When I first “cracked the code” on stabilizing and reversing prolapse, and wrote and published Saving the Whole Woman, I set up this forum. While I had finally gotten my own severe uterine prolapse under control with the knowledge I had gained, I didn’t actually know if I could teach other women to do for themselves what I had done for my condition.
So I just started teaching women on this forum. Within weeks, the women started writing back, “It’s working! I can feel the difference!”
From that moment on, the forum became the hub of the Whole Woman Community. Unfortunately, spammers also discovered the forum, along with the thousands of women we had been helping. The level of spamming became so intolerable and time-consuming, we regretfully took the forum down.
Technology never sleeps, however, and we have better tools today for controlling spam than we did just a few years ago. So I am very excited and pleased to bring the forum back online.
If you are already a registered user you may now log in and post. If you have lost your password, just click the request new password tab and follow the directions.
Please review and agree to the disclaimer and the forum rules. Our moderators will remove any posts that are promotional or otherwise fail to meet our guidelines and will block repeat offenders.
Remember, the forum is here for two reasons. First, to get your questions answered by other women who have knowledge and experience to share. Second, it is the place to share your results and successes. Your stories will help other women learn that Whole Woman is what they need.
Whether you’re an old friend or a new acquaintance, welcome! The Whole Woman forum is a place where you can make a difference in your own life and the lives of thousands of women around the world!
Best wishes,
Christine Kent
Founder
Whole Woman
granolamom
October 2, 2008 - 5:37pm
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balms
get the wholewoman balms! seriously! it doesn't say so on the label, but I'd guess they're safe enough to eat. all natural ingredients.
and so moisturizing
discouraged
October 2, 2008 - 5:56pm
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discouraged Thanks for the
discouraged Thanks for the advice. Has anyone tried Replens, which my GYN suggested? (Guess who is suspicious about her advice?:))
louiseds
October 2, 2008 - 8:45pm
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Replens
(Well, here we go again, ladies!!)
Hi Discouraged
Welcome back. Glad to hear you are going OK. While you have been away we have had a major discussion on Replens and vaginal moisturisers and lubricants. Use the search box to look for the topics, which mostly have product names in the subject line, but there are mentions of moisturisers in all sorts of topics. Just remember the two different spellings of moisturizer. Try both.
I swear by the WW balms too.
Call back with questions when you have taken all the posts in.
Geez, a few months is a long time in POP land.
Cheers
Louise
discouraged
October 2, 2008 - 10:29pm
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Sorry
Louise,
Yes, I have been gone. I'm sorry to be repititious on the posts. I did look up replens in the search and, I thought moisturizer as well. Perhaps I misspelled it or was searching in just one particular focus group. I'll try again.
louiseds
October 3, 2008 - 12:18am
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Hi Discouraged
Gee, it is hard to make a subtle joke in these posts. I am not making fun of you at all. :-) If you have a look at the strings about Replens, moisturisers and balms you should get a laugh too. We seemed to spend weeks recording what happened and comparing applicators, husband responses, and trying out products. It was a real hoot!
I find the best way to search is to do one keyword or spelling at a time. It is not a sophisticated search engine. You will probably get more than a page of topics, some of which will seem irrelevant, but the reference to the keyword will be somewhere in there. Open each topic and use your browser's Find on This Page function to highlight the keyword. I use Firefox. That way you can skim large numbers of posts very quickly and the keyword will jump out at you. The keyword may only be in one post of a long string (topic). Good luck.
Louise
Clonmacnoise
October 3, 2008 - 5:38am
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Don't be Discouraged
Discouraged,
I don't get to post much these days, but I'm the tampon queen. As a moisturizer, I use olive oil exclusively. I have even begun to use it on my face! My grade three has gone to a grade one. I have a little jar of olive oil in the bathroom, and I let the tampon absorb about five seconds of olive oil, and then I apply the tampon while I'm lying down. It stays in place most days all day. Since I'm not bleeding anymore, I don't worry about infection. Others have tried this, and have not had good success. I think the combination of the lying down, the olive oil and the fact I use a sports tampon by Playtex. You don't need much olive oil. I've been doing this for about six months.
