The thing I've finally accepted is that with ESRD patients, it's a lifetime thing. You're never cured. You may trade one treatment (dialysis) for another (transplantation), but each comes with its own set of problems, complications, hurdles, and even blessings. I don't mean for this to sound like "doom and gloom" because we live a very upbeat, happy, optimistic life. Soon after Marvin's diagnosis in 1995, a chaplain visited us in the hospital. We were stunned (it happened quickly and with no warning -- he worked one day and everything was fine and four days later he was on dialysis), overwhelmed, and feeling sorry for ourselves (he was 39 and I was 32 -- we were so young and so scared!). This chaplain said this to us, "If every person in this world were at the same church and each was instructed to go to the altar and lay their troubles down and then pick up another set of troubles to take back with them and live with, 99 percent of people would look over the troubles other people have to live with and then pick back up their OWN troubles."I have thought of that many, many times, and it has gotten me through many times of crisis. Looking around at what other people live with, I'll keep our burdens. I'm not glad that Marvin is on dialysis and waiting for a kidney transplant, but I am glad it's a kidney he's waiting for and not a heart or liver or lung. He probably wouldn't have lived 13 years waiting for another one of these organs. I'm not glad that Marvin has ESRD, but I am glad that he doesn't have terminal cancer. I'm not glad that the doctor said the average wait time for an O+ kidney transplant is 6 years in NC, but I am glad that a doctor hasn't said, "You only have xxx months to live."All I can say to you is, "Chin up. Shoulders back. This, too, shall pass. Grab a 'cat nap' when you can. Ask the doctor lots of questions. Know everything that's going on (insist if you have to). Hang on! Hang on! Hang on! And...EVERY TIME you get the chance, give Len a kiss, a hug, a hand squeeze, a wink, or a loving pat on the arm (a kiss blown across a people-filled room is good, too). You can do this. You can get through it."