Typical Dealer Service
#31
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
wrote:
> I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
collection.
I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
about 6 years after the wreck.
A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
bit with some of that.
--
Will Honea
wrote:
> I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
collection.
I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
about 6 years after the wreck.
A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
bit with some of that.
--
Will Honea
#32
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
wrote:
> I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
collection.
I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
about 6 years after the wreck.
A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
bit with some of that.
--
Will Honea
wrote:
> I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
collection.
I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
about 6 years after the wreck.
A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
bit with some of that.
--
Will Honea
#33
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
wrote:
> I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
collection.
I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
about 6 years after the wreck.
A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
bit with some of that.
--
Will Honea
wrote:
> I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
collection.
I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
about 6 years after the wreck.
A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
bit with some of that.
--
Will Honea
#34
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
Will Honea wrote:
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#35
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
Will Honea wrote:
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#36
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
Will Honea wrote:
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#37
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
Will Honea wrote:
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
>
> On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 13:19:10 UTC Mike Romain <romainm@sympatico.ca>
> wrote:
>
> > I have a compressor pump in the garage. Maybe time to get a tank and
> > some air tools. Pinched nerves are nasty, my left hand can barely move
> > this week and that's just from driving 4 hours in a seat that didn't fit
> > me. The neck pinch spazes out my left side bad.
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
Thanks, actually my physio has already figured me out fairly good. I
have the correct back brace for car seats for my size and have to use it
in the Cherokee. When I do, I have no arm issues. They have played
with arm braces too. I have to watch it because my whole left upper
side will totally seize if I move wrong. Never thought of it for the TJ
because my CJ fits nice.
A friend is on his way over now to take me camping at a big Canadian
Folk festival for the next few days and I am taking the brace for sure.
We are volunteers at the event in the kids area. He has 2 under 10
years old still, mine is over 20.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#38
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
I think Mike, told us of a mini stroke, too. Which may give the
same symptoms as of a pinched nerve, paralyzed lim with pain.
I sling an arm in a walker to relieve some of the twist off my
L5-S1 in order to sleep.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Will Honea wrote:
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
same symptoms as of a pinched nerve, paralyzed lim with pain.
I sling an arm in a walker to relieve some of the twist off my
L5-S1 in order to sleep.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Will Honea wrote:
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
#39
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
I think Mike, told us of a mini stroke, too. Which may give the
same symptoms as of a pinched nerve, paralyzed lim with pain.
I sling an arm in a walker to relieve some of the twist off my
L5-S1 in order to sleep.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Will Honea wrote:
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
same symptoms as of a pinched nerve, paralyzed lim with pain.
I sling an arm in a walker to relieve some of the twist off my
L5-S1 in order to sleep.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Will Honea wrote:
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
#40
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Typical Dealer Service
I think Mike, told us of a mini stroke, too. Which may give the
same symptoms as of a pinched nerve, paralyzed lim with pain.
I sling an arm in a walker to relieve some of the twist off my
L5-S1 in order to sleep.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Will Honea wrote:
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea
same symptoms as of a pinched nerve, paralyzed lim with pain.
I sling an arm in a walker to relieve some of the twist off my
L5-S1 in order to sleep.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Will Honea wrote:
>
> Just a bad case of tendonitis in both forearms (couldn't trun a
> screwdriver - period) a few years back was enough to start my air tool
> collection.
>
> I watched my Dad fight a pinched nerve in the neck for years so I can
> visualize the problems you are fighting. Only encouragement I can
> give is that in Dad's case it finally stopped bothering him completely
> about 6 years after the wreck.
>
> A thought: When Dad first got hurt he had a therapist who ran him
> thru the wringer and came up with some positions he could rest his
> arms in to the minimize the affects - things like sleeping on one side
> or the other, using a sling at times, driving with a pillow in his lap
> for the arm on the worst side (to take the weight off), etc. He also
> got relief by putting his chin on a bar and stretching his neck by
> trying to lift himself with his chin. You might want to experiment a
> bit with some of that.
>
> --
> Will Honea