“It feels like someone is stabbing me repeatedly in the abdomen.
“I get a constant burning pain.
“There’s an aching that starts in my lower back and comes right down through my legs,
“And it feels like there’s a bowling ball in my uterus.”
This is what life is like for Jess Hirst, 28. She is one of 3.25 million Australians living with constant chronic pain, according to the latest Pain Australia report.
“If I get my pain down to a 5 out of 10 that’s amazing, that’s like a zero to me,” she tells Mamamia.
Jess has stage four endometriosis. She has been in pain since she was 11 and got her first period.
For most of us, the worst our period does is embarrass us. Post continues after video.
“It was horrific, it was so excruciating. I spent a few days in bed after it started,” she describes.
Over the years, Jess’s pain has just gotten worse and worse. Now, 17 years after that first experience Jess can’t work, and relies on her husband who is her full time carer.
“He has to help me shower. I get quite dizzy and the pain gets really bad, so I have a chair in there and he helps me in and out.