36 Things People With Inflammatory Bowel Disease Wish Others Understood

Known collectively as inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis affect more than 1.6 million people in the United States, according to the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America. They are painful, medically incurable diseases that attack the digestive system. Many patients require numerous hospitalizations and surgery.

“It’s difficult for people who are not affected by inflammatory bowel diseases to grasp how debilitating Crohn’s or ulcerative colitis can be,” said Michael Osso, president and CEO of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America. “These unpredictable, incurable diseases can cause immense physical pain that, often times, isn’t visible to the average person. Individuals with IBD may appear healthy on the outside but internally they are struggling with inflammation, pain, nausea and cramping, along with a wide array of issues outside of the gut. It is our job to educate others about these diseases and how they are more than just a bathroom disease.”

The Mighty teamed up with the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America to ask our readers affected by Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis what they wish the world understood about their condition.

Here’s what they had to say:

1. “It has nothing to do with what you’re eating. Please stop pushing food fads on us!” — Olivia Abbott

Related: The Most Ridiculous Things People With Invisible Illness Hear

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2. “The pain is worse than your period.” — Ashley Minnick

3. “No, that thing they advertised on TV about upset stomachs is not going to cure me.” — Crystal Savoie

4. “When I have to go… I have to go now.” — Stephen Barbuto

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5. “People often feel awkward and uncomfortable when they see me going through a flare up because I clutch my stomach. Don’t worry, you don’t need to do anything. The pain will pass and I will be OK. I am used to this and I know how to handle it.” — Jillian Smith

6. “That I have no control over the symptoms of this disease.” — Ruth Abney Culp

7. “When I say I’m tired, it means a type of exhaustion that no one could push through. I just can’t do anymore and I can’t go anywhere. I have to decide what is most important to me on a daily basis and those are the things I choose to do and anything else is put on the back burner.” — Stacey Stratis Fowler

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8. “Although I most times have a smile on my face… I truly feel like crap.” — Jill Howard-Donlan

9. “IBD should be something you can talk about and have others not be grossed out by it.” — Amy

10. “I really do have to take ‘all that medicine’ or I will end up in the hospital.” — Sarah

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11. “It’s autoimmune. Nobody did anything wrong. It’s your body doing it to itself…” — Margaret Bader

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12. “That it isn’t ‘just diarrhea.’” — Jo Anne Elam Pylant

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13. “It’s a real illness that doesn’t ever truly go away, even after surgery.” — JoAnne Capell Christensen

14. “Just because I don’t look sick, doesn’t mean I’m not sick.” — Jenn Hampshire

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15. “No, it’s not something I ate. Yes, I was in the bathroom for an hour.” — Jessica Prince

16. “That employers should be more understanding. A lot are not.” — Diana Mays

Related: She Questioned Our Use of a Handicapped Parking Spot. I Wish I Asked Her This.

17. “IBD is not IBS.” — Russell P. Girolamo

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18. “It’s completely unpredictable.” — Ellen Contaldi

19. “I can’t control how I’m OK one minute and in the bathroom in intense pain the next.” — Chelsea Mae Cook

20. “IBD can make you lose weight, but it can also make you gain a lot of weight too.” — Wendy Havens

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21. “It can make you so tired. Even when you don’t have other symptoms.” — Hayley Ford Denton

22. “It’s not my ‘tummy.‘” — Ivey Rose Coss

23. “Some/most days I cannot just get in the car and go somewhere. You better have a bathroom route planned if you want to take me somewhere.” — Stacie Carpenter

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24. “One minute you might feel perfectly fine but the next minute your body changes its mind and vice versa.” — Daniella Leal

25. “It’s unique. Changing to a diet you like won’t magically make it better.” — Mike Straw

26. “Even a ‘safe’ food sometimes isn’t.” — Gina Walsh

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27. “It’s never going to go away. It’s part of daily life for you.” — Heddalynn Stephens

28. “I am ‘allowed’ to eat anything I want. I am a grown-up. Also, after having the disease for 27 years, I have kinda figured out what to do.” — Beth Brooks

29. “IBD never takes a vacation…it is a daily struggle to make sure we eat the right things.” — Nancy Tychewicz

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30. “Sometimes I have to cancel plans. I’m not antisocial and it’s not about you. I’m sick and I am doing all I can.” — Amira Barger

31. “My normal is not like yours.” — Lisa Hemphill Pagett

Related: The Perfect Thing My Doctor Said About My Life With Chronic Illness

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32. “It’s like being in the early stages of labor and the flu every day…” — Kimberly Ingram

33. “No, I can’t hold it.” — Anna Miller

34. “Taking a few immodium and getting back to work isn’t going to help.” — Johnathon Gray

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35. “It’s a serious, complex condition that is different for everyone and affects many aspects of a person’s life. Even though we might look ‘OK’ we are dealing with so much more than the average person. What we need most from others is patience, understanding and encouragement.” — Shaina Wright

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36. “Children can get it too. My son is 11 and has been battling for two years now.” — Joy Fales McCarthy

*Some answers have been edited and shortened

For more info on IBD, be sure to visit Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America’s Facebook page.

By Elisabeth Brentano

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