When I first booked flights to Thailand it didn’t cross my
mind for a second that EDS may pop up and become a problem. I was far too busy
making mental lists mostly involving ‘buy bikini, flip flops and check exchange
rates.’ I am lucky enough to not have pain and daily issues to the point where
I am constantly thinking about my lack of collagen woes. It wasn’t until a
friend mentioned that with the travelling I was doing, a suitcase would be a
nightmare due to boat rides and needing to wade to shore to get to hotels. “Get
yourself a rucksack!” Oh God. The dreaded rucksack. My arch nemesis from
festivals.
So I stuffed a few clothes and some shampoo into my rucksack
and trotted off to Heathrow in mass excitement and far too much Thai Baht. And
now, 6 flights, 2 ferries, one motorbike, about 6 taxis,approximately 20
longtail boat rides later and one military coup, me and my dodgy shoulders and hips are back and just
about in one piece.
I am a frequent flyer
and sitting on planes with a bad back and jarred hip is never fun, so the 18
hour journey was a worry. The first flight I took was about six hours, from
London to Oman and it was so empty I could lay down across seats and sleep.
This delayed the back ache slightly, however the second flight was very busy
(screaming children, arguing families) so I had to stay seated and the aches
crept into my back.
Nothing was too bad for the first few days, until I moved
from a town to an island and spent about two hours carrying my rucksack. Ouch.
Very bad shoulder pain. I had expected it, but it still puts a downer on your
mood. I also found that my right shoulder, which is the most affected part of
my body, was sore when I was swimming too and clicking more than it had in ages.
This prompted me to try and carry the bag on my other shoulder only, which
obviously led to killer back ache on that side. Lose lose rucksack situation.
As ever.
All was not lost though. Thailand is famed for massages, and
I took advantage. Asian massage is not a type that I have ever heard of. Little
did I know it involved being on a bed with a small lady who bends you into
compromising positions and pokes you harshly in the ribs, but who cares. IT
REALLY HELPED. It was brutal and I spend the last five minutes thinking ‘PLEASE
LET IT END. LET ME LIVE.’ However, I fully recommend. Once I got over the shock
and drank the delicious ginger tea they gave out after, I realised how much it
had loosened up my hip and shoulders. My rucksack damage felt almost reversed.
I would massive recommend asking for details on any massage before taking them
though, as I think some massages in spas like these would be too much for
hypermobile sufferers. Gentler options are Swedish and oil, whereas Thai
massage is very hard and painful. You can thought, aways feed elephants to overcome your massage trauma.
Sleeping in hard beds in hostels and waking up feeling like
you’ve spent the night on an ironing board is an almost unavoidable part of
travelling. For EDS and hypermobile people, it can mean waking up either too
stiff to run away from beetles and mosquitos, or actually feel pretty good. I
didn’t mind the hard Thai mattresses at all. I still clicked like a frail old
lady in the morning but my back felt well supported.
Aches, pains and clicks were fully expected on my travels. I
was quite worried for a time about how I would cope given a recent hip
sublaxation and constant battle with my shoulders, but it can be done.
Investing in a good bag, packing lightly, exercising and not doing elaborate
dives from boats or cartwheels on the beach are all helpful. Also keeping
deepheat at close proximity when bag carrying is a good idea (though not in the
sun, the heat alone without adding to it is almost too much to handle.) I guess it helps a bit when you have an evening off due to martial law taking over town and being curfewed by the army. Lots of bored laying around in a hotel. Also
take taxis, don’t scrimp and carry stuff around, they are so cheap, even if it’s
a couple of street or from a train stop to a hotel. YOU CAN TRAVEL WITH EDS.
You can carry a rucksack. You can clamber on and off of quaint wooden boats and
enjoy glorious views like this. You just have to take it slow.
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