Where many of my military friends have been injured in combat, roadside bombs and so on I took my injury and received my incontinence from two sources. In early 2010 I was sitting in my office as the lead of my shop. I had already sent many of my Airman home early for the holiday weekend. I got a call from the Military personal flight about a beeping noise coming from the 3rd floor where the finance team was working on closing out some deals that weekend and the noise was bothering their leadership. I knew this was from a UPS that was about to die so I grabbed a few cases of batteries. Large, heavy batteries that run heavy equipment for a few hours in the event of a power failure. I didn't want to climb the stairs multiple times so I grabbed all three boxes, a bit over 100lbs i'm sure and started up the stairs. I remember being about two or three steps from the 3rd floor when the door swung open and some female captain came running out. She pushed right into me as she went down the stairs. I was thrown off balance and went flying backwards down the stairs. I remember boxes crashing down on me. My wedding ring went from round to egg shaped or something that cut into my finger deeply. I went down a few flights of stairs stopping somewhere around the 1st / 2nd floor.
She didn't stick around. Before i passed out, I remember her stopping, turning white and fleeing. I got taken to the base hospital by someone who heard the fall and came to check on me. Over the next 6 months or so, I fought with them to figure out what the problem was. I told them early on I felt like I had a 2-3 inch wide hot knife shoved in my lower back just an inch to the right of my spine. I explained that all the muscles in the right side of my body were always super tight and how badly my back hurt. They just kept saying I pulled a muscle. I started off on Alleve before being put on Percocet, Darvocet, Fiorcet, and finally a combination of Valium and Vicoden. I finally bitched enough they sent me to physical therapy who worked with me but it only got worse. During this time, I was noticing I was having issues going pee.
I'd go up to the urinal and go pee and feel like I was done. As soon as I relaxed to pack everything up, i'd start to squirt more into my boxers and uniform. ABU's apparently as horrible as they are, can still camouflage urine at least. I started by using men's pads but those quickly weren't enough as I found myself squirting often. I soon realized that if I tried to lift something heavy or twisted my back to the side I would empty my bladder without control. I spoke to my therapist about this and we brought my doctor over. "I wouldn't worry about it, your muscles are just pulled so tight it's probably pulling on your bladder. If you lost control of your bowels or you can't hold your bladder anymore at all, then come back and see me".
I continued to fight and finally got an Xray. That xray was enough to send me down to the Alaska spine Institute. They ordered a CT scan and a MRI. Sure enough, my spine was crushing my disk which was pushing out against my nerves. I went back to the PT people and they realized they had only made it worse. Instead of extending my spine, they were working to compress it. I stopped seeing them and started with off base support. A little over a year after the injury I was out of the service and here I am today.
I have to thank my wife for all her support. Had it not been for her, I don't know where I would be. Moving from an active young male to suddenly needing to wear diapers like my 2 year old son was humiliating and I didn't know how to deal with it. It was one thing to be in the privacy of my own home, but after we moved here to Colorado and I started to see specialist to look into my back more and my incontinence I had to get used to being in just a tshirt and diaper, or gown and diaper around people. I had to get used to therapist lifting my diaper up to slide electro pads on my lower back to connect to a TINS unit. I had to get used to my doctors checking my diaper and my manhood. I became so depressed during this time and didn't know how to deal with it all. My wife was there to support me and talk sense into me. She reminded me that my diaper was just a different type of underwear, that I was still the same loving husband and father I had always been.
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