't have the same result. I told her how unfair it felt and she agreed the loss of agency can be a lot to process. 'I hear the 'thin fantasy' constantly from patients – it's a dream to fit into societal norms,' Curtis added, 'but what they're really saying is they want to be accepted, cherished, adored.' She helps patients reframe success to focus on healthy outcomes beyond weight loss – like how the Health at Every Size (HAES) movement centers on overall wellbeing. It feels similar to any other time the diet industry has thrown marketing momentum behind one particular 'fix' Virginia Sole-Smith Still, these drugs are here to stay. Johnson pointed to recent innovations like CagriSema, a compound drug bringing together an amylin agonist and a GLP-1. In trials, CagriSema helped reduce blood sugar spikes after meals and can also contribute to weight loss. 'The hormone called amylin is normally released by the same cells that make insulin – which type 1 diabetics lack,' Koutnik said. He added that amylin helps slow digestion and also lowers levels of glucagon, which could help better manage blood sugar. Society seems to have rewritten ideas about health, worth and willpower through the lens of these astonishing drugs. I figured I could, too. I've tried to quiet the inner voice that's shaming me into thinking I'm a failure for not losing more weight. Forging self-acceptance from deep frustration, I am realizing there is nothing inherently 'wrong' with my body – I am simply among those for whom the current medications produce a partial benefit. Learning that I'm not alone has helped curb my body shame. I am grateful that GLP-1s have helped me with blood sugar control, minimizing my risk of complications from diabetes. 'When we focus on the miracle weight loss narrative, we ignore their real value in helping people with diabetes, adding to the discourse of body shaming, which is never health-promoting,' said Sole-Smith. I've been trying to shift my focus from weight loss to improving my relationship with food. For me, that's learning to eat with more intention and maybe even a little joy. Hopefully, I can come to appreciate my right to the occasional indulgence without self-recrimination. And on my next birthday, I want to celebrate with the most delicious symbol of self-acceptance: a guilt-free piece of cake.

Ozempic didn't work for me. I was furious
Ozempic didn't work for me. I was furious

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Ozempic didn't work for me. I was furious

