Despite all the wonderfully positive stories you might see on the news or on blogs about IBD’ers who’ve overcome personal obstacles, it probably wasn’t always easy for them.
WARNING: This post contains graphic images of real disease. I can’t sugar coat this topic, and these images represent the reality of IBD for many patients.
Table of Contents
Intro
Many of us haven’t climbed over those obstacles yet, and continue to live a life of pain and suffering.
Many IBD advocates have attempted to bring these issues to the forefront, but our message about the true challenges we face when living with Crohn’s and Ulcerative Colitis usually goes unnoticed by the public.
I hope to bring some of those challenges to light in this article.
Keep in mind that not everyone with IBD will experience these problems, and this post is not intended to scare anyone who is newly diagnosed. My goal is to let the public know how serious this illness can be (so maybe they’ll stop telling us that we don’t LOOK SICK).
This post contains very graphic content (hidden by default), strong language and many, many puns. Having lived through many of these symptoms, I can only tell you that profanity is a wonderful painkiller and coping mechanism (science has agreed thus far SOURCE), so let out an f-bomb when you’re in a flare! I won’t judge you.
Malnutrition, Deficiencies, and Weight Loss
A common problem that many people with Crohn’s or Ulcerative Colitis will face.
When your gut is inflamed or scarred, nutrients aren’t absorbed well, which means malnutrition and weight loss.
But when you factor in that many people with IBD can’t keep food down (because they throw it up) or because food passes right through them without having time to digested or assimilated, you’ve got a recipe for disaster.
It’s quite common for someone with IBD to lose massive amounts of weight during a flare (and don’t you dare tell them they are “lucky”). I went from 160lbs to under 108lbs during the course of my illness – it’s fucking scary.
Of course, eating more would help, if not for the fact that eating usually causes us to vomit or shit uncontrollably for the next day and a half. And you want to know what vomiting and shitting all day does to us? It causes us to lose more weight and become malnourished. Just great, eh?
Chronic bleeding also contributes to anemia, which causes another set of problems on its own. It’s quite common for someone with IBD to be taking iron supplements, vitamin B12 shots or even be fed through TPN (basically being fed intravenously).
Abscesses and Fistulas
Ahh, fistulas. I won’t get technical, but think of them like wormholes tunneling through parts of your body, between organs or through your skin.
Fistulas are among the worst symptoms for anyone with IBD, and they can be hard to treat.
You don’t tend to hear people talking openly about their fistulas because they can appear in the most private of areas: for women, that can include coming through their vagina.
When a fistula originates in the rectum or intestine, you often end up with stool coming out of the exit hole (your vagina, your skin, another organ, your bladder, etc.).
My fistulas caused gas and stool to painfully accumulate UNDER my skin many times a day. It required the complete removal of my colon, rectum, and anus to get my fistulas under control!
Abscesses are an accumulation of puss under the skin.
I’m not talking a small bump like a mosquito bite, I’m talking golf ball sized or larger in some cases!
When these abscesses can’t drain, they hurt like hell!
Abscesses can often be the source of a fistula, which, as you’ve read about already, are no fun.
A perianal abscess was one of my first symptoms of Crohn’s disease.
Nausea and Vomiting
Sometimes we don’t just shit uncontrollably, we often puke uncontrollably too!
I suffered from both nausea and vomiting for several years, and it was a nightmare.
Nausea made it difficult to want to eat, and the vomiting (or dry heaving) made it impossible to eat.
I don’t know what pissed me off more: the fact that eating would lead to vomiting and more pain, or that vomiting is a waste of good food (I really hate wasting food).
Either way, throwing up until you can’t breathe is a terrible way to live.
Anal fissures
Anal fissures are tears in the skin near the anus.
These hurt a lot, especially when you have burning diarrhea a dozen times (or more) a day.
I used to have fissures off and on, and they made any time in the bathroom a terrible experience.
Even showers would cause these fissure to burn and/or bleed. If you’re having a shitty day from Crohn’s disease, anal fissures are ready to make it worse.
Internal and Rectal Bleeding
Many people with Ulcerative Colitis or Crohn’s Colitis will see blood in their stool at some point.
