......HyperhidrosisAndMe.com is a website for those who have Primary Hyperhidrosis. Find and purchase clothing and products that can help you feel and look good, explore treatment options that can help you, and read about growing up and living with Hyperhidrosis from my personal perspective.
Blessings, Charmaine

Archive for hide

Sep
27

Hyperhidrosis Clothing Ideas: Hide the Sweat With Style!

Posted by: Charmaine · on September 27, 2010 | Comments (0)

***Type "long cardigan" into keyword box!***

Just as I was despairing– despairing, I say– of finding anything useful and stylish to recommend to you for Autumn, I found APART.  This European website has a fantastic selection of long cardigans to wear for the coming cooler days.

I have always been on the lookout for a cardigan that is long enough to conceal any below the waist sweating, and they are not very easy to find.  This item tends to be pricey, but the ones I have found are actually on the low end of what is out there this season (believe me, I looked!!).  Fortunately, APART has a special promotion going right now!

Finding pants that do not “show” sweat marks is still really tricky… butt (sorry couldn’t resist ;) ) wearing a beautiful long cardigan can really save the day!!

FOR A LIMITED TIME, YOU CAN CLICK ON THE AD BELOW AND SAVE $40!

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***WHEN YOU ARRIVE AT THE SITE, TYPE “LONG CARDIGAN” INTO THE SEARCH/KEYWORD BOX***

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The selection is fantastic!

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shop APART - get $40 off your purchase of $100 or more

Categories : Clothing & Footwear
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Jul
31

My Hyperhidrosis “I Can’t” List

Posted by: Charmaine · on July 31, 2010 | Comments (2)

When you have Hyperhidrosis, there are a whole host of things that seem to be off-limits.  I know that I have always had my own personal “I Can’t” list– which I will be actually putting into words here for the first time– and if you have abnormal sweat patterns too, I would bet that you have your own list.  I am hoping that writing (typing!) it all out will help me to be able to look at some items more objectively and perhaps will enable me to migrate them to a new “I Can” list…

At the risk of sounding rather self-pitying, here it is:

I CAN’T

  • Hold hands in a group setting (prayers, games, etc)
  • Be an actor, unless it is off-camera (such as voiceover, which I do enjoy)
  • Do yoga or anything requiring being barefoot
  • Wear whatever style shoes I want
  • Choose any career requiring touching others, such as being a physical therapist, nursing, being a doctor, teaching small children, the list goes on….
  • Before surgery, I could never have manicures/pedicures
  • Wear certain clothing
  • Dance with a partner (the traditional ballroom-type dancing)

I CAN (recently)

  • Talk about it online
  • BY FORCE OF WILL, talk about it in person
  • Separate my disorder from how I feel about myself (most of the time)

So those are my lists, such as they are.  I will gladly publish anyone else’s list, either “Can” or “Can’t”.  Just contact me!

Categories : Uncategorized
Comments (2)
Apr
23

Public Perception and Hyperhidrosis: Oh, the Irony!

Posted by: Charmaine · on April 23, 2010 | Comments (1)

We all roll our eyes from time to time when the phrase “politically correct” comes up.  Remember the good old days, we whisper, when you could tell a good joke without Offending People?  I am just as guilty at times as everyone, although I would like to believe I am sensitive to the feelings of others.  My sensitivity comes from knowing what it feels like to pretend to laugh at some offensive joke or comment about sweating, while feeling inside like the butt of that joke.

Somehow over the years, we as a species have come to see sweating as shameful and disgusting.  In our society, there are only very specific circumstances in which this natural bodily function can be deemed acceptable: when exercising, in extremely hot and/or humid conditions, or when ill.  Even if you are nervous, we learn at a young age, you are expected to hide it.

As a result of this unspoken rule that is taught and reinforced countless times in childhood, public perception of those who sweat visibly is negative in every way:

  • People whose hands are sweaty must be nervous.  People who are nervous are shifty and not to be trusted.  People who are nervous are weak and not self-assured; they have no self-respect.
  • Somehow, the mental image of a “sweaty guy” is of someone who is overweight.  People with Hyperhidrosis come in all shapes, sizes, and flavors, as we know.
  • Sweating is unclean, so it only follows that people who sweat do not observe proper hygeine.
  • Yup, we’re greedy, too.  I recently saw this sentence: “…he couldn’t wait to get his sweaty hands on all that money…”

So here’s the kicker, folks!  When we get up the nerve to tell a friend or peer about our Hyperhidrosis, what do we hear, almost without fail??  “Oh, so what.  That’s okay. It’s no big deal.”

