I think your absolutely crazy if you decide to show up to the evaluation with no shoes and a kilt...
Go ahead and attend your appointment as naturally and authentically as you'd like! You might get lucky!
BTW, my tx neph is a Sudanese woman who wears a hijab. She got her medical degree from Khartoum. She's brilliant.
I'm glad you mentioned it here in this forum. It's a very unusual question. I confess that I've never heard of a religion that requires one to remain barefooted.
At this point I'm wondering if I should never have mentioned it here in this forum.
Which was their transplant clinic? I'm just curious.
My concern still remains about which other immunosuppressed patients you might happen to encounter on your tx evaluation. They may not be as open minded and/or educated as you are. Most clinics have a stonking great jug of hand sanitizer lying about, so would you perhaps consider making a bit of a show of putting sanitizer on your bare feet once you've arrived at your appointment? It might be a thoughtful thing to do and shouldn't impinge upon your beliefs. Or would it?
So maybe you get an Indian surgeon who is familiar with monks walking around the countryside barefoot in a much less hygienic environment than Arizona...
What are your feelings, though, about walking barefooted inside of a building where OTHER people have been wearing their shoes? I can understand being barefooted in a "natural" environment, but I'd be wary of being barefooted in an airport or an underground train station or just about any public building. They are just so DIRTY? Are you really happy being barefooted within a medical facility? I'd be worried for my health. How do you reconcile the filth of public buildings with your practice of going barefooted?
(This is not a "hostile" question. I'm really curious! Thank you.)
In retrospect, I have to wonder - why would my nephrologist have even referred me for a TX eval? He was aware of my history and of the non-healing wound on my head. I asked the TX neph if perhaps my neph was just being overly optimistic and his answer was "they (my regular nephs) are 'dialysis doctors'; I'm a transplant doctor." He said that the regular nephrologists simply aren't aware of all the various risks and complications of a transplant.So I guess for now - maybe forever - I can forget about transplant and prepare myself mentally for dialysis. One less decision to make, one less thing to worry about, I suppose. I'm a bit bummed, but life goes on.