Yes, I sure have noticed that... a few years ago I wrote a short article, "Let's get the 'Die' out of dialysis" for AuthorsDen Hearing the word 'Die-alysis' several thousand times a month can get to anyone!
Quote from: LifeOnHold on August 08, 2005, 07:13:03 PMYes, I sure have noticed that... a few years ago I wrote a short article, "Let's get the 'Die' out of dialysis" for AuthorsDen Hearing the word 'Die-alysis' several thousand times a month can get to anyone! I knew I wasn't alone. Man I would love to read your article. How about posting it here.
I think you'd be better off at Dialysis Online... we're here to VENT!
Oldborris is in his 80's... it's a lot harder adjust to dialysis when it hits you just as you're starting out in life. I started dialysis at age 23, and sure didn't think it was a 'new start in life!' I never even started the life I already had before it got yanked away from me.Elderly people don't have to put up with dialysis for as long as younger people have to-- which is why younger people hate it more.
I am overcome with remorse to learn that my happiness [relative, I assure you] is offensive and that it is thought that I am insensitive to the enormous problem that early dialysis presents to young people faced with a virtual lifetime on dialysis interspersed with, if they are lucky, transplants of varying length. Every time I see young people on dialysis my heart bleeds for them and for the tragedy that has affected thier lives and I consider how [relatively] lucky I am that I did not get renal failoure until I reached 72 and that I had, until then, a great life involving a lot of travel. While it is true, of course, that v.a.p's [very aged persons] will have to suffer dialysis or the problems of a transplanted kidney for shorter periods than an older person yet it remains true that the closer one is to death the more fiercely one clings to life. I might well be dead within the next couple of years [and, indeed, fully expect to be: no flowers by request] but you will still be alive, and dialysis or not, life will still be relatively [that word again!] sweet. Better than being brown bread, anyway.Even young people can surmount the challenges of dialysis. Professor Robin Eady contracted renal failure as a 21 year old medical student in 1960 at a time when dialysis had just been invented and was not available in the UK and was being introduced in the US in Seattle to which he went. At that time, with 14 hour sessions, dialyysis really did suck, big time. Continuing his medical studies in US and Canada he returned eventually to the UK where, today, he practices as a professor of dermatology.But I see that you don't want to know about such positive outcomes so I will remove my beaming smile [slightly twisted now] from your site.
Why would a person who doesn't hate dialysis join a board titled "I hate dialysis?"I thought being disgruntled was a prerequisite for being a member here!
Quote from: LifeOnHold on August 27, 2005, 02:37:05 PMWhy would a person who doesn't hate dialysis join a board titled "I hate dialysis?"I thought being disgruntled was a prerequisite for being a member here! i joined because i wanted to see what sort of persons could be so pi***d off with receiving a life saving treatmentoin
We hate dialysis because it inturrupts our freedom. While I'm tied to a machine 12 hours a week plus down time and recoop time everyone around functions normally. I know suffering is relevant, and that is why I'm here. No one around me wants to hear me bitch. They don't understand. They would have a hard time just sitting in a chair for 4 hours let alone haveing every drop of blood sucked out and ran througha machine and pumped back in. For GOD sakes, this is worse torture than putting panties over someone's head in Iraq!
No, I haven't. And now that you have brought it to my attention, I'm still not bothered. Anyone that is bothered by it seems, to me, to be a trifle over-sensitive. Now what I do dislike, but in an amused, detached sort of way, is the phrase End Stage Renal Failure. What's end stage about it? I see it Beginning of New Stage of Life Renal Failure