Marquise_Madness
Shiny_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2016
- Messages
- 304
Have you discussed this with with a doctor?
True dat! My husband recently died at 38!Life is temporary.
I got some serious health issues, but I'm just glad to still be pissing off as many people as possible.
I read somewhere the human body lasts for only 40 years.
After that, be glad you're above ground.
I found my first gray hair at 11. My metabolism started slowing at 20-21. My back is bad.
And now my vision is starting to go and I need glasses. I am ordering some now and hoping that my aging slows down!
How has your body failed you?
Discuss all this with your doctor, not strangers on the Internet.
Find a good ophthalmologist ... NOT an optometrist that crapy insurance companies want to limit you to because an optometrist is cheaper than an ophthalmologist (which is a real doctor).
If your insurance won't pay, pay out of pocket.
I'm in my 60s; I've had glaucoma for around 25 years.
If I had obeyed my insurance company and only saw who they allow me to see (optometrists) I'd be blind now.
Insurance companies don't care about you.
They only care about profits.
Life is temporary.
I got some serious health issues, but I'm just glad to still be pissing off as many people as possible.
I read somewhere the human body lasts for only 40 years.
After that, be glad you're above ground.
I found my first gray hair at 11. My metabolism started slowing at 20-21. My back is bad.
And now my vision is starting to go and I need glasses. I am ordering some now and hoping that my aging slows down!
How has your body failed you?
Hi Marquise_Madness, I am sorry you are feeling down about things and perhaps I can offer a different perspective for you. Consider your blessings and value what you have now. Fast forward a few decades and you will realize how wonderful your health was back when you were in your early 20s. Gray hair-Color it if you want. Metabolism slow? Check it out with your internist have blood work done and then exercise, eat right and see if you need any other medical intervention. Bad back? See a specialist and perhaps find a good PT and start doing exercises that might help relieve your discomfort.
Wishing you lots of healthy and happy decades ahead. And yes please get an eye exam if you haven't had one in the past 2 years. With whichever eye care professional you choose. Just make sure (as with all your doctors) that they are qualified and licensed and good at their profession.
How has my body failed me? Lots of auto immune issues causing skin and hair issues but I am thankful for what I can do and that generally I feel well. I didn't start developing most of my health issues until my late thirties and honestly I didn't appreciate how great my health was when I was younger so value the good health you have now and value each day and enjoy it to the fullest. Life is unpredictable at best and can change in a moment. And I for one have a new found appreciation for the good health I do have right now despite the health conditions I have.
Hi Kenny, sorry you have glaucoma and 25 years ago things were very different in the fields. However yes, I would go to the specialist who deals primarily with the disease you have so you are getting the best care. So if you have glaucoma a glaucoma specialist is who should treat you and if you have a retinal tear a retinal specialist is who should treat you and if you have cataracts and need surgery you need to see a cataract specialist. Optometrists are (generally) very skilled at providing comprehensive primary eye care and diagnosing (and in certain cases treating) ocular disease and caring for your general eye care needs. Optometrists go through a very thorough education (college, then 4 years of Optometry school and then usually complete a residency) and are quite capable of taking care of one's primary eye care needs. But to each his/her own and fortunately you have options.
I will add for those who might not know I am a (retired) Optometrist. Who did a residency and provided excellent care for my patients while I was in my profession.
http://www.allaboutvision.com/eye-doctor/choose.htm
Hope your glaucoma is well controlled and that your vision is comfortable and clear.
Discuss all this with your doctor, not strangers on the Internet.
Find a good ophthalmologist ... NOT an optometrist that crapy insurance companies want to limit you to because an optometrist is cheaper than an ophthalmologist (which is a real doctor).
If your insurance won't pay, pay out of pocket.
I'm in my 60s; I've had glaucoma for around 25 years.
If I had obeyed my insurance company and only saw who they allow me to see (optometrists) I'd be blind now.
Insurance companies don't care about you.
They only care about profits.
Hi Marquise_Madness, I am sorry you are feeling down about things and perhaps I can offer a different perspective for you. Consider your blessings and value what you have now. Fast forward a few decades and you will realize how wonderful your health was back when you were in your early 20s. Gray hair-Color it if you want. Metabolism slow? Check it out with your internist have blood work done and then exercise, eat right and see if you need any other medical intervention. Bad back? See a specialist and perhaps find a good PT and start doing exercises that might help relieve your discomfort.
Wishing you lots of healthy and happy decades ahead. And yes please get an eye exam if you haven't had one in the past 2 years. With whichever eye care professional you choose. Just make sure (as with all your doctors) that they are qualified and licensed and good at their profession.
I hate to sound all poo poo about it because I know you're concerned, but those are not signs of aging in the standard sense. You don't get to chalk those up to aging.
Having your metabolism slow at 20 isn't aging, is usually what they used to call "the freshman 10 (or 15 or 20)". Where you leave home, mom's not watching what you eat, and now neither are you. I gained at least 20 lbs over the first 3 years of college and when I finally got on the scale was like WHAT?? Ah to be back in the days when you could whip the pounds off at a clip. Now? Uhhh...
I wore glasses from age 3 to 15, when I was able to ditch them for a decade or 2, until I hit the dreaded 40, and now I can't see a damn thing without glasses. Basically, your eyes change over your lifetime, some of which is simply human variation and not age-related.
The back can probably be improved right now by the proper exercises. That will be a bit tricky and you might need help picking the right ones for you, because there are many things that can cause back issues. The human back is a crap design overall.
But Arkie and others are correct, get what you can under control now (mainly that back thing, and whipping off any excess weight), because years of those will age you prematurely. Right now, you're still a pup and can change things and have those changes effect your quality of life for the better for decades.
And how has my body failed me? There is not enough keystrokes for it. Let's just say big bad autoimmune and leave it there.
Been wearing glasses since 6th grade. Started to gray in my 30s and my thyroid was removed in 2000. Slow Metabolism and some depression are attributed to thyroid. Have your doctor check your thyroid.
FM