Help! I've heard scary comments from pro-surgery people.....

Body: 

(Note: This is not Dec. 31, 1969, as it says above. It's Dec. 19, 2009.)

I've had a period of adjustment right after my Mom passed away where I wasn't going to the gym on a regular basis....and I think it might have made my prolapse worse. I had kept my prolapse at bay (asymtomatic) for ten years with regular exercise and riding a stationary bike at the gym. :-)

I came across a negative comment the other day (not here) - and there are often a lot of negative comments from pro-surgery people, and if I have the facts, I can and will ignore these negative comments.
I'm definitely not for surgery for myself, and I'm not going to have it.
I've heard too many horror stories about POP surgery, and the natural, non-surgical way for treating POP is the only way for me.
The pro-surgery people often say, "There is no way to treat prolapse except for surgery. If you don't have surgery, your prolapse will keep getting worse."
They also say,
"Doctors know that if your prolapse is grade three or higher, it is impossible for your prolapse to be reversed! So that is why most women choose surgery in the end." :-(
I just heard that view again now, as well as this depressing view: "Excercising will make your prolapse worse."
It is so depressing and fright-inducing, and these views attempt to kill all hope I have of my prolapse being reversed, or at least, less bothersome, so that I can take long walks again and not always be aware that I have a prolapse.

I am ready now, after my Mom's passing, to really buckle down and concentrate on improving my prolapse with the natural methods that Christine recommends.
I have her book, DVD, and cookbook.
My prolapse must now be around a grade three or four (the highest).
Things have re-arranged themselves naturally lately - after becoming symtomatic a year ago- so that I can go to the bathroom usually comfortably, but my prolapse is there when I walk or stand.
I don't feel it at all when I sit down.....

Please give me hope again.
I am going to work hard with the POP exercises, etc.
Some of you have had prolapses of grade three or higher who have improved their prolapse - or had it reversed - by doing the POP work, posture, and exercises, isn't that so?
I want and need to have hope, but I also need to be realistic...... :-)
I also need to take off thirty pounds.
After my Mom's passing, I gained ten pounds. :-(
Will being slimmer also improve my prolapse?
And all of my life (except lately) I have been active with regular exercise. And for the last twenty years, I've been going to the gym on a regular basis - except lately.
Tomorrow is a new start for me.
Please answer these three questions:

Will my prolapse get worse if I exercise ( for example at the gym) every day (like I've done for many years)?

If you have a grade three prolapse or higher, can it reverse itself or at least, improve - to the point where you have your life back and can talk long walks again?

Will being slimmer also improve my prolapse?

Thanks very much!

Mozart

I don't think I can answer your questions adequately but I can give you my thoughts. I think that some exercises can worsen a prolapse, such as abdominal crunches or any other exercise done while tucking the bum and holding ones breath. I think that almost any exercise can be done without harming a prolapse if it can be done in some modified way, keeping wholewoman posture in mind.
some woman here have had a grade three POP and have seen positive results.
I think obtaining/maintaining a healthy weight is good for overall health and thus good for prolapse.

I'm sorry to hear about the loss of your mom. I really believe that stress,etc impacts our health. maybe now that you're feeling ready to take better care of yourself you will see your body cooperating and responding. I hope that turns out to be true for you as it has for me.

as far as long walks, some women here find that wearing a support garment such as the V2 supporter or a pessary helpful.

try not to let the scary comments take up residence in your mind. you need the space for positive thoughts. {{{hugs}}}

Hi Mozart, I'm really sorry you are feeling so wretched at present. Like Granolamom I can only speak from my own experience, and from what I have read on this site. I doubt very much if a stage 3 prolapse can be completely reversed (that is only my own opinion, however) but it can certainly become less bothersome, and often be forgotten. I know this because this has happened for me.

As Granolamom points out, you have recently had a lot of stress and grief in your life. Discovering one's prolapse is also intensely stressful. So I think the first step towards getting back your normal life has to be stress reduction. Please try not to be blaming yourself for behaviours you think may have contributed to your prolapse. I know those thoughts will come, but when they do, turn on the radio, go out for a walk - anything to escape them. They can do you no good at all.

No human being has ever led a perfectly healthy life in all respects from cradle to grave. You have done very well with your exercise in the past and will do again. We can't know exactly why any individual develops a prolapse at a certain time - which in any case had likely been gradually developing perhaps over decades. Who knows whether gravity, age, childbirth, heredity would have caused that prolapse even if the woman had lived an impossibly healthy life forever? I think we should put all our energies into learning and living the best possible way for the future, and that is what you are clearly determined to do.

