TO ATHENA : AKA "THE PRINCESS" . I have known you longer then anyone else here as you know . We go back to another place . Winter in your part of the world is a bummer as it is summer in most populated areas. The short cold indoor days are hard on anyone. Many of us will be feeling the same in 6 months. Hang in there. Better days will come. Your anemia will improve in 4 to 6 weeks. You should feel better then. I am with you on doctors. Many are jerks and a pain to deal with. my wife agrees. We all sympathize with you here.
I can't stand doctors anymore and I have to see 2 doctors this week!
You have a lot to deal with at once. I'm sorry.If you're already seeing the best doctors in your area, would seeing others help you, or would it only cause you greater frustration and anxiety? If you think they're giving you bad information, change doctors, but if you think the information is correct and you just aren't hearing what you want to hear, then changing doctors will only create additional appointments for you and might cause anxiety over differing answers. Are your current doctors aware of the herbal supplements you're using?
Regarding hearing loss, check all of your prescriptions. I used to take Lasix, and it caused ringing in the ears. Good luck, and feel better. Unfortunately, "modern" medicine still needs a lot to be desired: treat one thing, another thing pops up.
TO ATHENA : AKA "THE PRINCESS" . I have known you longer then anyone else here as you know . We go back to another place .
Hello Athena,I am very sorry how you feel and I can quite understand it because I have been there as well...... I do hope that you can stay pre-dialysis for as long as possible, but please don't stretch it for too longbecause then it could eventually backfire on your generel health and other organs might get involved ...... The most important point for me was to check-up my regular blood tests and rely on my instinct to figure out when it was time ...Quote from: obsidianom on July 13, 2015, 09:00:44 AMTO ATHENA : AKA "THE PRINCESS" . I have known you longer then anyone else here as you know . We go back to another place . P.S. Am I right in thinking what I am thinking because it has been documented that part of "The Family" went to the USA ?Best wishes from Kristina.
Living in limbo is hard. For me, it was harder than the actual event itself. I spent years wondering when my kidneys were going to fail. I was diagnosed at 9 and spent my whole life wondering when the other shoe would fall. It can be psychologically devastating. My suggestion is to do things you enjoy. Choose *not* to feel like a wounded animal. I know how hard that is - I've been there and learned that it *is* a choice. My family used to constantly ask me how I was doing. I stopped letting them ask. It wasn't doing me any good. I didn't want pity or reminders, and I definitely didn't want to be treated like a "broken" person. I've learned that almost everyone you talk to has something wrong. The person next to you in line might be suffering from life-long back problems after a car wreck that happened when she was just a child. One of your neighbors might have a heart condition, the guy on the next block might have bipolar disorder. The woman a mile from you has been struggling to get pregnant for years. It seems like almost everyone has *something* wrong.Focus on having fun. If you have hobbies, do them. If you don't have hobbies, find them. Try to make those hobbies as active as possible (ie, not sitting by yourself in front of the TV or Internet). You said it's winter for you. Do you live near snow? Try snowshoeing, skiing, or just go build snow creatures. Do you like crafts? Try a weaving class, make jewelry, try a fused glss class, take a class in welding, woodworking, or whittling. Do you like to cook? See if you can convert existing recipes into kidney-friendly equivalents. Use your friends and family as guinea pigs - sounds like an excuse for a dinner party. If you can afford to travel, learn the language of a place you want to go and then go there. Once I finally learned to live (not until I was in my 20s), I decided I would excel at my career. I knew I could support myself then, but I still wasn't really having fun. I needed more adventure and ways to challenge myself, so I picked up my life and moved across the country to try living someplace new. I decided I didn't like it there, so I did it again and landed where I am now. I kept finding new ways to challenge myself and found out I didn't have time to think much about being sick. I found out failing kidneys really didn't slow me down that much. In the end, my kidneys failed, of course, but instead of being that worried about it anymore, I learned it still didn't really stop me from doing almost anything I wanted to do.