The bleeding might come from the damage done to their intestinal lining or from damage around the rectum and anus.
Seeing blood when you expect to see poop in your toilet can be unnerving; it certainly was the first time (and even the 20th time) I saw it.
Because I also had active perianal disease, including abscesses and fistulas, blood would often show up on toilet paper or on the pad that I use to wedge between my butt cheeks (to stop the drainage from my fistulas from soiling my underwear).
I remember feeling blood dripping from my ass when I’d be sitting on the toilet sometimes; the blood would usually not stop unless I was applying pressure to it.
One of the fears I had when rectal bleeding was a problem, was the thought that I could “bleed out” while sleeping.
Fortunately, this never happened, likely because of that pad I use to wedge between my butt cheeks was creating enough pressure to stop any bleeding.
This strategy, however, created many opportunities for clots of blood to collect under the skin and in my abscesses.
Eye Problems
There’s a crap-load of eye problems that can be associated with IBD.
It’s not unheard of for someone with IBD to have inflamed eyes to go along with their inflamed guts.
It’s another extraintestinal manifestation that seemingly has nothing to do with the digestive system, but it does happen.
I get this from time to time, and it does sting a bit. Sometimes this type of eye inflammation can cause more damage, and it should be checked out by your GI and optometrist.
Skin Problems
Some medication used to treat IBD can cause skin problems, but IBD is also known to cause a shit-ton of skin issues too.
Rashes, psoriasis, eczema and skin ulcers can also manifest, often during a flare. I haven’t experienced any severe skin problems, but here are a few photos from around the internet to show you just how brutal this can be:
Perianal Disease
It’s one thing to talk about this “pooping” disease, and another thing to talk about our assholes, but combine the two, and you have one nasty problem: perianal disease.
This was a common feature in my own Crohn’s disease, and it’s part of the reason why I now have a permanent ostomy and no asshole to speak of.
If someone were to ask me what perianal disease feels like or looks like, I’d probably say that it’s similar to putting a stick of dynamite between your ass cheeks and lighting the fuse to see what happens.
Of course, I’m joking (it’s not easy to find dynamite at your local Walmart!), but when you see the extent of my perianal disease, you’ll likely find that the joke isn’t too far off from reality:

Mouth Sores
If you’ve ever had a canker sore, you’ll know how painful it is to eat or talk with one, but imagine having a mouth full of those sores for weeks or months at a time.
Mouth ulcers (a.k.a APHTHOUS STOMATITIS) can happen in those with Crohn’s disease.
When it happened to me during my “Great Flare of 2010”, it lasted nearly a year, and I had 10+ sores in my mouth, all at the same time. It was absolutely brutal!
Incontinence and Urgency to use the bathroom
What the general public knows about IBD tends to be limited to what they see in commercials or from watching an interview with a celebrity who has it, but the focus tends to be on the fact that many of us with active IBD are in the bathroom a lot.
But what doesn’t get talked about is incontinence, which leaves us shitting in our pants more often than we’d like to admit. This has happened to me many, many times, often several times a day.
What’s worse than RUNNING to the bathroom 20 times a day? Not making it to the bathroom 20 times a day.
Urgency and incontinence are among the worst symptoms of IBD, not only because of the obvious mess that tends to follow, but for the fact that we tend to stay locked up in our homes out of fear that this unpredictability may suddenly present itself while we are out in public – even when not in a flare!
Someone with IBD simply cannot “hold it in” like the rest of the population can.
And no, it’s not like the one time you had food poisoning…
Side effects from Medication
What’s better than feeling like shit because of IBD? How about feeling like shit because of the treatment for IBD!
Just like the insert included with your prescriptions, I could write a book listing only the side effects from the most prescribed drugs used to treat IBD, and that’s not even touching Prednisone!
Ah, Prednisone, a drug that would likely be banned if not for the fact that it does help some people. The side effects from Prednisone likely inspired many books, comics, and movies, like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Incredible Hulk, Psycho, Nightmare on Elm Street and more. Here are some of the “awesome” things I experienced while on Prednisone:
- Severe vision loss (went from 20/20 vision to not being able to read the time on the clock next to my bed, in a matter of DAYS while on Prednisone).
