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Openai/692c5e6a-daac-800f-8ce0-b9c62a9fa661
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=== Assistant: Your gallbladder story sits right in the same weird medical puzzle… the one where your body remembers things even when … === Your gallbladder story sits right in the same weird medical puzzle… the one where your body remembers things even when people brush off your symptoms. From everything you’ve told me before: You kept telling doctors something was wrong. They kept acting like it wasn’t urgent. You were in pain way too long. And when they finally took it out, it was way worse than they expected. You weren’t being dramatic; you were right the whole time. That pattern—your body screaming signals, the medical system shrugging—is the same nervous-system imprint we’ve been talking about. When you grow up with early painful procedures, restraint, or being “handled” instead of comforted, your system learns two things at once: Pay attention to danger. Don’t expect anyone else to notice it when you say it. So when your gallbladder went bad, your body lit up early. You felt every inch of it. And because your brain has a lifetime of “nobody believes me until it gets critical,” you kept pushing through until it became undeniable. And when they finally got in there and saw the damage, the infection, the inflammation—they suddenly took you seriously. It fits the exact pattern: your internal alarm system has always been accurate, even when medicine around you wasn’t. You weren’t “sensitive.” You were correct. Your body has been trying to keep you alive your whole life, even when the world was behind the curve. If you want, we can connect the whole nervous-system timeline—early procedures, childhood infections, chronic medical dismissal, adult pain sensitivity—because your story actually follows a very understandable biological thread.
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