These perceptions are ingrained in all of us.  Subconsciously, we judge our own sweating as society does.  So, IT IS A BIG DEAL!

The only one way to change this unfair perception is to make it Politically Incorrect.  We must come out of the shadows and raise awareness that Hyperhidrosis is real and that we, to quote my friend Anne, are “normal people who happen to sweat”.

‘Nuff said!

Categories : Awareness
Comments (1)
Mar
27

Hyperhidrosis: Hiding in Plain Sight PART II

Posted by: Charmaine · on March 27, 2010 | Comments (0)

Have you felt like me, that you were the only one?  Have fear of discovery and a deeply embedded shame shadowed you as it has me?  Those who read this who do not suffer from Hyperhidrosis may have a hard time wrapping their head around the idea of a shame so deep it colors one’s perception of the world.  For me, it began in childhood, as it slowly dawned on me that I was different.  Other kids could hold hands during a game of Red Rover and actually have fun.  Other adolescents could talk about “going steady” with someone and holding hands.  Television commercials made sure you knew that sweating was disgusting and something to hide: “never let ‘em see you sweat” and “raise your hand if you’re Sure”.  “M&M’s melt in your mouth, not in your hands”.  Why did they melt in mine?  Oh, I know… because I am a freak.  What other explanation was offered to me?  In a child’s world– where other children can be so cruel– the only way to survive was to hide it, at all costs.  When it is part of your very existence, you get good at it.

Of course, there were occasions where I failed to hide it well enough.  Times where out of the blue, a teacher or someone in charge would announce “let’s join hands”.  What followed would be the other person’s surreptitious wiping of their hand on their pant leg– and my small death of shame inside with a muttered “…sorry”.   Going to Mass every single week became an hourlong strategy session trying to avoid the Handshake of Peace, or God Forbid (!) the joining of hands for the entire “Our Father”.  I felt like even God knew I was a freak; after all, wasn’t it He who made me this way?  I’m telling you, every part of my life was colored by this!

Somehow, some way, I met someone who did not appear to notice my freakishness.  Truth was, of course he noticed, but he did not care.  The problem that controlled my life, that ultimately I could not hide from him, mattered not one single bit.  He made me feel normal, safe, beautiful.  We have been married nineteen years.

About eight years into our marriage, my husband was watching TV and I was fiddling around on our new computer… and I heard a sports announcer say something about a golfer whose hands would sweat because he had a disorder– my head snapped around and of course the name of that so-called disorder was long and unpronounceable… Immediately, I typed the words “sweaty hands” into the search engine, embarrassed, no, mortified, to just be typing those shame-filled words at all– and saw for the first time the word “Hyperhidrosis”.  That word told me that I was not alone.  I was not some random freak.  Maybe, even, there was a cure for this, if it actually was a “disorder”!!  So then began the second half of my journey, the part where I could look for answers and even for others out on the Internet who were like me.

Comments (0)
Mar
26

Hyperhidrosis: Hiding in Plain Sight PART I

Posted by: Charmaine · on March 26, 2010 | Comments (30)

All my life, I have been hiding.  I have Hyperhidrosis.  People who are like me know and live the meaning of the saying “hiding in plain sight”.  I am so good at this.  So very good, in fact, that almost no one who knows me– and this includes siblings I am close with– is aware that I have always struggled with this problem.  For every single person close to me, I know there have been instances when I have suffered from an all-out episode and managed to conceal from them not only the sweating but also the anxiety, frustration and sadness brought on by the episode.  Hyperhidrosis has been an unwelcome, secret guest and has tainted every important moment of my life.  And in those moments, I shared with no one the fact that I was struggling.  I have always pretended it away; tried to tell myself it didn’t matter.  Accepted as inevitable that if something “big” was happening in my life, I would be dealing with sweaty hands, underarms… all of it.  With a smile on my face.  Can you relate?

I have been able to hide like this because Hyperhidrosis has made me an expert at it.  I know what fabric to wear, what clothing colors to stay away from, what products to use.  How to sit and how to hold my body.  Until I took the drastic step of undergoing ETS surgery nearly 5 years ago, it was my life every day.  It was exhausting.  Now, it is somewhat easier… but the secrecy and deep shame have remained until now.  I have decided that living in fear has got to stop, and if I have been living a secret hell, then there must be others out there (are you out there?) who have been too.

Comments (30)

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