I'm 46 years old and I have been on a diet since I was 11. For as long as I can remember, eating has given me comfort. As a kid, I lied to my friends' parents so I could eat a second dinner at their house. I've never wanted just one cookie – I'd eat 12 and only stop when I felt physically ill, and sometimes not even then. In nearly every photo of me as a teenager I'm wincing, sucking in my stomach, trying to pose. I never really enjoyed the taste of these foods, nor was I happy with myself after eating them. They came with a side of guilt: you don't deserve this. This relentless food noise trapped me in a cycle of wanting to eat, then shaming myself for doing it. I spent inordinate energy hating my too tall, too big body. I always felt simultaneously like not enough and too much. Now, GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro are being hyped as an easy fix to obesity. Their manufacturers have experienced significant revenue growth credited to the drugs' popularity; for instance, Eli Lilly recently announced 38% yearly growth, credited in part to sales of Zepbound and Mounjaro. Media headlines tout the changes in weight and appetite for those who take them. But what if the 'miracle' doesn't work for you? *** Being diagnosed with diabetes at age 27 threw me deeper into a shame spiral. At the time, my doctor clinically defined me as obese. That, along with the prognosis of a deficient pancreas, felt like punishment for decades of failing to control my overeating. Given my family history of diabetes – my grandpa had it – the doctor diagnosed me as type 2 and recommended dramatic lifestyle adjustments, including carb counting and daily exercise. She also did an A1C test, which measures average blood sugar levels for three months. A non-diabetic's result would be under 5.7%. Mine was 7.7%. This diagnosis felt like being sentenced to lifelong obsession. Food already controlled me, and now it had even more power. Over the next five years, I worked with a nutritionist and psychotherapist. I trained for a 200-mile relay race with friends. I did Weight Watchers, went to Overeaters Anonymous, worked the 12-step program, and used apps like Noom and My Fitness Pal. I lost 50lb. Still, I remained overweight according to the BMI chart, and my A1C didn't budge, which confounded my primary care doctor. Related: I'm not diabetic – should I be using a glucose monitor? She referred me to an endocrinologist who specialized in metabolic health. Six months later, when my appointment finally arrived, my A1C had shot up to 9.1%. That should not have happened while I shed pounds. She declared I was misdiagnosed: type 2 diabetics' bodies make insulin, which helps regulate blood sugar, but don't use it effectively. But I was actually type 1, an autoimmune condition where the body stops producing insulin. I would be dependent on insulin injections from that point forward. Living with diabetes was taxing. I had to order a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), pen needles, insulin vials and other items – but via a specialty supplier rather than a standard pharmacy, for insurance purposes. I had to procure pre-authorization forms for medication and attend required half-day training sessions every time I wanted to try a different insulin pump or when my insurance changed. But in 2018, after five years of effort, my A1C settled in at 5.9% – a happy result for me and my doctor. But to get to a weight my doctor would approve, I still had to lose 30lb. She started me on a new drug called Ozempic. Like most people at that point, I'd never heard of it. She said it was only technically approved for type 2 patients – but some who were overweight with type 1, like me, were taking it to help with weight loss. Over the next four years, my doctor and I gradually increased my Ozempic dosage and eventually were pleased with the results: when I woke in the morning my fasting blood sugar reading was finally within the recommended range of 80-120 on my CGM. I was able to reduce my regular insulin usage. But my weight didn't change. I continued my healthier eating habits and exercised regularly with cycling, yoga and running. Still, the scale didn't move. *** In 2022, when Ozempic was becoming a household name, I suddenly had two problems. First, my doctor confirmed I was already on the highest available dose, so taking more wouldn't help me lose weight. Second, because the drugs were now approved for general weight loss, I might have trouble filling my prescription. A global shortage followed, and I went four months without, eventually switching to Mounjaro because it was available. The meds are highly effective for a majority of patients but there is still a percentage who don't lose … body weight Veronica Johnson My already-thin friends started taking GLP-1s, and I couldn't avoid chatter about the 'skinny shot'. 'I'm not even hungry! I don't even think about food!' they'd say. But I didn't experience this quieting of the voices in my head telling me I was hungry all the time, and I wondered why. I was furious. As my friends celebrated their new bodies, I wondered, again, what was wrong with mine. My diabetes was under control, but I was also existing at the margins of a miracle. An estimated 15% of all GLP-1 users are so-called 'non-responders' to the weight loss effect, according to Atlanta-based physician Dr Cristina Del Toro Badessa. Lucas Veritas, a GLP-1 user from Montreal and author of The GLP-1 Effect newsletter, highlighted clinical trials showing that approximately 13% of people taking semaglutide (the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy) and about 9% of those taking tirzepatide (found in Mounjaro and Zepbound) did not lose more than 5% of their body weight. 