why does my whole body hurt even to the slightest touch with no injury and has b!


Question: Why does my whole body hurt even to the slightest touch with no injury and has been happening for a month?
its worse in my abdominal area but its also bad in my arms legs my butt and my chest .Honestly the only place on my body that doesn't hurt is my face. i have been having these symptoms for maybe a little over a month about two months after i started a methadone treatment due to a opiate addiction i think my addiction masked my pain before this but now im in almost debilitating pain .after my initial withdrawal from opiate's was over and i was put on a comfortable dose is thas wen i started to notice

Answers:

hang in there. you're being supervised at the methadone clinic so they know everything. when you see people achieving great things in life and others failing, 99% of the time is because the ones who failed didn't do what they had to do the whole way, from planning to preparation to practice to performance. the winners did. if you do what you have to do you'll put yourself in a position to achieve anything you want to in life and the sky is the limit for you. life isn't about temporal gratification and worldly comforts. it's about gutting it out when it's hard. it's about the tests. think of yourself as the kind of person who guts out the hard times, weathers the storms, and is a good steward to your soul.



It could be a delayed opiate withdrawl or simply your body adjusting to dealing without it.

Opiates are a depressant, it dulls your body's senses (and gives the mental impression of replacing them with different or stronger ones). This can be fairly normal in some people coming off of various drug addictions. Your body is readjusting to its natural state and your nerves and senses are coming back to form and are hyper sensitive after all the time they were shut down.

However, no advice you get from me or anyone else can outweigh the opinion of a doctor specializing in such things. Make sure you go seek the professional help.

EMT, Degree in Emergency Medicine, Minors in Psychology and History, Semi-Professional Athlete



Opiates are a depressant, it dulls your body's senses (and gives the mental impression of replacing them with different or stronger ones). This can be fairly normal in some people coming off of various drug addictions. Your body is readjusting to its natural state and your nerves and senses are coming back to form and are hyper sensitive after all the time they were shut down.




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