Tag: MCAS

  • Everyday Tools for Neck Pain and Instability

    Everyday Tools for Neck Pain and Instability

    Living with neck pain and cervical instability often means relying on small, supportive tools rather than one single solution. This post shares personal experience with everyday tools like KT tape, prism glasses, positional rest, and daily positioning awareness that help reduce strain, head pressure, and fatigue.

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  • KT Tape: A Small Thing That Made a Big Difference in My Neck Pain

    KT Tape: A Small Thing That Made a Big Difference in My Neck Pain

    I have shared pieces of this before, but now that it has been a full month, I wanted to put the whole story in one place. Not dramatic, not exaggerated, just real. Because what started as a simple experiment ended up giving me something I hadn’t felt in a very long time: relief, function, and…

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  • Finding Stability in the Unstable: Living with Cervical Instability

    Finding Stability in the Unstable: Living with Cervical Instability

    What Upper Cervical Instability and shared experiences have taught me about hope and healing Last November, after nearly three decades of unexplained pain and symptoms, I finally received my first clear diagnosis: a syrinx extending from C5 to T12. I didn’t know what that meant at first, but it marked the beginning of finally understanding…

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  • Syringomyelia and Cervical Instability: What Doctors Missed and What I Found

    Syringomyelia and Cervical Instability: What Doctors Missed and What I Found

    When I first shared our mold story and later wrote about my symptoms, I thought those chapters explained the root of what was happening to me. Mold was a real factor in my health, but as time went on, I began to realize there was much more beneath the surface. For years, I lived with…

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  • The Struggle, and God’s Quiet Plan

    The Struggle, and God’s Quiet Plan

    From Mystery Symptoms to Ehlers-Danlos: My Story God has a way of offering us strength when we don’t think we can handle one more thing. And somehow, we pull through. Again and again. I think back to when I gave birth to my fourth baby. My oldest was only five. Five! How did I survive…

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