As one spouse to another I feel for you. I want to faint (and I'm not exaggerating) every time I think of having to help in any way. My husband does PD and I'm soooo worried for the day he might need home hemo b/c I don't think I have the guts for helping. Thoughts to you.
MM, I really am going to just choose not to respond too much to what you said. You have NO IDEA the amount of hell this has been on me, my relationship. If I didn't love my husband trust me I would not have survived. It's ok with me that I cannot handle the needles aspect. I have BRAVELY and PROUDLY handled a LOT of emergencies these past few years, on top of having to nearly be a single parent, and I will hold my head high regardless. I was just put an opinion out there, and an admission that I already feel like crap about. So thanks.
Thank you MM. I really appreciate the apology. It's such a supportive place here that I was a bit floored.I'm sure a lot of people get over the needle thing. I have very rare blood (AB+/CMV negative) and give b/c my blood goes to AIDS patients, burn victims and babies (I've seen it tagged every time) but it is so hard for me - I see spots from even seeing the needle and feel faint thinking about it. I feel such awe for all of you being able to deal with that daily.I was really just responding as a spouse (and more thinking of it as a spousal discussion) so that is where I was coming from. I also was flinching at her having three kids, b/c that is more than I could ever handle, even of itself (I really don't rock as a parent). I was pregnant when this happened (renal failure), and I've had to do things like breastfeed a screaming newborn while calling 911 b/c he was passed out in the floor. I won't beat around the bush, it ROYALLY sucks for both of us.B/c of the (high risk) pregnancy and stress, when he went on PD I did not go to training with him and he doesn't really require me to help with dialysis. But let me rephrase that I do help - I haul all of the trash, empty the bags, keep the baby away and change all poop diapers now b/c of infections. I help by coaxing him to do that last exchange when he'd rather go to bed. I do all daycare pickups/dropoffs etc b/c he just can't go there and not become crazy ill. I deal with lots of hospitalizations every year (pick your related illness!) and am a single parent and caregiver for sometimes months on end. I have a full time job also.I don't know a patient perspective at all so I can only speak to what I know, that's all I was trying to do. And yes, we may have to face the hemo decision and I may change my feelings, or get a RX so I can deal with that, but thank heavens it is not like that right now.The other issue with hemo is a very personal one for him. My husband's dad died of cancer when he was a teen, and the clinics, the needles, all of it, well it puts him in a bad place emotionally. I don't think it would be good for him mentally to relive all of that while also fighting for his own life. I am SO grateful that PD has been an option and like I said, super fearful of that ending. For both of us.As for your husband, well I understand that too. We took the decision for me to donate off of the table for now, b/c we have such a little kid. I hate going to these new drs and having them say "you don't have ANYONE who is willing to donate for you?" Jeeez. I hate that. I want to look at them and say "Do you really think we'd effing be here if we had a donor??"Anyways, thanks and I appreciate the feedback.