Progress: talking grapes and beef!

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JenniferS
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Progress: talking grapes and beef!

Post by JenniferS »

Many of you may know, I've been crawling my way toward remission, seeminly hitting more rivets than gains. But it seems I keep adding yet one more piece to this crazy puzzle of wellness. :)

One is grapes. I don't know why, but these seem to do me good. (I peel them) I had steered clear of all fruits because certain ones made me insanely ill. (Pears, watermellon...) One day, as I was making my husband's lunch, an intense craving for the grapes I was making came over me. So I peeled one and ate it. Then peeled another, and ate it. So here I was, peeling grapes and shoving them into my mouth so fast, I resembled a food eating contestant on steroids. (And I am on steroids, so ha!).

The next day, no D. Odd.

Second piece of the puzzle. I've been eating a mix of rice or potatoes with some either cauliflower, green beans, or brocoli, and some sort of meat. Most often, beef, chicken, fish, or pork.

But I've been struggling, and struggling, and struggling. Due to laziness and finances, I'll normally stick with one big pot for a week, then will make it again, maybe the same ingredients until whatever meat and veggies I bought are gone.

So, in Nov., I was on a ground beef, rice, and cauliflower kick. Made a pot of my goo, and ate it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. I've pretty much always had pain and nausea, but it started getting worse. Asked my GI about it. She put me on an acid blocker. Pain got worse, sensitive to the slightest touch, then got to where it was bad enough to double me over and I started taking Tramadol, but it didn't touch it. It radiated to my back, dropped 10 pounds in a week, D not even my cocktail of meds could stop, vomitting, and ultimately dry heaves. Ended up in the ER with dehydration.

I then went on a liquid diet. Which largely consisted of water, although I added some chicken broth in the mix.

Anyway, while in my gunk, a friend who survived breast cancer asked me, "You can do beef? Ever since my chemo therapy, I can't do beef."

This question kept coming up. But I'm dense. And stubborn. And cheap. So I kept eating beef. Yes, the pain came back, but now that I knew what it was, I'd just go back to liquids 'til it went away. Smart, I know, and yes, very helpful for gaining weight. (Insert sarcastic font)

But then hubby bought a bunch of chicken, and my daughter went gluten free. (Yay! As a side note, she'd been puking 3-4 times a day. Hasn't puked once since going GF) So, I'm no longer cooking spaghetti or burgers for them, which means, there's no point buying ground beef.

Guess what? The pain has largely stopped. And I've dropped two meds: hyoscyamine and pepto. I am now down to 2 immodiums and 9mg of budesonide. If this continues... :)
JenniferS
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Post by JenniferS »

I should clarify as it seems I didn't end my point on the grapes. lol. It seems the grapes have a healing effect on me.
Leah
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Post by Leah »

Well, it took a while for you to get the message, but at least you did. Since you are on full dose Budesonide, there could still be things you are eating that you shouldn't. You may not figure it out though until you wean to a lower dose.

Good luck
Leah
JenniferS
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Post by JenniferS »

Thanks, Leah,

I kinda hope that isn't the case, as I eat very few things, but time will tell. ;)
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tex
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Post by tex »

Cool! Slow and steady wins the race (the race to remission), but a lot of detective work along the way is necessary to keep us on track.

You're making good progress, but as Leah says, the path to remission is almost always littered with additional land mines that tend to show up from time to time.

Thanks for sharing your progress and your insight.

Tex
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It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
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sunny
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Post by sunny »

This was so interesting to see this part of your journey. I think I will profit from this too...
Sunny
"It is very difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it. "
Upton Sinclair
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