Judy
discouraged
October 3, 2008 - 12:55pm
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moisturizer
Thanks for the advice, I love olive oil...never did use tampons but I'm willing to give it a try for support. I am past menopause. Also, I haven't tried the sponge. Posture has helped me and I always bend over to touch my toes after sitting on the toilet and before going to bed. Sometimes I have to "walk" forward with my hands on the floor until I am a few feet away from my toes, and sometimes I have to rise on my toes, but that usually works for me. If I could just have some assurance that the entire thing is not going to get much worse (and I'd be facing surgery when I'm older and it's more risky), I'd be A-OK with my situation. I can live with it and even can forget about it sometimes. I am 64 now and am always amazed when my GYN asks me if I'm still sexually active. Duh, yes!
discouraged
October 3, 2008 - 1:03pm
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moisturizers
Thanks for the tips, Louise.
For me, and I suspect for several others, we vacilate between on the one side fretting and needing to know everything possible to the other side of staying calm and relaxed and enjoying life while we just put it on the "back burner." I'm not saying I don't enjoy the posts, but for me a visit every day would not necessarily be a good thing. I enjoy the women and the support, but if no symptoms appear to be getting worse, I do not like to dwell on the situation.
a6a25725
October 3, 2008 - 2:30pm
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Hi discouraged
I have been living with my prolapses since 2002. I was fitted for a pessary then because I refused surgery. Surgery scared me silly.
The pessary worked for quite awhile but my prolapse was getting very uncomfortable so I was seriously considering surgery. Still scared silly but thought it might be the answer. I found this web site in 2004 and haven't thought of surgery since.
The posture helped to improve my prolapse and I have been living well ever since. Still have some uncomfortable times but with rest they always improve. I still use my pessary as needed. I use the bliss balm and find it helps keep things moisturized quite well.
I am 72 soon to be 73 and I won't consider surgery unless it is a "life threatening" condition.
The only exercises I do are a lot of walking and work out on my gazelle when the mood hits me.
IMO I don't think your prolapses will require surgery if you take care of yourself, don't get constipated, proper diet etc.
Regards,
Flora.
Mae
October 3, 2008 - 3:46pm
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Replens
Hi Dis (I'll just call you dis..discouraged seems so.. well, discouraging!),
I am am avid user of Replens as you might have seen in our past posts if you found them. Replens gives me tremendous relief and keeps my Stage 3 bladder prolapse up higher. I would hate to have to go without it, although it does carry some small risk. The good outweighs the bad in my mind. I love Christine's Balms as well, however, I find I need both since Replens goes up higher and the Balms work lower.
Good luck. I hope you are doing better. It's a shame that you don't have a Gyn that will work with you. Might want to think about finding one who will. This is too important to let someone persuade you to do anything you think you don't want to.
Regards,
~Mae
discouraged
October 3, 2008 - 4:07pm
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GYN search
Hi,
Thanks, I'm willing to try it all. ANy ideas on where to find a good GYN that thinks like the people on this website? Most of the Googled sites I find are on surgeons...
discouraged
discouraged
October 3, 2008 - 4:10pm
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Best balm
Hi Flora,
Your words were just the best balm I could have found. I wish you all the best and hope I can do as well with my situation which I now believe I can do!!
(not so....discouraged)
louiseds
October 3, 2008 - 6:42pm
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moisturizers
Hi Dis
I don't want you to think managing POP is just a matter of finding out what you can so you can feel better and just get on with your life. It is not really like that. The WW method allows you to firstly change the configuration of your pelvic organs in relation to their fascia and the skeleton, and secondly to maintain that new configuration in every day life. That is what allows me to get on and live may life in the same way as I always have lived it, with subtle changes to the way I now do things so I don't do further damages to the fascial supports of my pelvic organs and don't push them backwards so they fall down my vagina and down the plughole, so to speak.
Once you build these new ways of doing things into everyday life they are self affirming and the discomfort for me has simply gone away. Yes, I do feel them occasionally, but honestly it is less than once a day, and usually momentary. Mind you, I am having less frequent periods now, so I don't seem to get the monthly variations that I used to get a couple of years ago. I am naturally mindful of my prolapses these days because I don't want them to bother me and limit my activities. My new ways of doing things affirm themselves cos I know that if I go back to doing things the old ways the symptoms will be back with avengence.
