“It’s just a herniated disc (or two). You shouldn’t be in so much pain.” Every doctor, physical therapist, chiropractor and osteopath I have met in the last few months has said the same thing. They also add that if we were to run a random MRI on even asymptomatic adults walking on the streets, every six out of 10 persons would be found to have some amount of disc alteration—a bulge, an extrusion or degeneration. Therefore, my condition is not abnormal. And yet, I wake up most mornings with a body so stiff and so much in pain that getting out of bed seems like the most difficult part of being alive. The legs agitate themselves even as I try to lay still, looking out of the window, mulling over the pain I feel.