Why do I wake up so...
 

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[Closed] Why do I wake up sore everyday?

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Hi Crew,

So I'm 30 years young reasonably fit but every morning when my alarm goes off I wake up sore.
Main parts being knees, shoulders and just the whole body being a bit achy but why ? I'm alight after say 15 minutes of being up and moving around but I'm so over feeling so sore when I wake up.
I'm a joiner so I have a pretty active job and I ride say 3 times a week.
Do you have the same problem? Are there vitamins or something that might help ?

Be great to hear any feedback,

Cheers
Shaun


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 9:51 am
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Make your peace, it's the end, I'm afraid.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 9:53 am
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google fibromyalgia.
Jas


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 9:57 am
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When did you last buy yourself a new decent mattress? Makes a huge difference and mattresses should be replaced every ~10 years.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 9:58 am
 myti
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I'm 35 and exactly the same. Manual job for the last 15 years takes it's toll. No pill is going to help I'm afraid.you need to get into yoga!The mattress idea is a good one too. I switched to memory foam and that really helped.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:03 am
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Yes, for about the last 10 years. Although for me its all muscular pain rather than joints and takes a lot longer than 15 mins to ease off.
Understandable if i've been training, but is still present even during end of season break.
Tried all the obvious stuff like increased protein intake, new mattress etc.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:04 am
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You'll get used to it eventually 🙂 Its all part and parcel of getting old 😆


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:07 am
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I'm definitely in need of a new mattress so that's a good start. Also yoga as you said could be an option to look at.
That's the thing I understand after a big day at work or a big ride the day before but I'm in holiday ATM and have been for the past week and still feel it.
God it's overrated this getting old thing.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:13 am
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Drink a glass of water or two before you go to bed, works for me. Even if you have to get up in the night you still sleep better when you are hydrated


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:13 am
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Excessive masturbation....


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:14 am
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Excessive masturbation....

Totally worth it 😀


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:17 am
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We are sleeping on an old Ikea mattress at the moment as our bed is in storage and we both keep commenting that we are stiff as a result! Certainly has proved the concept to me. That and my ~60 year old parents just replaced their 20 year old mattress and keep remarking how much better they feel!


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:21 am
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Have you got a cat?


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:21 am
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 10:29 am
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Rohypnol?

But as above, I've been a squaddie and a&E nurse, and generally cycled to work. Started to notice more general aching in my thirties, and now I'm mid-fourties I just ache whenever I start to move. But once in motion I'm awesome 🙂


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:06 am
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You have reached skeletal maturity and peak bone mass and it is all downhill from here


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:14 am
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Not enough lube.

In your joints, why what did you think I meant?


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:29 am
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Arthritis?

Be wary of googling for "fibromyalgia", it seems to be a bit of a catch-all for any undiagnosed body/skeletal pain.

/edit

do you have an overly soft mattress?? Is it better when you go camping and have a less saggy bed?


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:35 am
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Make sure your bike is fitted properly i.e. Seat height position reach etc. The amount of people I see on very expensive bikes with the saddle to low or the frame to large. Stretch after exercise also.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:40 am
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Have you got a cat?

If so, that's how you contracted cat AIDS. The bad sort.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:42 am
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Take a cod liver oil capsule every day. As a joiner you should be a lot more supple than the lardy arsed desk jockeys who seem to frequent this forum.
Are you on any medication?


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 11:46 am
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Leap out of bed and attack the pain, fight it, kill it, its you or the pain........................who is it gonna be

😉


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:02 pm
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Check your pillow as well, I had a nine year old memory foam one that was giving me horrific back pain.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:05 pm
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No pill is going to help

Not true. My dad had to stop working when he was 41 due to chronic pain and severely restricted mobility - needed a wheelchair for anything outside the house. He had a hunch that something was blocking his repair process, probably a shortage one or a number of vitamins/minerals/proteins etc, so he got stuck into the biochemistry textbooks and papers to find out how they all interact (Alice in Wonderland world of ever increasing complexity/contradiction and compromise) and worked through them all individually to figure out what promoted repair and what didn't.

Ups have always followed downs - increased repair has always been accompanied by increased pain, to the point where if he tries something new and pain levels increase he'll be fairly certain that he's onto something. 2-6 months of elevated pain levels, followed by reduced pain and increased mobility.

He's still making progress 25, 30 years on, and for a 70 year old to be able to be walking further every year, with less pain and quicker recovery is pretty unusual.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:10 pm
 Keva
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a new mattress will definitely help but are you actually getting enough sleep and eating properly or crawling into bed every night after six pints and a bag of chips from the chip shop?


