You know that little chart at the doctor’s office?
The one with the cartoon faces — smiling at 0, crying at 10?

Yeah.
I broke it.

Not because I’m dramatic.
Not because I “don’t tolerate pain well.”
But because when you live inside a body that’s been burned, poisoned, cut open, starved, scanned, and scarred —
you lose your baseline.

Pain isn’t a moment for me.
It’s a place I live in.


What even is a “5” anymore?
Is it bone pain that makes it hurt to stand?
Is it nerve pain that makes my skin scream when fabric touches it?
Is it the migraines from medication withdrawal?
Or the mouth sores that make soup feel like swallowing knives?

Is it when my joints grind every time I move,
or when I feel like I’m inside out with nausea?

Or is it just a regular Tuesday?


I’ve had to teach myself how to function through pain most people would call unbearable.
Because if I cried every time it hurt, I’d never stop crying.
And if I stopped every time my body screamed, I’d never move again.

So I don’t stop.
I grit my teeth.
I down the meds.
I act normal, because people get uncomfortable when I don’t.

But just because I look like I’m coping doesn’t mean I’m not still breaking underneath.


Doctors ask, “What’s your pain, 1 to 10?”
And I don’t know how to answer anymore.
Because if 10 is supposed to be “the worst pain of your life” —
what do I do when I’ve had fifteen different versions of a 10?

The scale wasn’t built for bodies like mine.
It wasn’t built for chronic pain.
It wasn’t built for layered pain.
It wasn’t built for cancer pain.

And sometimes…
it feels like the system wasn’t built for me, either.


I’ve had nurses tell me I look too calm to be in real pain.
I’ve had doctors brush me off because I smiled through a flare-up.
I’ve had people assume I’m exaggerating — because if it was really that bad, wouldn’t I be screaming?

No.
I’d be ignored faster if I screamed.

So I’ve learned to shrink it down.
To make it palatable.
To say “it’s manageable” even when it’s not — because I need them to listen, not dismiss me.

I’ve learned to speak about my pain like I’m giving a PowerPoint,
because if I show too much emotion, they call it anxiety instead.


Here’s the truth no one wants to hear:
I’m not brave because I push through the pain.
I’m trained to.
Because the world doesn’t believe people like me when we say,
“I’m hurting.”


From Mojo:

You want a scale?
Here’s my version:

0 — She’s asleep, and I’m snoring.
5 — She flinches when I nudge her with my nose.
7 — She hasn’t moved in hours.
9 — She’s shaking and whispering through it.
10 — She doesn’t call for help. She just goes quiet. That’s how I know.

I don’t need a chart. I need humans to pay attention.
And to stop measuring her pain against how they think it should look.

She’s in pain all the time.
And she’s still standing.
So don’t you dare call her dramatic.

— Mojo 🐾

3 responses to “My Pain Chart Is Broken”

  1. mshibdonssciencelab Avatar

    I hear you. I’m so sorry you’re in such awful pain. Hugs

    Love you, momma

    Liked by 1 person

  2. alwayselectronic06c81330f4 Avatar
    alwayselectronic06c81330f4

    babe. I wish there was so much more I can do. You don’t have to justify your pain or tolerance or anything to anyone

    Like

  3. mysteriously3d631eebfa Avatar
    mysteriously3d631eebfa

    The doctors and nurses have never felt the pain you deal with every day. Still, my wish is that when people are not sympathetic to people who live with chronic pain, God allows them to deal with it for one week to help them be better doctors, nurses, and better advocates for their patients. Gentle hugs, lots of love, and continued prayers.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to mysteriously3d631eebfa Cancel reply

I’m Izzy

Welcome to mojo and the mess, This isn’t the blog I ever expected to write — but it’s the one I needed.

I’m Izzy, a twenty-something living (and dying) with terminal cancer, navigating the messy, heartbreaking, unexpectedly beautiful in-between. Here, you’ll find raw reflections, real talk, dog snuggles (shoutout to Mojo), and the unfiltered truth about what it’s like to face the end of your life before it really got going.

This space is for the ones who’ve felt forgotten, the ones who don’t know what to say, and the ones who are still holding on. It’s not always pretty, but it’s always honest.

Thanks for being here. You’re part of the mess now — and I mean that in the best way.

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