'The meds are highly effective for a majority of patients but there is still a percentage who don't lose a clinically significant percentage of body weight. Everyone's physiology is a little different,' said Veronica Johnson MD, an obesity medicine specialist in Chicago. Recent research has identified a gene that may help predict who will successfully lose weight with GLP-1 medications. Related: The radical practice of eating what you want Additionally, according to a recent study comparing GLP-1 medications to bariatric surgery, 'real world' cohorts lost less weight than what drug companies reported in their trials: about 5% of their body weight, compared with the 15% reported for semaglutide and the 20–25% for tirzepatide in pharma-funded studies. Nicoletta LaMarca-Sacco, 56, a former Ozempic user in New York, also didn't lose weight after a year of use. 'I've always been a squishy mom and will continue to be,' she said. 'It just didn't work for me.' She expected the drug would quiet more of the internal chatter telling her she needed to snack. 'It did help, but only to a small degree,' she said. 'When we consider these drugs, they need to be combined with other markers of good health like diet, exercise, even stress management,' said Dr Raj Dasgupta, an ABIM Quadruple board-certified physician in Los Angeles. He said his patients sometimes had unrealistic expectations about how quickly and dramatically they will drop extra pounds. He explained that for someone who is overweight, shedding even a small amount of weight can improve heart and kidney function, adding: 'The bar has been set too high for weight loss.' 'What's dangerous,' Badessa said, 'is the dominant societal narrative that these are 'magic shots' for weight loss.' Veritas agreed: 'Expectations are sky-high. People see all the before/after photos and expect an easy ride.' 'It feels similar to any other time the diet industry has thrown marketing momentum behind one particular 'fix',' Virginia Sole-Smith, author of Fat Talk, told me about the current hype. 'There's excitement that we've found a 'silver bullet', then it silences any other narratives and experiences about it.' Related: What is metabolic syndrome – and do we really need to worry about it? I had definitely been looking for an elixir to rid me of body mass. Then I discovered that diabetes itself might be the reason I wasn't losing weight. Andrew Koutnik, a metabolic research scientist, said that GLP-1s typically lead to significant weight loss for people with obesity (15-25% of their body weight). However, people with diabetes generally lost less weight, proportionally: for type 2, an average of 8-11%; for type 1, about 8-12%. 'While we don't know why this is occurring, prior data suggests the drug's metabolic effects may be tied to how well the body manages glucose,' Koutnik said. GLP-1s are designed to coax the body into making and using insulin more efficiently, he explained. But for someone with type 1 diabetes, meaning their pancreas cannot make insulin, that's like installing a turbocharger on a car with no engine – there's nothing to boost. That said, he clarified, these drugs aren't entirely useless for people with type 1. GLP-1s slow digestion and suppress appetite, which can lead to fewer snacks and less carb-heavy meals. That might nudge blood sugar in the right direction, but it's more of a side-effect. 'The actual impact on blood sugar control is minimal: less than a 1% drop in A1C,' Koutnik explained. *** The psychological fallout of being a non-responder can be devastating. It was more fodder for my destructive inner dialogue: Why won't my body just comply? Alyson Curtis, a therapist based in New York, works with patients who feel isolated as they see others losing weight and don't have the same result. I told her how unfair it felt and she agreed the loss of agency can be a lot to process. 'I hear the 'thin fantasy' constantly from patients – it's a dream to fit into societal norms,' Curtis added, 'but what they're really saying is they want to be accepted, cherished, adored.' She helps patients reframe success to focus on healthy outcomes beyond weight loss – like how the Health at Every Size (HAES) movement centers on overall wellbeing. It feels similar to any other time the diet industry has thrown marketing momentum behind one particular 'fix' Virginia Sole-Smith Still, these drugs are here to stay. Johnson pointed to recent innovations like CagriSema, a compound drug bringing together an amylin agonist and a GLP-1. In trials, CagriSema helped reduce blood sugar spikes after meals and can also contribute to weight loss. 'The hormone called amylin is normally released by the same cells that make insulin – which type 1 diabetics lack,' Koutnik said. He added that amylin helps slow digestion and also lowers levels of glucagon, which could help better manage blood sugar. Society seems to have rewritten ideas about health, worth and willpower through the lens of these astonishing drugs. I figured I could, too. I've tried to quiet the inner voice that's shaming me into thinking I'm a failure for not losing more weight. Forging self-acceptance from deep frustration, I am realizing there is nothing inherently 'wrong' with my body – I am simply among those for whom the current medications produce a partial benefit. Learning that I'm not alone has helped curb my body shame. I am grateful that GLP-1s have helped me with blood sugar control, minimizing my risk of complications from diabetes. 'When we focus on the miracle weight loss narrative, we ignore their real value in helping people with diabetes, adding to the discourse of body shaming, which is never health-promoting,' said Sole-Smith. I've been trying to shift my focus from weight loss to improving my relationship with food. For me, that's learning to eat with more intention and maybe even a little joy. Hopefully, I can come to appreciate my right to the occasional indulgence without self-recrimination. And on my next birthday, I want to celebrate with the most delicious symbol of self-acceptance: a guilt-free piece of cake.