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:11 pm
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Posted : 27/10/2016 12:14 pm
 DT78
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Do you do any form of stretching or core exercises?

If I don't do any maintenance I suffer from bad knees and back. It is a result of overpronation / stiff ankles / tight hamstrings and ITB. Lots of rollering and yoga helps, to the stage it stops hurting, so I stop stretching and it all starts again...


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:15 pm
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Be wary of googling for "fibromyalgia", it seems to be a bit of a catch-all for any undiagnosed body/skeletal pain.

Quite right. And because of this, even for those formally diagnosed with Fibromyalgia, the diagnosis is not a huge amount of help. Doesn't move you onto any particular treatment programme, as no-one knows how many different factors are at play in one individual or in the group of sufferers as a whole, whether it's one "disease" or loads.

Looking at the word itself gives you a clue about how little help it offers:

The term fibromyalgia is derived from three words – “fibro” is a Latin word meaning fibrous tissues such as tendons and ligaments that connect bones to muscles and bones respectively. The middle part “my” is derived from the word “myo” meaning muscles. The word literally means pain in the fibrous tissues.

"I'm suffering from pain, what's wrong?"

"You're suffering from pain."


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:25 pm
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Ah, welcome to the club - I'm now fairly certain my Wife knocks me about with a bat in my sleep - a decent 10 min hot shower sorts me out.

I've got a lot of old injuries in my arms which cause most of it, but my knees and back are useless first thing, winter worse than summer.

As for magic pills, I was taking 3000mgs of Fish Oil a day which helped, I've forgotten to buy them for ages, but they're good for reducing inflamation in your joints etc, - they give you a wet noise and a shiney coat too, or that's what the vet said.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:31 pm
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Mattress.

Are you cold in bed? I find I tense up if I'm cold.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 12:47 pm
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Are you cold in bed? I find I tense up if I'm cold.

Sometimes, but not all the time - although for me, temperature does for sure play a part.
I do feel better when i'm on holiday soaking up 25°C every day than at home in the perpetual gloom.

💡
Having just typed out what I guess I have known for ages, I googled vitamin D deficiency and found I have a minor case of 3 of top 5 symptoms.
Fatigue
General muscle pain and weakness
Chronic pain


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 1:16 pm
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Hi, I suffered vague but chronic pain around my shoulders and upper torso for around 18 months. I tried all sorts of physios, doctors, acupuncture etc. When I started to develop other conditions, I self-diagnosed Lyme disease, went to the GP and had tests which proved positive.

I had a strong course of anti-biotics and things slowly started to correct themselves. I've recently had a few similar pains in my knees which the physio diagnosed as inflammation behind my kneecaps.

I'm half putting it down to a recent walking holiday in Italy, but in the back of my mind, I can't help thinking that the lingering virus keeps dishing out various bouts of joint pain just to remind me that I'm probably stuck with it!

I'm early forties, fit as a flea in every other respect and very active... I wouldn't be accepting your symptoms at your age, talk to a GP and don't take 'no' for an answer. If it's affecting your ability to work, they're far more inclined to help.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 1:31 pm
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Trust me its not fibromyalgia.

My Partner has Fibro... horrible horrible horrible condition.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 3:38 pm
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Have you had any eye issues? If it was lower back I would say look up ankylosing spondylitis but it can affect other parts too.

If not then it's cat aids. You will not find your answer here, talk to your GP.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 4:29 pm
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It's the chem trails.... or you're gluten intolerant.

Maybe see a GP and make their day by listening to them.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 5:22 pm
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Thanks heaps guys for all ththe feedback.
I didn't think to much of it when I put the post up now all of a sudden I'm thinking shit what wrong with me haha.
But definitely something to sort out now rather than wait a few years till it gets worse so a massive thanks to all the comments. Plus good to know I'm not alone with the aches pains.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 7:57 pm
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I'm also a joiner but a bit older at 46 and started to get pains in my joints and generally feeling achey in my mid 30's. The wife has taught me yoga which is amazing at keeping the body supple and flexible and the mind a bit calmer. I take cod liver oil and glucosamine daily and eat oily fish every other day especially after riding. I'm confident that if I continue this regime, it's looking not too bad for the future. Drinking lots of water is also important, the thing I found most difficult to work into my routine but now drink about 3 litres every day. I've got no science to back this up but it seems to work for me.


 
Posted : 27/10/2016 8:02 pm
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New mattress
Start yoga
Drink plenty of water
Big spliff just before bedtime.

You'll be fine. 😀


 
Posted : 28/10/2016 8:01 am
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http://www.cityassays.org.uk/vitamins.html


 
Posted : 28/10/2016 8:16 am

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