Getting on with my life is not putting the discomfort on the back burner and doing other things to get my mind off my POPs. It is just something that has happened as a result of doing all these WW things on a 24/7 basis. I can now live my life free of the fear that I had before.
It is a matter of not taking your body for granted and working with it instead of against it. As an older woman who is discovering that I can no longer do things at the pace I used to, or the intensity I used to, I am very aware that it is downhill from now on. My mother is 96, her mother died at 104. I'm 55. I am going to be around for a long time yet. I will look after my body as well as I can so I can live life to the full and hopefully make the rest of my body's years a gentle downward slope, rather than hurtling into an invalid old age in a body which has been unnecessarily abused. I now consider that *not* doing all the WW techniques is abusing your POPs, and abusing your body by neglect and misuse.
Having said all that, it has been 4 years of WW for me, and there is a lot of information to take in. You can only do that gradually in order to assimillate it into your everyday life. Be patient with your body, and just keep learning. I am sure you will get there, or at least get to a point where you lose the fear of what is happening. :-)
Soon you will need a new username. Encouraged!
Cheers
Louise
queenmother
October 3, 2008 - 10:14pm
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Finding a doctor
I tried to post this before and lost it... so apologies if it somehow shows up twice.
I think the best way to find a doctor who fits with your needs (besides getting a great referral from a friend with the same problem!) is to contact other people in the community of whole woman-centered and/or alternative healthcare. I would look for midwives, doulas, and practitioners of alternative medicine (acupuncture, chiropractor, naturopath, etc.) and seek referrals from them. The gynecologist I have now seems wonderful so far - definitely the best I've had - and I was referred to her by my old doula when I called her and said I wanted to change doctors. Even though my GYN doesn't do obstetrics anymore, my doula had been around long enough to remember her.
If you ask around and hear the same name from more than one person, that's a really good sign.
Also if you have another doctor you trust you can ask that person, but I think that's the hardest one. It's always hard to know why a doctor recommends another doctor - sometimes it may have to do with a reputation in the hospital that has to do with surgical skill and not bedside manner or an open mind. And I've never had a GP I thought highly enough of to trust their referrals. I do take advice from my kids' pediatrician because we can talk more mom-to-mom than doctor-to-patient about that stuff (as I am not the patient!).
Good luck,
Sarah
discouraged
October 4, 2008 - 10:55am
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Thanks, Louise. You are
Thanks, Louise. You are right, there are no quick fixes for much of anything. Let me assure you that I've read the book (about two years ago and referenced it often), I've changed my posture effectively, I've done the exercises that work for me (I have an arthritic knee) and I've rested more and picked up less heavy loads, I eat the right things and my posture is working. I very much appreciate the advice and the knowledge I've gained. I am a former teacher, so I do value education and it seems to me like this website is where it is at. I know these things I've learned have now become a habit and that is what stops me from sliding backward. I would say that I visit monthly, and I post less often. I look for recent posts that maybe my experiences can help out with. You are right, it is a lifelong change in lifestyle, and I've been able to do that with Diabetes Type II so that my blood now reads normal for glucose. It is just a function of my worry-wort personality, I guess, that sometimes I freak out! :) Anyone else out there that does that? For me it is the memory of my GYN, a woman my age, telling me that I should have the surgery now since it will be much harder when I get older. I know the stats, I know she was wrong, but she sits there in my head and gets rewound every now and then, that's all. I had gall bladder attacks for years and the doctor said I should have it out immediately, yet I listened to my body and changed my eating and waited for two years. By that time surgery had become much easier, so that was a good idea. I would love to find a medical professional that was working on approving the approach to POP. Think of all the boomers out there that will be experiencing this situation. Maybe there will be wonderful help available within our lifetimes. I'm actually loving getting older. People respect me for no other reason, and they ask my advice! You will love your aging, I think, and how lucky to have such fine genetics. THanks for writing.
discouraged
October 4, 2008 - 10:59am
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Finding a doctor
Thanks, Sarah,
You are right. That's definitely the way to go. I do not know why it had not occurred to me. I live in a very small place but there are people here I can ask. I live in the Pacific Northwest, so if anyuone out there has a suggestion, let me know. And I'll start asking my daughter's childbirth team, my chiro, etc.
not so discouraged