LOL! LOL! One can plainly see that I am no longer in touch with nursery rhyme characters. Jack Sprat did have some dietary restrictions however. To me, that fable is about compatability -- as both Jack and wife got along well by getting exactly what they each could/should eat.
Who was the quick one? Maybe that was Jack-be-Nimble? LOL!
Anyway, Thanks for the good thoughts Shirley. Actually, I am doing well at this point.
That WAS a very bad time – and it all began with a case of Plantar Fascitis, for which I was prescribed high dose NSAIDS for that pain. My PCP here took pity on me with all my problems and prescribed an NSAID called Feldene, which is a potent NSAID only available by prescription. Directions were to take one immediately after largest meal of the day. Directions were followed to a T, but after about 3 weeks I was also beginning to feel stomach discomfort. So I thought to myself “I can’t take this drug” and although I do know better, I flushed the remainder down the john

. I decided for myself that I could only take Tylenol for a while.
Lo and behold, by about 10 weeks later, the symptoms of CC began to resolve and I went into a spontaneous remission.
I did NOT connect the dots then and there however.
A few months later I began using some NSAIDS again

and wa-la eventually developed all the nasty lower GI problems all over again. To make a long story short, that is when the CC was finally firmly diagnosed and Entocort prescribed. AND it was then that I learned about the correlation between CC and NSAIDS.
Then, looking back over that history, things fell into place!! It is not really probable that some of the food intolerance’s experienced by many here are my particular problem, as I was in a full remission with no dietary restrictions what so ever for many months, but relapsed when resuming ingestion of NSAIDS.
I would add here that my GI practice here in MN did NOT inform me about the potential connection to NSAIDS. I found that information on one of the Mayo sites on the Internet. AND, the GI I see at MAYO AZ, has been most emphatic about this possible connection during our conversations. (But then, -- He just happens to have been one of the original co-authors on that original study publication.)
I would also add that the Mayo model uses an extensive group of folks to serve their patients. You see the DR in Clinic, but are also encouraged to call with concerns or questions. It has been my GREAT fortune that the Physician that I see there has a

RN that works with him taking the phone calls and working with the patients. SHE is THEE most comprehensively knowledgeable person regarding this condition I’ve ever met -- and takes the time to discuss things. She listens, understands, explains, and when I have gotten to feeling depressed, she jockeys me back out of it.
Once I asked here how she learned so much about this condition? Her answer “By talking to our patients. You people have taught me pretty much everything I know about this
very frustrating condition!”
For all this, I truly appreciate her -- and have informed the Dr of this appreciation too.
Best,
Gayle