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Anyone ever sleep on their shoulder wrong and have it hurt for days?

idk wtf I did but I woke up 2 days ago with this pain in my shoulder right inside where the shoulder itself meets my chest and man it hurts. It's so bad in the morning I can't lift my arm over my head. But as the day goes on (and taking some nsaids) it lessens a bit.

What did I do to myself?

73 comments
  • yeah. i call shit like that (slept weird, now have pain) sleep injuries. to avoid them, i try to go to bed well before becoming exhausted. or if i am super wiped out, i try to be very intentional when and where i am positioning myself. it's easy to fall asleep in an awkward position when you're wiped out completely.

    i'm also a broken record about undiagnosed sleep apnea, because the unconcious movements and flopping your brain tells your body to do can generate some very weird postures that are jank on your mechanical body but somehow result in you being able to breathe easier.

    most of the time sleep injuries will work themselves out as you stay out of the posture that stressed them and made them tender.

    also, i had been doing routine sun salutations for years since my late 20s, off and on. i definitely noticed my body becoming crankier, stiffer, and more random pull-pain prone when i went through long periods without doing them. i'm in my 40s now. about a year ago i resolved to start every workday morning with 5 before i do anything else, i.e. waking up 10 minutes earlier. they are done fast and hit a lot of my problem areas (upper/mid/low back, hamstrings, shoulders). it's been a game changer for my mornings and the general day of being in my body, maintaining good posture, and maneuvering it around mechanically with balance. i think of it now as this alignment protocol i go through, like something out of an operator's manual for heavy, complex equipment. it's also a massive check in for lung capacity and upper respiratory function and all kinds of mental shit, but to the point, i probably haven't gotten a sleep injury in at least a year. and i was probably getting them like quarterly more or less into my late 30s early 40s.

  • I don't know how old you are but as you get older odd, inexplicable pains are more common. I'm in late middle age. Yesterday was a first for me. When I yawned wrong - I got a sharp unpleasant pain in my the lower front part of my neck. What the fuck - from yawning wrong? I felt like I'd imagine I'd feel if I was in a street fight and a dirty fighter used a trick he loved like smashing a knuckle into my neck. Incredible, sudden pain.

    For the first few seconds I thought it was funny. Aches and pains - what can you do? But after 5 to 10 seconds I started to worry I might have to go the emergency room. The pain didn't lessen at all and and my neck felt wrong. What the fuck - this is not funny. I started walking around the room to try to relax because that's all I could do. After ~20 seconds (it felt like 20 minutes) the pain finally started to go away. And then ~60 seconds later all I had was a tiny soreness.

  • all the people saying that this is a function of getting older are making me anxious, i periodically experience this and i’m 20 lol

  • yeah never that bad but to a lesser extent quite frequently. im not yet 30 but suffer with shitty body hurts all the time disease. also have a fred flinstone mattress which doesn't help

  • Got something like that happening right now, and I've had it several times before. If it were in my left arm, I'd rush to the hospital. It's a deep, burning ache that might be a nerve or something. But yeah, it's part of getting older.

  • I had this earlier this year while staying with my inlaws for a few weeks. The mattress in their spare room was a super uncomfortable spring type and the pillow was way too thin and soft. I think the way I was sleeping to compensate for the discomfort of the bed was also putting a ton of pressure on my shoulder joint.

    What helped me was alternating the side I slept on, positioning my shoulder in a way to avoid putting pressure on it while sleeping, and in the morning doing shoulder circles to slowly iron out my range of motion.

  • Yeah my shoulder has been fucked for a long time tho and sleep me is a shit and will roll onto it. Pain sometimes can be really intense and not let up for ages and also make my fingers go numb and feel stiff

  • Yeah unfortunately I get this occasionally. For me it's on the back right by the shoulder and neck, and it just sucks for at least three days.

    • Fuck body pain!

      • It doesn't solve the pain, but I do try to think of Montaigne when I'm in a situation like this. Of course he's talking about kidney stones and the instant relief (something unfortunately back pain doesn't usually have), but the shift from pain to not pain is amazing. The morning you wake up and slept right and no longer hurt is 10/10.

        But is there anything delightful in comparison of this sudden change, when from an excessive pain, I come, by the voiding of a stone, to recover, as by a flash of lightning, the beautiful light of health, so free and full, as it happens in our sudden and sharpest colics? Is there anything in the pain suffered, that one can counterpoise to the pleasure of so sudden an amendment? O, how much does health seem the more pleasant to me, after a sickness so near and so contiguous, that I can distinguish them in the presence of one another, in their greatest show; when they appear in emulation, as if to make head against and dispute it with one another! As the Stoics say that vices are profitably introduced to give value to and to set off virtue, we can, with better reason and less temerity of conjecture, say that nature has given us pain for the honor and service of pleasure and indolence. When Socrates, after his fetters were knocked off, felt the pleasure of that itching which the weight of them had caused in his legs, he rejoiced to consider the strict alliance betwixt pain and pleasure; how they are linked together by a necessary connection, so that by turns they follow and mutually beget one another; and cried out to good fellow Aesop, that he ought out of this consideration, to have taken matter for a fine fable.

        Obviously pain isn't good on its own, and get yourself some Tylenol and if it persists see a doctor. But allowing yourself to feel through it and then, on the other side, appreciate feeling good even more is I think a good attitude when it's just the flesh being... Bleh.

        As I get older "On Experience" continues to hit harder and harder.

73 comments