Endometriosis is painful disorder in which the
tissue that lines the uterus grows outside of the uterus and on other organs.
Endometriosis can cause pain, internal scar tissue and fertility problems and
former beauty queen Nike Oshinowo has been battling with it for over 33 years.
Nike explains:
"I have lived with Endometriosis since the age
of 13. I went to boarding school in England when I was 7. I went to prep
school. It was during the first few days in secondary school that I began my
periods. They called the ambulance and I was hospitalized for 10 days because
the pain wouldn't stop. The pain was so intense I passed out. I thought I was
going to die.
Living with Endometriosis is a challenge. When you
see your doctor, your doctor tries to treat the symptoms and assumes the pain
revolves around your menstrual circle. But this is not so. The pain affects
every single aspect of your life. I have never had an examination without my
period. There are so many things I have never done without my period. When I am
happy, my period comes. When I'm depressed, my period is there. I learned to
just cope with it.
Continue after the cut...
Until I turned 40, Nigerians didn't know I suffered
from Endometriosis. I granted an interview then and people understood why I
never drank alcohol and why I was into healthy living. At last, it was understood
why if I come to your party, by 8pm I had to go home to take my pain killers
because when you live with Endometriosis, you live with pain. I have a library
in my home about pain.
I talk about this pain now so that mothers, when
their young daughters are starting their period for the first time and it is
traumatic, they should go to the hospital and have it checked out.
Mine was left so late in life in spite of the fact
that I grew up in England. I have had so many surgeries I have lost count. I
remember when Michael Jackson died and they talked about a drug he had been
taking. I exclaimed oh yes I have taken that drug. You try everything to make
the pain go away, so all I know is that I don't want a child of mine to suffer
Endometriosis. The only way to make sure of that is to educate as many as I
can.
One ignorant doctor told me once to try to have a
baby, because once you have a baby the pain would go away. I thought to myself
if I had a gun, I would have shot that doctor and I would have been locked and
there would have been no one to give me pain killers. The reason for that
relief is that when you are pregnant, you don't have periods and a long gap of
not menstruating actually abates the symptoms of Endometriosis.
Women with Endometriosis do not want to have sex
because it is painful. So you do not want to have intercourse once and it is
painful, you will not want to go there. It is not something you are going to
look forward to. You are either bleeding or you do not want. So, on the
average, my friend's period is 5 days, mine, if I'm lucky lasts 7-10 days and
if I'm super-duper lucky, lasts less than 7 days. If you look at a girl's
circle, 26-27 days, remove the days she's been menstruating and remove the days
she doesn't want, when she had premenstrual tension. When every part of you is
sore, on those days you are not going to want and even on the remaining 5 or so
days that you are OK, you are not going to want to have intercourse it is going
to be painful. You just don't want to, so you cannot have a proper relationship
with men.
Endometriosis is a disease. You are not supposed to
have endometrial tissue in your abdomen. Surgery removes it. But the moment you
menstruate, the pain comes back. My understanding is that I have a uterus,
every woman does. Something lines it. Just like when you want to bake, you line
your pan with baking paper. That baking paper or lining is the endometrial
tissues. But mine isn't just confined to my uterus. It's in my fallopian tube, it's
everywhere. Everywhere this tissue is, when you menstruate, that tissue will be
doing the same thing. and you feel pain everywhere. Anywhere that tissue is, it
behaves as if it is the uterus. The purpose of menstruating is to shed the
lining and come out. I know someone who has endometrial tissue in her gut. Even
in the brain. When you menstruate, it also menstruates and you feel pain there.
I am almost 47 and I am looking forward to
menopause. People like us look forward to it because it give us a breather. I
have finally learned how to cope with the pain, how to live with it and how to
manage it. It takes up a huge amount of my time and life...
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