Also, I did haemo for 4 month before changing to PD. And haemo didn't suit me. So, it's much easier for me to say PD is way better as I have something worse (for me) to compare it to. I don't know how I would feel about it if I hadn't done that first. Do you know what I mean?
I have a coworker whom thinks her life is a total disaster and I just laugh and tell her when she needs to talk it out, I am there to listen to her awful healthy life. LOL
Another way that I deal with what I am going through is to understand that there is always someone else dealing with something worse. I am blessed to have kidney failure, yes, I said blessed..... and not some other organ like heart or liver. Gallbladder would be much better if I had that choice, but I am stuck with what I am given. My friends friend is in the ICU right now dealing with liver failure and will die soon. Nobody knows their own fate, we dialysis patients think we know, but nobody knows. I've seen healthy active adults just fall over dead and terminal patients live for years. So, don't let what others say bother you.I'm sure we have all complained about having to get eye glasses, where a blind man would think we were lucky.I'm sure we all complained about getting up to that annoying alarm clock, but a deaf man would think we were lucky to hear it.I'm sure we all have complained about having to walk that extra block, but a crippled man would think we were lucky.I used to think sneezing and peeing my pants was terrible, but I have learned now that not peeing is worse.My mother used to complain about her gray hair until Chemo made it all fall out.So, I guess my point is we never see that things can be worse until they are. We take so much for granted right along with people with healthy bodies.Hang in there!