ocdgirl123 wrote:
I have heard that people's sensory issues are supposed to cause pain. I have mild sensory issues, but they don't cause pain. Like for example, some sounds make me cringe, even thought they don't hurt my ears. I don't like being touched, but it doesn't cause pain.
Does a sensory have to be painful or can it just really, really bother you?
I suppose it depends on what is being meant by 'pain' by those people. If they mean that some sensations are so unpleasant that the person reacts in a way that includes physiological distress (raised heartrate, blood pressure, sweating, anxious/fearful, 'fight or flight' response, feeling sick, trembling) then experiencing that
is painful IMO. It's just the terminology is a little confused.
Given that raised anxiety or levels of high alert for unpleasant stimuli on an ongoing basis can lead to shortcuts in the body's response, so that the person is sensitised and so reacts more easily & acutely as time goes by, then physical symptoms can also manifest which are indeed the 'classic' pain of stabbing/aching joints, muscles, stomach, head and so on. This happens often in classic stress & is why such pain is on the list for stress symptoms . It's the continuum of the same process but if you don't have the 'classic' pain symptoms it doesn't mean the sensory issues are any easier.