When I first discovered my bulges, I was scared to do anything for fear of making them worse. Now, I am back to trail running (just worked up to 6 miles), weight training (1 hour 3 times a week) and hill walking. In the summer I did a difficult 27 mile mountain hike which kept me out 17 hours. None of these activities seems so far to have any effect on my prolapse, which seems no worse than when I first discovered it. I do try to be very mindful of my posture, especially when weight training, and I don't do any crunch/situp type movements. I make sure to arch my back and brace my "pelvic floor" before lifting and I do many exercises sitting that I used to do standing. However, I have to admit that sometimes when things get difficult in the mountains, I do forget about my prolapse and my posture. I just have to hope the posture has become fairly ingrained by now.

I have good and bad bulge hours or even days, but I have never been able to relate that to anything I do or don't. At first the bad times panicked me, but now I just assume they will pass. If I feel too uncomfortable and haven't had a bm for more than 12 hours I sometimes use a glycol suppository to bring that on. It usually works fine, but that is only necessary maybe once a month.

There is no need to agonise now over the choice of surgery or not. That option will always be there. But as my physio, who has helped a lot of women after surgery used to say to them, "Surgery is not a cure, just a repair". I would never rule surgery out completely - in the case of cancer or extreme prolapse I might feel it was the best option for me. As long as I can do without surgery, that option is still there for me as a last resort, so I feel I can risk being active. A woman who has had surgery has not the same freedom.

As to losing weight, I do think it likely (but I don't know) that having a lot of fat inside one's abdomen may contribute to the pressure pushing one's organs downwards. BUT now is not the time to be dieting (another stressor). If you can get back to more physical activity and a calmer frame of mind, you will feel like eating more healthily and the weight will gradually come off.

Good luck!

Thanks to Granolamom and Alix for posting thoughtful and informative advice to Mozart. And, Mozart, my sympathy on losing your mom. I hope you're feeling better.
My question is for Granolamom, who mentioned the V2 supporter. I've never heard of it. What is it, and where can it be found? Thanks! Dogwalker

about the V2, I've never actually used it myself, and I can't remember more details. try typing it into the search box? or hopefully someone who knows more will chime in. sorry I'm not much help

found it, I think
prenatalcradle.com

Hi! Thanks so much granolamom, Alex, and dogwalker, for your concern and support!
I'm so glad that I'm not alone, and that others with prolapse have gotten improvement naturally. :-)

The important thing for me now is to establish a regular exercise routine again as I had before my Mom passed away, and stick with it always.
And start with the POP exercises and posture.
I believe that in strengthening my body, it will also be easier to do and maintain - as much as I can - the whole woman posture and exercises.
And it feels good to exercise.

May I ask: I like to do sit-ups. Can I do them in a way that does not worsen my prolapse - perhaps while trying to maintain the whole woman posture?

Another question in reading here about regularity:
It's normal for me to go number two around every 24 hours (once a day) - not every 12 hours.
It's always been like this for me. I think this is normal too, isn 't it?

The v-2 belt looks interesting.
I hope it would help if one has a rectocele too; I have a cystocele and rectocele.
I feel the bulge now just in the "rectum" area, whereas I used to feel it just in the front - before I also got the rectocele.
The v-2 belt is something for me to look into later.
Perhaps it is also available at Amazon.com.
I personally don't know about giving out one's credit card number to a site I don't know.....I would be cautious about it and want to know if it is a secure site....

Your support and encouraging comments are very much appreciated!
Thank you so much for all your help!
Hugs,
Mozart :-)

Mozart, I'm very glad you are finding the support on this site helpful. You do sound happier already. I don't think you should have to apologise for wanting to exercise: without exercise, we are setting ourselves up for all manner of bad outcomes from heart disease and diabetes to osteoporosis and dementia. To me exercise is like breathing - even if I knew it was bad for my POP I would still have to do it. But of course the trick is to be mindful and minimise any risk. For instance, once I would work out in the gym for hours at a stretch, but now I stop at one hour, as I think over-fatigued muscles would be less able to protect my prolapse.

Personally, I no longer do any kind of crunch or situp. That's one exercise one can't do with a hollow back! I am planning to substitute various plank and side-plank static postures. I am pleased to find that many think these superior to crunches anyway.

I didn't mean to reccomend 12 hourly bms - it's just that if the interval is longer than that I personally feel very uncomfortable and I know by experience that what is inside is getting harder and more painful to pass by the hour. As I also have piles, that's pretty disastrous. But I'm sure everyone's timetable for this is different. You sound as if you don't have any problems in that area.

