You are worth MORE to them on dialysis then off. $$$$ At least that is my opinion.Hang in there. Read all you can and make your choices.
Quote from: Rerun on March 25, 2015, 10:02:10 AMYou are worth MORE to them on dialysis then off. $$$$ Rerun, you are quite on the money I believe.
You are worth MORE to them on dialysis then off. $$$$
I have been on dialysis for 2 yars now and while I wouldn't. Reccommend this as a holiday treat the fact is I spend 18 hours a week either havering dialysis or taking care or post dialysis chores like getting taped and weighed. That leaves me 150 hours a week to do other things. All and all it is not a bad life. The people I have met doing dialysis are good people. Dialysis is not the end but a way to continue.
Athena,I hear your frustration and maybe a little fear. We had the same feelings going into the whole dialysis thing. Let me give you my perspective as a caregiver for my wife. She turns 61 on Friday and has been Type 1 diabetic since she was 13....that is 48 years. She had a doctor tell she would never live to be 30 and she has outlived that doctor! She has dealt with all the diabetic issues for almost her entire life. About 6 years ago she went on the insulin pump which has been a "God send" helping her to manage her sugar levels better than ever. For the last two plus years, she has been going doing that slippery slope of CKD. She felt awful with anemia, and all the things that go with it. In August she got her fistula and started in center hemo in early October. In December we were trained for home hemo and are coming up on 3 months of doing treatment at home with the Nxstage system. The system is easy to operate and works with a tremendous amount of support from Nxstage. She is determined to make the best out of difficult situation. Her attitude makes all the difference in the world. Somedays, she does not want to do get treatment but she does and feels very good when completed. From what you said, I realize that you do not have a caregiver but many folks do in center and have done for a number of years. Hang in there, roll with the flow and you will be fine.
This site is a safe place for you to express your worries, fears, anger, frustrations.... all of it. I'm "lucky" in that I grew up knowing I had kidney disease while not feeling any symptoms of it until I was well into adulthood. This saved me from the shock of what you're going through. I've seen many many others here who have gone through your situation, felt the same fears, anger, and frustration and wanting what we can't have - our perfect health back, and nothing else is good enough. We can't all have that though and I think what you're feeling in light of that is perfectly normal. Your nephrologist likely wouldn't be surprised to hear you say you don't want to do either dialysis or transplant. Even growing up with kidney disease, I said the same thing. In the end, I did both. I was only on dialysis for six months before transplant, but it wasn't really so bad for me. I did PD and my evenings were greatly restricted since I needed to be hooked up at about 7:30 in order to be done and up for work on time the next morning.I, too, am single and don't live near family and it's fine. I know several others here are, too. I've never noticed any big problems because of it. My biggest challenge was going through the transplant evaluation and answering their questions about post-transplant help. I have several friends who said they would be willing to help, and since I'm used to coping on my own with everything, I had a lot of confidence in my own abilities. I never had any doubts that I could handle it all on my own. You can do it, too!Are you seeing a counselor to help you get through this?
I grew up in a time and place when I don't think people communicated with children very much, so I grew up thinking I was going to die at any time, and then was a victim of bullying in junior high school.
Much as my Nephrologists seem like caring concerned guys, what I find absolutely daunting and depressing when having contact with them is how they seem to be only waiting for my kidney death. There is NO HOPE that is ever communicated to me. Both know how dreadful and risky dialysis and transplantation can be for many. They don't seem to understand why I am so anxious whenever they allude to the FINAL stage - what's wrong with them?No one has ever bothered to ask me whether I even want to be around for dialysis or Tx. I actually don't (but it's a secret for now). I live alone as a single, childless woman and only have an elderly frail mother who won't live forever for personal support. The way I see it, I can't possibly survive looking after myself, even if I wanted to survive on dialysis/Tx. I don't understand why everyone seems to think that D is some answer. It is hardly the answer. Particularly for an insulin dependent Type 1 diabetic, who needs their good judgement in managing their insulin dosages, etc.I just don't know if I should tell my Nephrologists that they can kiss their Tx preparations goodbye, whether they might do more to help me NOW to avoid kidney failure. I'm feeling increasingly desperate. For me that is the only goal worth fighting for and the only reason to keep living in hope for. (Please, I don't want to upset anyone here if my deeply felt desires and ideas are contrary to their own. I must be honest with what I truly want. I feel so hopelessly lost just going from one Neph meeting to the other without being able to articulate what I really want).After reading through more posts on this site, I can only say how much I admire everyone for what they are going through. This disease is the mother of all diseases. If only, more was being done to help us in medical research!
Do you truly believe that your nephs are not doing all they can NOW to help you avoid ESRD? If so, you really do need to ask them what more you can do to help yourself....what can THEY do to help you help yourself. What are they doing now for you to help slow down your renal decline? It is important that you trust them. If you don't trust them, then maybe you can find another team.One thing about CKD...you HAVE to advocate for yourself. This is true for anyone dealing with a chronic disease. You have to be the captain of your own starship. You can't give the helm to anyone else. Your doctors and everyone in the medical community are your crew. They are there to give you information that will enable you to chart your course. You, as captain, have to do make decisions based on that information, and it is up to you to give the orders.I personally never cared whether or not my neph understood my feelings. He was not there to hold my hand nor to empathize with me. He was there to keep me off dialysis as long as possible. Whenever I felt that my emotions were beginning to overwhelm me, I DID tell my neph, not because I wanted him to hug me, rather, because I thought it was medically impactful.
How I ended up on dialysis no one is sure but I read a article about causes and they listed Scarlet fever,strep throat, and pardon the spelling impetigo. All caused my staph bacteria. My whole childhood I had these and I was very sick with them. But I also realize how I ended up on Dialysis does not matter. Here I am. Recently my. Dialysis center was evacuated because a construction company cut a 12 inch gas line just out side my clinic. My four and a quarter session was cut to three and a half hours. The next day I didn't feel well and was brushing mt teeth almost hourly due to a bad taste in my mouth. Now I know why I sit for a long session. Why does not matter the fact that I get to continue having a life does. I was not in a hurry to start dialysis and put it of for several years over my doctors strong objections I personally was waiting for a sign, one day I vomited in work and that was it. I called the doctor and started dialysis the next week. The only hing I would change is I would have toured a clinic before my first appointment. I was terrified the first day. It was like starting school as a five year old. It turned out school was not so bad and I learned to live with it and dialysis is the same.