After Decades of Mysterious Pain, I Finally Got the Diagnosis That Changed My Life
After Decades of Mysterious Pain, I Finally Got the Diagnosis That Changed My Life

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

After Decades of Mysterious Pain, I Finally Got the Diagnosis That Changed My Life

I have a busy and fulfilling life: I teach writing classes, I mentor a young girl, and I volunteer at my local history museum. I also have great group of supportive friends. But it wasn't always this way. I have struggled with chronic pain almost my entire life. The first time I recall feeling pain, I was three years old. My bones felt like they were being crushed at night, and I screamed in agony. Mystified, my parents took me to many doctors, including more than a dozen specialists. The diagnosis? Hypersensitivity to pain, and hyperallergic to everything. They told my parents give me Benadryl when I had a painful 'allergy attack,' as they called it. Bu it was so much more than that. Growing up in pain By age nine, I had daily headaches. Benadryl and Tylenol barely worked. I couldn't play outside with my friends because I got painful welts from the sun. My hip and arm joints ached constantly. A growth spurt at ten triggered more screaming episodes, so we went back to more doctors. Again, no answers. My parents believed me, but by twelve, we still had no diagnosis, and I had shingles–twice. The doctor didn't do any tests. He dismissed me with, 'You're the most stressed-out seventh grader I've ever met. Your problems aren't that bad.' I felt defective and terribly alone. After jumping over hurdles in P.E. class popped my knees out of the socket, I saw an orthopedist who handed me an Ace bandage and told me I'd 'grow into my joints.' I never did, and that bandage became my companion throughout high school. College was not an option for me–financially or physically. Crossing campus would hurt. So I began working, managing nonprofits, but the cycle repeated: work, get sick, lose my job, start over. It curtailed my career, and my dreams of travel became early flights home and canceled plans. My body revolted. By my thirties, my symptoms included electric nerve shocks, severe neuropathy, tremors, and agonizing spasms. Sitting made my legs painfully numb. I was desperate, until a relative suggested I try the Mayo Clinic, which is local to me in Arizona. The doctors there were shocked at my thin frame and gaunt gaze. I saw over fifteen specialists there, because every system in my body was involved. The doctors suspected I had an autoimmune disease, but my case was so complex they couldn't pinpoint a cause. At thirty-two, I started experiencing intense stomach cramps, vomiting, and joint pain. Since I had no official diagnosis, there was no recommended treatment, and no one would prescribe pain medicine without a diagnosis. Turning a corner My mom moved in to care for me, and with her gentle presence, she gave me a renewed sense of hope. I had the courage to keep going. Her unconditional love and unwavering support propped me up. Another helpful moment was when my doctors suggested I try medical cannabis. Within a week, the stomach pain eased, but I still experienced joint and nerve pain. At that point, a doctor finally prescribed pain medication, which brought some relief. I also returned to childhood coping tools. Growing up in a New Age household, I used meditation and biofeedback (visualization of the pain leaving). They don't erase the pain, but they do allow me to take a mental step back from it. Then, things changed when, after all those years, I finally had a name for my condition: The doctors at Mayo discovered I had mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), and afterward, they diagnosed me with multiple chronic conditions, including chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), small fiber neuropathy (SFN), piriformis syndrome, and hypermobility Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS) MCAS explained so much. It's a condition in which mast cells—the body's first responders—go haywire and release floods of inflammatory chemicals. It worsens everything else, including my nerve and joint pain. Finally getting diagnosed and knowing what was happening in my body was life changing. It wasn't just a diagnosis, it was validation. I had been treated like a mystery to solve or problem to dismiss. Now doctors came to me with solutions and a treatment plan. Most importantly, it renewed my sense of hope. I could begin to heal. Moving forward with hope In 2022, after losing my mom and close family members, I needed connection. I wanted to help people who are suffering silently. I co-founded The Chronic Haven, a nonprofit peer support group for people living with chronic illness and pain. We offer online support meetings, game nights, creative classes, and more. This is where I found my tribe, and it brings me so much joy. Finally, at 45, I was approved for intravenous immunoglobulin immunotherapy (IVIG) for CIDP/SFN. Every two weeks, I receive donor antibodies that help rebuild the myelin sheaths around my nerves. It's helping immensely. I have much to live for today. I have a better quality of life. I look forward to IVIG days, because that means I am one step close to being better. I am happy today, with supportive friends and a good team of doctors in place. I have found my smile again. You Might Also Like Can Apple Cider Vinegar Lead to Weight Loss? Bobbi Brown Shares Her Top Face-Transforming Makeup Tips for Women Over 50

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