For the record, I have all the celes, but the rectocele is the most noticeable bulge.

As for ordering from strange websites, I avoid ordering from any that don't give a telephone number, and I ring the number to check on them before placing my first order. I'm sure that's not 100% safe, but it must help.

Thanks, granolamom!

Hi Alix,
I agree with you completely.
Exercise is very necessary for all of us.
Even if it were bad for our POP, it is, as you say, very important to exercise regularly in order to remain healthy.
I've been running around the last few days so much preparing for the holidays - and, in a way, that does count as exercise - that I had no time to go to the gym - LOL - but the preparations are complete now, and tomorrow is the first time I'll be hitting the gym again.
I would stop at one hour too, Alix, but I'm not doing a lot of strenuous exercise.
I like to stay at the gym for two hours, as I go around to the various weight machines - I exercise on different ones on different days too - and do some floor exercises and free weights as well.
And sometimes, I need to use the ladies' room......
So it comes out to around two hours.
I especially like riding the stationary bike.

"But I'm sure everyone's timetable for this is different. You sound as if you don't have any problems in that area."

I do though, Alix.
I've had a slight tendency to be constipated all my life, but I've normally corrected it through eating enough fiber - fruits and vegetables....and prunes.
My son and daughter are now married, and two of my baby grandchildren also have this tendency.......My daughter gives them some of my pitless prunes when they come over.
I think that now, with this prolapse, I have to be particularly careful.....
I mentioned that things have settled naturally since I've had the prolapse, but I notice with number one, I sometimes need to tilt my body back in order to fully go.....
Piles are hemmorhoids, aren't they?
I have them too at times.
I first got them after the birth of my oldest child, but they do come and go....Of course, it just depends whether or not I am constipated, which I try to avoid.

"For the record, I have all the celes, but the rectocele is the most noticeable bulge."

My rectocele is the most noticeable bulge too.

The new year is upon us.
I hope that we can all - with work and practice - be able to do the things again that we used to do - things like walking some distance - walking the dog(s), and running if we are runners - and just be comfortable and become largely unaware of our prolapse.
HAPPY AND HEALTHY NEW YEAR EVERYONE!
Cheers,
Mozart :-)

Hi Mozart

I am sorry you have had such a challenging time and lost your Mom. Sometimes we underestimate the effect of losing a parent, and it does simply take time afterwards to be able to move on with your life and think about the future. However, your post indicates that you are indeed now ready to make your new beginning, and there's no time like the present, particularly with the start of a new year looming.

We all have different bodies and different POPs. There are no guarantees for anybody, whether you have surgery or not. The others are probably right. If you do nothing you probably will end up with your POPs worsening. But doing Wholewoman techniques could hardly be said to be doing nothing. I think they are definitely wrong in saying that surgery is the only thing that will stop the descent.

I would have to be honest and say that my POPs did descend further, after a marriage trauma that involved my moving out while under great stress, then back in again a few months later, not counting the months of acute stress leading up to the move. It got to a point where using my bowels involved splinting almost all the time and I couldn't empty my bladder. My cervix peaked out whenever I bore down slightly. However, I am now back to better than I was when I was first diagnosed by a gyn. I haven't splinted for weeks and bladder emptying is a breeze. I can squat without my cervix peaking, but only to demonstrate to myself. I normally kneel instead of squatting. My husband has had recent umbilical hernia surgery, so I have been doing all his lifting over 2kg initially, and anything bigger for the last couple of weeks, which have also involved a camping trip with bits of really rough outback driving and boating in quite rough seas. Result? No problems. I guess I have just figured out the 'best' ways of doing so many tasks. It is second nature now, so I don't feel limited in any way.

There are heaps of ways you can learn to use your body without unduly increasing intraabdominal pressure. You can also learn to alleviate it when it happens and reposition your organs if they do descend at any time. I feel sure you will make considerable progress, and not deteriorate if you use your body only in supportive ways. Give it two or three years, or even one year, and if you don't make considerable, and practical progress you can shrug your shoulders and take the surgical route. Unfortunately, doing it the other way around is fraught with difficulties.

From the sounds of replies you have received since you first posted you are getting new ideas to try. It is just a matter of optimising the way you move and do things. I know everybody doesn't experience the success I have had, but I certainly don't put it down to feeling lucky. It has been concerted effort and learning, and unlearning, and it has been so worthwhile. Looking to hearing from you as you progress.

Louise