Asd and health problems

I'm not sure if anyone else here suffers like I do but I thought I throw this out here, a to get it of my chest and b hopefully if you do you have some helpful tips to ease it tho I feel it will help loads just hearing I'm not alone. Tho I hope you guys don't suffer like me because it's total bollocks. Okie so this is what's happening with me. My problems is mostly with my stomach and digestive system I guess. Basically my stomach feels weird, like kind of sickly and empty. Not sure if it's something you guys experience as well. When I eat it makes loads of weird noises like I've got a stomach upset but it's not upset so I don't get that. After eating I don't feel very well or full for ages. Usually after an hour or two it gets a little better. Without tmi here when I go to the toilet there's a lot of mucus, but here's the thing I've been to the GP many times and tests always come back fine. So I don't understand what's going on. The GP seems to think a lot of it is in my head but I know how I feel and when something's not right. I feel like I'm crying wolf but no one is listening or cares. All this really puts me of of eating and drinking because every time I do this happens and it makes me feel like there's something wrong going on in my body. But I swear it's not in my head, they say you know when something's not right and I'm sure something's not right here.

You guys ever feel like this?

Parents
  • It could be food intolerances, I have them to pineapple, spinach, yeast (so no leavened bread or cask-conditioned beer) and potatoes (which is pretty rare as they are mostly starch). The best thing to do is to keep a food diary, record what you ate and what you felt like afterwards. It is a pain, but might be useful in eliminating anything that might be triggering an intolerance reaction.

Reply
  • It could be food intolerances, I have them to pineapple, spinach, yeast (so no leavened bread or cask-conditioned beer) and potatoes (which is pretty rare as they are mostly starch). The best thing to do is to keep a food diary, record what you ate and what you felt like afterwards. It is a pain, but might be useful in eliminating anything that might be triggering an intolerance reaction.

Children
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