Home »
» Séx Is Very Painful – Former Ms Nigeria
Séx Is Very Painful – Former Ms Nigeria
It has been recently reported that former Miss Nigeria, Chief
Adenike Oshinowo is now a mother of twins (a boy and a girl) via
surrogacy. The twins are Nike’s biological children but was
carried and birthed by another woman. It has also been alleged that the
47-year-old enterpreneur who battles with a disease called
endometriosis, bought spérm from a spérm bank in the US. Last week, she
talked about her long term association with the disease (endometriosis
is a disorder that occurs when the endometrium (cells lining the uterus)
grow in other areas of the body, causing excruciating pain.) Medical
experts identify endometriosis as a significant factor in unexplained
female infertility, chronic pelvic pain, and other gynaecological
problems. Read what she says below: I have lived with
endometriosis since the age of 13. I was sent to boarding school in
England when I was seven. I went to prep school. It was during the first
few days in secondary school that I began my periods (ménstrual). They
called the ambulance and I was hospitalized for 10 days because the pain
started and wouldn’t stop. I thought I was going to die, the first two
days, I was in the infirmary with the matron and she kept saying, ‘O
Adenike! We understand that you miss home, we understand that it’s a
rite of passage, we understand it is difficult for you, we understand
that every girl must go through it, but just bear it’. I’m telling this
story because it happened in England and, supposedly, the white people,
who knew best, yet had no idea what was wrong with me. Every female
student they had dealt with had had a normal period and coped with it,
so they could not understand why I was dramatizing. They thought I just
wanted attention. The pain was so intense I passed out. They called the
ambulance and I was hospitalized. The challenge was now to get me to
stop bleeding. Challenge Living with endometriosis is a
challenge. When you see your doctor, your doctor just tries to treat
the symptoms and assumes the pain revolves around your menstrual cycle.
But this is not so. This pain affects every single aspect of your life.
I, as Nike Oshinowo, have never had an examination without my period, I
have never traveled without my period. There are so many things I have
never done without my period. When I am very happy my period comes. When
I’m depressed, my period is there. I learned to just cope with it. I
love the quote that women wear their pain like stilettos. That is what I
have been doing. At 40 Until I turned 40, Nigerians
didn’t know I suffered from endometriosis .When I turned 40, I granted
an interview and Nigerians understood why I never drank alcohol. You
cannot be on medication and take alcohol. It was finally understood why I
was so clean cut and into healthy living. At last it was understood why
if I come to your party, at 8pm I had to go home to bed and to take my
pain killers; because when you live with endometriosis, you live with
pain. I have a library in my home. It is a library about pain. I have so
many books on pain cure. Ignorance It is extraordinary
the effect that endometriosis has on your life especially if you are
ignorant. Ignorance is of two types – knowingly or unknowingly. My
mother, unknowingly, was ignorant, because nobody had educated her about
endometriosis. She had two daughters, one didn’t suffer every month,
the other did, but my mother didn’t bother about it. She just figured
the one that suffered would grow out of it, especially since the doctors
just recommended pain killers. Pain I talk about this
pain, now, so that mothers, when their young daughters are starting
their periods for the first time, and it is traumatic, they will go and
sit with the doctors, ask questions and have it checked out. Mine was
left so late in life in spite of the fact that I grew up in England. It
was frightening. I wish I had someone to blame, I wish I could blame the
doctors. I have had so many surgeries I have lost count. I remember
when Michael Jackson died and they talked about a drug he had been
taking and I exclaimed –’ oh yes, I have taken that drug!’ You try
everything to make the pain go away, so all I know is that I would not
want a child of mine to suffer endometriosis. No. The only way to make
sure that does not happen is to educate as many as I can. Understanding
Everyone understands what cancer is. People know how to check for chest
cancer, and are aware that, for cervical cancer, you do a pap smear.
But endometriosis is not that easy. There are symptoms mothers and
fathers, nurses and aunts and other caregivers can watch out for so that
there would be no needless suffering like I had. I am living with
endometriosis. I was born with it and there is no cure. Hopefully by
the time I have menopause it will be better because once you stop
menstruating, everything is over. Hopefully! Have a baby
One ignorant doctor told me to try to have a baby because once you have
a baby, the pain would all go away. I thought to myself that if I had a
gun I would have shot that doctor, and I would have been locked away
and there would be no one to give me pain killers. The reason for that
relief generally is that when you are pregnant, you don’t have periods
and a long gap of not menstruating actually abates the symptoms of
endometriosis. Challenge But the challenge is the
pregnancy.How do I get pregnant to get to that stage? It was wonderful
meeting Dr. Abayomi Ajayi (of Nordica Fertility Centre, Lagos), who is
so passionate and knows so much about the disease, in spite of the fact
that he is a man and he is so willing to share his knowledge. Whatever I
can do to stop a girl of 12, 13 or 14 not to suffer the pain of
endometriosis, until she experiences menopause, I am willing to do. I’m
working for endometriosis. Menopause I’m 47, and I’m
looking forward to menopause. Menopause is slowly creeping up on me.
People like us look forward to it because it gives us a breather. I have
finally learned how to cope with the pain, how to live with
endometriosis, and to manage the disease. It takes up a huge amount of
my time and life. One pastor once said to me that I have to reject it.
He told me not to say “my endometriosis” but to refer to it just as a
disease because it is, really, a disease. He said I must reject it.
Well, I rejected it, but it didn’t go away. It is still here and I’m
learning to cope with it. I hope those coming after me won’t have to
cope the way I am. I expect they will have more relief because they
would have been educated. Symptoms The number one
symptom is severe pain, pain that you cannot imagine. That pain during
periods is known as dysmenorrhea. A lot of people confuse dysmenorrhea
with endometriosis. Dysmenorrhea could be a symptom of lots of things,
but anyone experiencing painful periods should see a doctor.
