Living a lifetime without the ability to feel pain is actually more of an inconvenience that it sounds.
The inability to feel any pain at all might sound like a highly
desirable trait, but for 33-year-old Steve Pete who has spent his whole
life with the condition, not being able to tell when you have sustained
an injury can prove to be highly dangerous.
Whereas a pain
response will normally indicate to a person that something is wrong,
when no pain can ever be felt it becomes surprisingly easy to sustain
nasty cuts and broken bones.
"One time in the playground at
school I was on the swing set going back and forth," he said. "I jumped
off the swing, landed incorrectly and my bones shattered in my right
arm."
"I didn’t feel it but there was bone sticking out, which was a pretty good indication I’d injured myself."
Pete
and his brother Chris, who also suffers from the same condition, have
sustained so many injuries over the years that their bodies spend most
of the time trying to heal up.
"It’s difficult when you don’t
feel pain because you’re always going through this underlying feeling of
your body trying to heal itself so you’re lacking energy, you don’t
feel in the best of moods," he said.
The condition, which affects only a small handful of people, currently has no known cure.
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