Cattlekid, I agree with you completely. No-one seems to give a s*** when it comes to,chronic illness. someone only has to,break their arm and everyone is bending over backwards to help, sending cards and flowers etc. I live in a sub-division where they have a monthly gazette and there are always stories about Mr or Mrs So-an-so and their injured this/minor op. that, with requests to remember them in people's thoughts, but ne'er a mention of us with chronic illnesses. a friend of one broke her arm while visiting her family in the UK. Her husband had to fly over and immediately back again from Ca. to help her. meanwhile, I travelled to and from the UK on my own with my son when he was two, with all the paraphernalia that accompanies a parent with a child of that age. Even now she still talks about when she broke her wrist, it was obviously such a big deal. I have blood tests like we all do so often, that it is never,mentioned, but if someone else in my family or a friend of the family has a blood test, I have to hear all about it. I think that this is the point. you can't talk about everything done to us medically as it is so continual that other people would switch off. for other people though, one little medical thing is such a big hoo-ha. the problem is , that this also means that they really have completely no clue as to,what being a person on dialysis entails. Not just the dialysis but the myriad of other things. this extends further too. A normally healthy person goes to the doctor and they gripe like mad if they are kept waiting. when I go to the doctor, I expect to give up an hour at least to wait. it annoys me big time, but on the odd occasion when I have explained to clinic staff how much of my life I give up to waiting at doctors' surgeries, you can tell that they just don't get it.sorry I've rambled, but these attitudes are one of my own pet peeves, and it would make our lives a lot easier, if people could step up to the plate and at least try and imagine the,selves in our shoes.
this extends further too. A normally healthy person goes to the doctor and they gripe like mad if they are kept waiting. when I go to the doctor, I expect to give up an hour at least to wait. it annoys me big time, but on the odd occasion when I have explained to clinic staff how much of my life I give up to waiting at doctors' surgeries, you can tell that they just don't get it.
Every summer, my dad's family has a picnic. It's usually just a gathering of my dad's brothers and sisters, and their significant others, but I usually try to go too. This summer, there was a lot of the cousins there, more than there normally is, as most of them live across the country, but a few of them made it this year, with their children as well. A few days after the picnic, I was griping on facebook about how long I'd been on dialysis and how crappy it was. One of my cousins, who'd been at the picnic and had talked to me, commented, saying that she didn't know I even still needed a kidney.I get a little depressed when it comes to my family. They seem to sweep my illness under the rug. Perhaps it's because, after 20 years of this disease, I've learned to wear the mask, perhaps a little too well. I don't want them to feel pity for me, so even though I might be feeling like crap, they're not going to know. My mom can see through it, most of the time anyway. Mom thinks that since I look and act normal, that maybe they don't think I'm really that sick. I think that if any of them could see me after a dialysis run, it would shock the sh*t right out of them, cuz then they'd see how I really am. I can't wear the mask then, as much as I'd like to.