Unfortunately, endometriosis cannot be diagnosed without putting you to
sleep and doing a laparoscopy to see what is going on. There are many
well equipped clinics around and it is easy to diagnose because our
doctors are so well versed in laparotomy. It is not normal to have pain
during periods. Why me? There is this thing about
endometriosis, that it is a disease not truly understood because we
haven’t done enough research. Where does it come from? How you get it is
still not thoroughly understood because enough awareness has not been
created. Unlike HIV/AIDS and cancer, a few years ago, there was no hope
for a cure but now there is more awareness and people do not die of
these disorders as before. But it is not the same about endometriosis.
This makes me wonder. Is it because it is a female thing? Is it because
I’m a woman, considered a 2nd class citizen in the world? Must I suffer
because I’m a woman? You wonder and ponder over these things. I need
answers to these questions. Why do I have it and my sister doesn’t? Is
it hereditary? Someone should tell me. If I give birth to a girl, would
she have endometriosis? This is why we need serious awareness. My sister
doesn’t have this disorder. My mother doesn’t have it, but then, I look
at my mother’s siblings and I discovered I have a sister that doesn’t
have a child. I wonder if she suffered from endometriosis. I have a
distant male cousin that doesn’t have a child. Does it also affect boys?
There are so many unanswered questions. If I lock you up in a room for a
month, you won’t finish answering my questions. I have so many
questions. We live in a country in which we believe in symptoms more
than the causes. No to séx Women with endometriosis do
not want to have séx because it’s painful. It is very, very painful. So
you do not want to have intercourse once and it is painful, you’ll not
want to go there. It’s not something you are going to look forward to. I
have read books on this. And even when you try to forget the fact that
you do not want to, half the time you are bleeding. You are either
bleeding, or you do not want. So, on the average, my friends’ periods
last about 5 days, mine, if I’m lucky, lasts 7-10 days and if I’m super,
duper lucky, lasts less than seven days; if I have eaten what I should,
and exercised constantly, it’s not so bad. Exercise works. If you look
at a girl’s menstrual cycle, 26-27 days, remove the 10 days she’s been
menstruating and remove the days she doesn’t want, when she has
pre-ménstrual tension. When every part of you is sore, on those days,
you are not going to want, and even on the remaining five or so days
that you are ‘OK, you are not going to want to have intercourse because
it is going to be painful. You just don’t want to. So you cannot have a
proper relationship with a man. Pain: Between ménses and endometriosis
Sometimes it is difficult to tell the difference, that is why it is
necessary to do tests. If all these symptoms are on, it is not the one
you take analgesics. The pain from intercourse occurs when there is the
presence of endometrium. If diagnosed early and you interrupt the
sequence, other things may not follow, can advise appropriately,
infertility may follow, or told to have baby quickly, donor, or give
appropriate advise. See the doctor If you have a
daughter with pain, she would talk because she would think she is dying.
I thought I was dying because I was ignorant. Go with her to see a
doctor when there is pain. There are different tests. Doctors test with
their hands, then they use the scan. I did that. The important thing is
that when something goes wrong, pain is not normal, something is wrong,
not to decide what to do, but, as a good mother, you take her to the
hospital. Breaking the silence Endometriosis is as old
as day but women do not talk, because they are embarrassed to talk about
anything down there. What a woman is going to tell you is that she
doesn’t like to sleep with her husband? To get a woman to start talking
to you about her periods, even that will make you to be seen as a
loudmouth. Even talking about her periods, it is not easy to get a
woman to start talking about it. But doctors are able to pick it up
because they are infertile. Women are expected to have children in these
parts and, if they are incapable of that, they have to find out why.
Then they go to the doctor who traces it to endometriosis. Ultimately
infertility would arise and they have to go to a fertility doctor. Face of endometriosis
The face of endometriosis isn’t particularly glamorous. Even me, with
my independent view, my laid-back attitude, it’s not easy. When I
thought about it, I have a mother and family. I know what happened when I
turned 40 and I talked about my endometriosis. I got thinking and I
almost put it off. But I said no, this is time for action, we can’t keep
postponing it. If they had postponed the research and awareness
campaigns into HIV/AIDS or cancer, there wouldn’t have been the
breakthroughs we have today. Knowledge is power, information is king
How do you get people to talk? It is awareness, awareness, awareness.
The more I talk about it, no matter how embarrassing the more awareness
I’m creating. Talking about it is embarrassing; I’m not immune to
embarrassment, by the way. Before coming here, I took my shame, locked
it up and put the key in my bag and said I would face you and tell the
truth the way it is. Endometriosis, a disease A disease
is something that is not supposed to be there, and that is what
endometriosis is. You are not supposed to have endometrial tissue in
your abdomen. Surgery removes it, but the moment you menstruate, the
pain comes back. My understanding is that I have a uterus, every woman
does. Something lines it. Just like when you want to bake, you line your
pan with baking paper. That baking paper or lining is the endomentrial
tissues. But mine isn’t just confined to my uterus. It’s in my fallopian
tube, it’s everywhere. Everywhere this tissue is, when you menstruate,
that tissue will be doing the same thing. And you feel pain. Anywhere
that tissue is, it behaves as if it is in the uterus. The purpose of
menstruation is to shed the lining and come out. I know someone who has
endometrial tissue in her gut. Even in the brain. When you menstruate,
it also menstruates and you feel pain there. Menstruation is made to
shed and come out. I have traced it back to the Old Testament. The woman
that wouldn’t stop bleeding and you wonder why? So it has been since
the beginning.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment