Another problem for us ESRDers is that we don't have energy to do many things with friends anymore. For me living with a family, loneliness is not too much an issue. We definitely have not dealt with friends as much as before.For a patient living alone, it really needs a lot of helps from friends or family members during the first 3 weeks after transplant. It really should not need any partner for most pre-transplant and post-transplant appointments, but it does need help for care after transplant.
Alot of them dont understand, one, in particular, has a relative who does fantastic on dialysis, so now she doesnt believe that i have the problems that I do. Another friend stopped talking to me when I stopped working, probably because I didnt have the money to support her anymoe....
I'm concerned about the caregiver thing. My wife of twelve years left me about 6 months after I was diagnosed and right as I started to get sick. Actually she convinced me to move out of my own house. I was so sick and tired that in the end I just went along with it.Anyway I moved into a little apartment which is easier to manage when you have no energy and my neighbors are great; very caring. I've also discovered who my friends are, and I'm happy to say I have many (I lost all the possessions in the split but kept all our friends...)As dialysis looms, however (my creatinine just passed 4) I am concerned about being forced to have a partner. I could probably convince a neighbor to act as my girlfriend, but I don't feel it's fair to ask her to do that. A close male friend offered to act as my gay partner! Made me laugh because he's such a homophobe, then made me cry because I realized what a great friend he is.Is the partner thing mandatory for home dialysis?