- “Moon face” (we all joke about this after we come off Pred, but it’s no fun!).
- Peeling nails.
- Hallucinations, nightmares, “micro sleep” (when you doze off in the middle of something and have no idea what the hell happened).
- The feeling that ants were crawling under my skin.
- Massive weight gain with an insatiable appetite. I recall making veggie burgers at 3:30am… more than once while on steroids
- Extreme mood swings. Violent thoughts, rage, depression.
- Tremors and muscle pain.
- Stiffness in the legs, which was a joy while walking (not!).
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg!
But you know what really sucks? We usually don’t have a choice when it comes to these medications, so you either suffer from illness or risk side effects.
But remember that not everyone will experience side effect or have such extreme side effects from their meds. Not being treated can often be much worse!
BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE!
There are still things like increased risk of colon cancer, bone problems, crippling joint pains, depression, extreme fatigue, blood clots and other really shitty things that go along with this “hidden illness”.
So please, when you hear that someone has IBD, show some compassion. While the media and television ads might lead you to believe that IBD is just a bad tummy ache gone wild, it’s often a nightmare for those with Crohn’s or Ulcerative Colitis who experience a full gamut of problems.
Question: Were you offended by the content in this post? If so, did you at least learn something new?
Such an informative article. I have been struggling with how this seemed to come out of nowhere for me. I went from feeling sick starting at the end of March 2018 to having my colon removed in mid June. Of course that two and a half months was like you described. Anything I ate either went right through me or came back up. I lost 40 pounds in that time. I tried going to dr a couple times but she didn’t know what was wrong and did some inconclusive tests. But after reading this article you wrote, I can see there were warning signs. 12 years ago, I had a huge abscess, which was the most painful thing ever. My dr at the time had me schedule with a surgeon to drain it. In the time waiting for my appt, it burst. My right butt cheek is where it came through but it was way up in me. The surgeon said it was the size of a small football. I had two different surgeries that year to have drain tubes put in. And my husband and I joked that we should buy stock in the butt pad company. I’ve never heard of anyone else who used butt pads before (what we called putting the gauze between my butt cheeks). Of course back then we didn’t know you could buy gauze by the brick and we were buying boxes of 25 individually wrapped gauze squares. Super spendy buying it that way. So, now in hindsight, I see that was probably an early sign of the Crohn’s. But no one figured it out. Over the 12 years since the abscess, there were other things, mostly blood from my bum, and that is on me for not saying anything. But there was nothing else that alarmed me, so I attributed it to the after effects of the mystery abscess. It has drained off and on and bled off and on over the years. I would just buy a couple boxes of butt pads and deal with it. Now I know there is a fistula there that the dr says will never go away, and they put a seton(?) ring in to allow it to properly drain. I wish I would have read this years ago. I might have been diagnosed with Crohn’s before I lost my colon, rather than after. But at least I have this website now and all of the people here to make me realize I am not the only one going through this. Thanks Eric!!
SqueakyandLiza, thank you for sharing that. It must have been incredibly frustrating to not have answers during that time. The incredible how painful those abscesses are! A large one like you describe must have been a nightmare! I hope you are doing better now.
If I am ever tempted to pity myself for having an ostomy ( hasn’t happened yet), I am going to re read this post/thread. Thanks for bringing it to the front again!For many of us, the diagnosis/treatment phase goes on way too long. By the time we get this life saving surgery, we are very ill indeed.
Crazy to think I had a doctor who kept telling me my weight loss and pains where all in my head. His advice was not to get stressed 😩
Too many people are told that their illness is “in their head" – and many suffer for years because of it.
Loved how you laid it all out in plain English. I’ve lived with my nasty Crohns since 1985 and have gone through most of what you mentioned. I really enjoy reading your honest articles.
Thanks for reading, Joannie. I hope that things have been better for you.
Eric, Hilary here (you taught me everything I knew about ostomies); a couple of my sister-in-law’s siblings suffer from this and I knew it was pretty severe but I never knew the whole body aspects of the illness! Another really well written (immune to profanity here) article which really tells it like it is. All the best and happy holidays!
Hi Hilary, thank you for reading. I’m glad you learned something new about IBD :) Have a wonderful holiday!