Around 10 to 15 per cent of all men will experience chronic prostatitis at some stage of their life. The chances are you know someone, whether a friend member or friend, who is suffering from the condition, either secretly or openly. And though sufferers have many similarities between them, these are the top four based on my own experience and speaking to medical experts. 1. We weren't always the anxious type The common misconception of male pelvic pain sufferers is that we are natural worriers, that our character is one of constant anxiousness, overthinking and panic. The experts I've interviewed on my podcast all agree that when you walk through their clinic door, they aren't seeing the regular you. That patients are in a heightened state of alert turned up to full by their pelvic pain. Sure, prostatitis often strikes at a particularly anxious time in a person's life, which may have created an unhealthy lifestyle and thus vulnerable body, but to say we're all ne
Sometimes, you can really put your foot in it. Given the fact chronic nonbacterial prostatitis affects around 10 to 15 per cent of men , the odds of finding yourself chatting to a guy suffering from it is high. And as a chronic prostatitis sufferer knows, when a friend, family member or colleague learns about your condition, the response can swing from bedside nurse to classroom joker. Even a well-meaning comment can hurt deep and light-hearted remarks taken as insults. Here are five statements you might want to bite your tongue at if you feel them slipping out your mouth. 1. 'Oh yeah, I've been kicked in the groin before. Hurts like hell, I know.' A kick to the testicles feels like a rapid cluster headache combined with a sledgehammer to your funny bone. The sensation is intense, disabling yet, crucially, temporary. Chronic prostatitis by its very name isn't going away anytime soon, something which a sufferer is more than fully aware of. Caution trying to associat
Hi Simon, I've had this bitch of a condition for the past two years. A few months after it hit I took up the offer to visit an old college pal in another city. It was the first time I'd stayed out anywhere since I was diagnosed with chronic prostatitis. I still needed to pee every ten minutes (still do) but I thought the distraction and change of scenery would boost my mood. His friends would be visiting to play a Halo tournament. After a few beers, I thought fuck it and decided to get it off my chest and tell them about my prostatitis symptoms. I told them everything from the pain in my lower back to the agony of erections. I tried to sound casual but they fucking annihilated me. My condition became the butt of every joke with my college friend leading the insults. Every fucking campaign or kill had a reference to my dick or balls. None of them had understood what I'd said. Anyway, they left and I crashed in the spare room but not before sneaking a cooking pot from the