If you're in chronic pain and your relationship is impacted, here are things you can do that can help you gain your loved ones' support.
Denise Mann is a health writer as well as the editorial director for several plastic surgery portals including the Consumer Guide to Plastic Surgery. Her work can be found across several publications such as WebMD, Health, CNN,Michael MacIntyre, MD, is a board-certified general and forensic psychiatrist practicing general psychiatry at the Veterans Affairs Healthcare System in Los Angeles.Chronic pain, it's there in the morning when you wake up and there in the evening when you go to bed.
The researchers found that people in pain who felt entitled to more support from their partners were more likely to have excessive or exaggerated perceptions and thoughts about the extent of their pain and the disability it caused—known as "If someone expects other people to provide support but doesn't know how to communicate directly what they would like, that person might express their frustration indirectly by sighing, moaning, or engaging in other behaviors that might seem off-putting to the other person," Cano explained.
"If one partner doesn't believe in the diagnosis, they are more prone to respond in an angry fashion as opposed to more supportive," Geisser said.
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