Wow, I just read thru this thread. I cannot imagine the day will come when I say I have done it all and I am ready to die. I have done alot ( well, not the "two chicks" thing!!) -- seen much of the world, worked with all types of people. I truly feel ESRD has made me appreciate everything even more. Tomorrow isn't promised to anyone; we need to live every day with wonder and amazement. Joe Paul, Sliff, Zach seem to all have such wonderful outlook on life and there posts make me want keep going. Epoman gives us a place to have a voice; Lost Sheep, what have you really done except please yourself? If that is how you truly feel, why don't you step aside and let the people who want to live, have your space on this incredible earth?
I support Lost Sheep 100%. This board is called "I hate dialysis," not "I am so afraid of admitting how bad my life on dialysis is, that I forbid anyone else to say anything which may open my eyes." Epoman founded this site so that people could express their true feelings about dialysis without the usual censorship we have to endure from the medical profession, which is always trying to "Disneyfy" our experience and get us to chirp that everything is wonderful, so they will feel powerful and good, and so society will not have to admit that it should do more to address the plight of dialysis patients. But it is then extremely ironic to find that the same instinct to paper everything over, to cover everything up, so that we can all continue whistling through the cemetery like children afraid of the dark, and never admit how bad things really are, because we are not mature enough to face up to the real difficulties of the situation, and have to take refuge in overly optimistic fantasies, recurs, despite the freedom of this forum, as a result of what the patients themselves seem to need, rather than the institutions which seek to dominate them.Let's admit the facts rather than try to hide from the truths Lost Sheep dares to speak, but which few here dare to hear. The incidence of clinical depression among dialysis patients has been measured at rates ranging between 5 and 60%, depending on the study population. Anxiety is reported in 50 to 70% of dialysis patients. (Data from Jeremy Levy, et al, Oxford Handbook of Dialysis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001, pp. 64-65.) 20% of dialysis patients die from voluntary withdrawal from dialysis (Levy, p. 530), and 5% of dialysis patients actively commit suicide, a very much higher rate than in the normal population. Levy concludes: "It is not uncommon for patients or family to feel that the quality of life on dialysis is so poor that they would rather die." (p. 534)
As for whether if it's worth it or not...? I guess it depends on how you feel personally about whether you believe living in general is worth it or not. As for me, I just keep peeling back the layers!