Meh. I'm nearsighted and I have a hearing loss.Nothing serious.
I was apparently born with a hole in my lung or heart.I 'm not sure,they never gave me any information about it.Of course,i was treated for it,don't remember it much.
Personally I have costochondritis (also know as Tietze's Syndrome), essentially I get chest pains every once in awhile and generally in mimics the type of chest pain you get before a heart attack, which can really frighten me sometimes, it can also be extremely painful and hard to ignore. Generally it doesn't stick around in people but it seems whatever I did to my chest must have been bad, I've had it on and off for 4 years now and there is no treatment, all they can do is give you pain meds for when it's really bad.
I'm not alone with having it for a long time, a few people who replied to a question I asked a while ago on another forum have had it for their entire life.
I'm pretty nearsighted, I have to wear glasses pretty much all the time or everything blurs a bit. I also have mild asthma, I'm in decent shape but whenever I run for an extended amount of time my lungs cramp up even though my legs are still going strong.
When I was 5 or so I had to get surgery for some sort of problem in my lower-stomach area, not sure about any details.
I also have some of the characteristics of having very mild OCD, but of course it's probably more of my personality and/or Minecraft playing than a tangible disorder.
I was born with an asymptomatic heart block which became a symptomatic third degree heart block when I was five. I was rushed to the hospital where I had to be given a pace maker when I got there.
Today, I'm fully dependent on it in order to stay alive. My first pacemaker was a single lead with an estimated life span of ten years. It's life span exceeded that estimate about two years. After those twelve years I had to go to the hospital to get it replaced. I now have a double lead pacemaker with an estimated life span of 6 years (yay technology: glad to see it's moving forward rather than backward). Without the pacemaker my heart rate is next to nothing.
(What's really fun is when the doctor starts making the pacemaker change my heart rate during tests. No, but seriously, it doesn't feel nice).
Okay, I'll just come out with it. I don't have OCD. Since nearly everyone else seems to have it nowadays, I guess that counts as a disorder...
I have to agree with that, it's mandated. I think a lot of people nowadays have only one "disorder", self diagnosing hypochondriacs. Not diagnosing themselves as hypochondriacs mind you, but googling what symptoms they have (or think they have) and then saying "I have that!" and acting as if they do. Now whether it's to feel special, or because they want something to gossip about, or maybe they're bored, or are in fact hypochondriacs I can't tell you; but it's no coincidence.
Im very near sighted,(can only see up close without my glasses, things too far away will be blurry.) and I also have a blood disorder that orginates from Greece,(That my father father got from ancestors, who then gave it to me and my sister.)that makes me get tired and sweat faster. So this makes gym in the early parts of school a living hell.
I'm allergic to corn, beans, peas, shrimp, rice, nuts, milk, soy, gluten, eggs, pollen, and cats. That all ties into the throat disorders I have, between Eosinophilic Esophagitis and Laryngopharyngeal Reflux. I also have epilepsy, which gets extremely complicated when I'm in public and happen to zone out for a long time.
"I only devoured two men"
I was apparently born with a hole in my lung or heart.I 'm not sure,they never gave me any information about it.Of course,i was treated for it,don't remember it much.
Of course you do.
I'm not alone with having it for a long time, a few people who replied to a question I asked a while ago on another forum have had it for their entire life.
When I was 5 or so I had to get surgery for some sort of problem in my lower-stomach area, not sure about any details.
I also have some of the characteristics of having very mild OCD, but of course it's probably more of my personality and/or Minecraft playing than a tangible disorder.
Today, I'm fully dependent on it in order to stay alive. My first pacemaker was a single lead with an estimated life span of ten years. It's life span exceeded that estimate about two years. After those twelve years I had to go to the hospital to get it replaced. I now have a double lead pacemaker with an estimated life span of 6 years (yay technology: glad to see it's moving forward rather than backward). Without the pacemaker my heart rate is next to nothing.
(What's really fun is when the doctor starts making the pacemaker change my heart rate during tests. No, but seriously, it doesn't feel nice).
I do really.
It's totally hip now a days to look at how anal you are about logical things and declare it OCD. troo fax bro.
My DeviantArt, so sexy
I have to agree with that, it's mandated. I think a lot of people nowadays have only one "disorder", self diagnosing hypochondriacs. Not diagnosing themselves as hypochondriacs mind you, but googling what symptoms they have (or think they have) and then saying "I have that!" and acting as if they do. Now whether it's to feel special, or because they want something to gossip about, or maybe they're bored, or are in fact hypochondriacs I can't tell you; but it's no coincidence.
I also have avoidant personality disorder, but I've been working on this. Kinda.
I might also be Schizoid and/or Schizotypal.