Her mother died from complications from the surgery. About three years later, she threw the kidney, had to go back on dialysis, I guess she, being the person she was, didn't like dialysis and didn't go, and she died too.
Having had both a transplant and been on dialysis, I would much prefer a transplant. With it you have a chance of getting better, not so with dialysis, you just stay the same or get worse.
I wish I could do home hemo, my hubby is not at the point where he could be my partner.
I would like to think i have a degree of intelligence but i dont really understand what the original poster of this thread is saying? Are they saying they actually like dialysis?
I would like to think i have a degree of intelligence but i dont really understand what the original poster of this thread is saying? Are they saying they actually like dialysis? Because its safe . its routine ? Quote ; its a hassle getting showered , dressed and going to the clinic and lying around for 5 hours ; !!!! Am i mistaken but do they actually enjoy going to the clinic? To me that makes it sound like someone who is enjoying being ill. It also makes it sound like they have someone at home waiting on them hand and foot , if the only hassle they have is getting dressed n showered n out the door. Try having this illness on your own , with NO ONE to take care of everything else , then you will know what hassle is !
"I would get a kidney, and sit around and wait for it to fail, and then either die or be back on dialysis."
I am grateful for dialysis, I am sure that people waiting for heart or liver transplants would love to have something like dialysis. I also think about the people who had kidney failure before the 1970's, when dialysis was not paid for by our government, or readily available for everyone who needs it. I think it is important to count you blessing and be grateful for what you have, but I am always pushing myself to do better, to be better, to do more, and I think that attitude and God's grace have kept me alive with kidney failure for 20+ years. I contribute now by taking care of my familily. Isn't society supposed to help to take care of those that need it? Many of us worked a lot of years before we needed medicare and social secuity. That's what they are there for.
Quote"I would get a kidney, and sit around and wait for it to fail, and then either die or be back on dialysis."People who get kidneys for the majority of the time resume normal lives and do not sit around and wait for it to fail. To those that do this or say they would sit back and wait for it to fail, they have bigger problems and its not related to kidney failure and or getting a transplant.
Well let me just say that I don't feel like I am sitting around waiting to die. I feel like I am learning how to live diffrently. Look at Zach. He has been going for so long and at his rate can go for so much longer. It is all on your attitude on life. I think Dialysis is wonderful. Those of us who need it, have it. Yes it is hard, and makes you feel like crap. But we are around. I may be selfish but I want to be here to watch my kids grow and become adults. And Dialysis is gonna help me do that. I don't agree with living donors. Yes I have two very young children, and I need to keep them in mind. And if for what ever reason Dialysis wasn't working anymore I would look into living donors. But as long as I can make it on my own without it I will. I know that I might change my mind later on down the road. But I am hard headed, and it is gonna take a lot to change my mind. Dialysis is hard, life is hard. We just take what God hands us and find a way to overcome. And we all can do that, he wouldn't trust us with it if we couldn't.
I feel for you.I wish I could do home hemo too.But I live alone.
Kidney failure and lonely bachelorhood don't seem to go together.