Riki, do your friends know that you have to avoid chocolate, and do they understand exactly why? Do they understand what high serum phosphorus does to your body?
My nurses drink water, or coffee or tea at the desk. They don't carry it around or anything like that. They also have a break room for them to eat their meals. That being said, they do sometimes have a Tim Horton's coffee in their hand, but some of the patients do as well. I've had an ice cap brought into me by a friend who was visiting, and another fellow brings a coffee and muffin with him every time he comes in. I don't see it as a big deal. We're not children. Just because we have to restrict what we take in doesn't mean that the people around us should be deprived. I love chocolate, but it is one of the renal no-nos, but it doesn't mean that if I go out with friends, and they decide to have chocolate cheesecake for dessert, I'm not going to take it as an insult. It seems silly to me
I guess if you've been restricting your food/fluid intake for 20 years, you've gotten used to the whole palaver and don't care what other people eat or drink. But if you are still new to all of this, you haven't had the time to gain the equilibrium that the pros have achieved, and watching your family gorge themselves on your favorite foods can still feel like a slap in the face as it is a constant, painful reminder of the seriousness of your condition and of the dark road down which you now travel. Sharing food and drink has been a common human experience since the dawn of time, and to feel that suddenly you are left out of that can just add to the isolation that chronically ill people feel. I'm sure as new renal/dialysis patients get more experienced with their suddenly upturned lives, they will eventually reach the same point as you and not care what other people are slamming down their throats.I don't ever think it is silly to want to avoid making someone feel bad.
I certainly couldn't ask my parents to give up protein, but my mother did help me count and gave me options for stuff to eat..
But I guess if it does bother you to see someone drinking then it does and your feelings are as real as mine.
You say, Subeat, that you expect your family to be very accommodating over the holidays. How do you define "accommodating"? What if they are not as "accommodating" as you expect them to be? Do you expect them to even ask you about your diet restrictions? I'll be very interested to see just how easily you avoid a single moment of resentment if you discover that no one in your family has given a single thought to your special needs and that no "accommodation" was made. Maybe you won't care, but maybe you will.
and I honestly don't care if someone eats "forbidden" food in front of me.
Quote from: MooseMom on October 12, 2011, 02:56:37 PMThat's certainly a very effective credo to live by, and more power to you! But I don't think it is unfathomable to expect better behaviour from dialysis staff. If you were having dinner with someone who you knew was struggling with giving up alcohol, would you order cocktails and wine for yourself knowing that your dinner companion might possibly just love to drink, too?If they are giving up alcohol due to addiction then no, I would not drink in front of them. To me, that is a very different situation. I miss cheese probably more than anything else...gooey, yummy mounds of the stuff...but it is not the same as being addicted. And I won't compare my Diet Coke addiction to alcoholism either...apples and oranges.
That's certainly a very effective credo to live by, and more power to you! But I don't think it is unfathomable to expect better behaviour from dialysis staff. If you were having dinner with someone who you knew was struggling with giving up alcohol, would you order cocktails and wine for yourself knowing that your dinner companion might possibly just love to drink, too?
In dialysis clinics, I'm sure staff aren't eating and drinking in front of patients in order to torture them, but they seem awfully blind. Can't they exercise a bit of compassion and eat and drink away from the patients? Or is it the patients' responsibility to suck it up and not be allowed to feel bad? I sometimes feel that this demand for others to "exercise personal responsibility" is actually a tarted up abdication of a bit of human empathy.