petey
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« Reply #25 on: May 14, 2009, 04:09:51 PM » |
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Way back in 1995, the decision to do / or not to do dialysis never entered my husband's mind. It was a "given" that when the doctors said he needed it and it (dialysis) would prolong his life, that was all Marvin needed to hear. He started dialysis four days later. In the past 14 years (which came with about 75 hospitalizations, 26 surgeries, two fistulas, a couple of fistula repairs, four grafts, two Tenckhoff caths, 14 perm caths, one transplant, one transplant nephrectomy, two pacemakers, and soon his 2,000th treatment, ... you get the point) stopping dialysis has never entered Marvin's mind either. Also, he has never missed a treatment, and he's only "signed off early" about a half a dozen times (all to get to a doctor's appointment) in all these years.
I think if Marvin had said that he never wanted to start or that he wanted to stop anywhere along the line, I would have cried and begged him to keep going (I'm kind of selfish and want him with me as long as I can have him). But, I know that if it came right down to it, I would have honored his wishes and supported his decision. It is his body. It is his life. It is his decision.
Knowing what I know now, if the shoe had been on the other foot and I had been the one to need dialysis, I'm not sure I could have done it. I'm not strong enough. I'm not brave enough. I'm just glad that Marvin is.
I would say, "Talk to your mother. Hug her. Cry with her if that's what's needed. Make sure she's well informed about everything on both sides of the coin. But, in the end, let her make the decision and then support whatever decision she makes."
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