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vifferman

Recovering my Mojo

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... is going to take quite some time.

I've lost a lot of condition, and about 6kg of weight, much of which is muscle I put on in the weeks leading up to the operation. Perversely, I was told that fit people often fare worse during major surgery, as they require more anaesthetic and sedatives. That was certainly my experience. My recovery should have been better, but all my 'conditioning' seems to have been gobbled up by a couple of weeks of semi-inactivity and reduced diet. Diuretics and other droogz (and frequent blood sampling) probably haven't helped.

The worst thing (next to my food tasting like crap, making me reluctant to eat), is my left shoulder. I now have great sympathy for people who've busted their collarbone(s), as that's how my shoulder feels. My right arm is pretty much as mobile as before the op, but I can't lift my left arm as high as my shoulder. I guess this is an artefact from having my the left side of my ribcage levered open. I need to apply a heatpack to it about 5 or 6 times a day to help get it mobile and the maximum doses of paracetamol are largely just to deal with the pain from that and my sternum.

Last night I had a new and unexpected pain; dunno what it was, but I'm hoping it wasn't anything to do with my kidneys, as it was a sharp stabbing pain in the right lower part of my back. It came on very quickly, was about a '9' on the pain scale, and nothing I could do would make it go away. Eventually I drifted off into a pain-fogged sleep, and when I woke up at 12:46am, it had lessened and I was able to take some more panadol.

My new bed seems to be working (which is a relief, given the price!) We bought a special mattress with 'memory foam' over latex. Feels really weird, like sleeping on plasticene, but has resulted in no pressure points when I'm lying immobile in one position, so I can sleep for as long as five and half hours at a time, without sleeping tablets (which is convenient as I forgot to get a script for some).

On the weekend we received the last of some scary bills for the operation. Some of the items were scarily weird, like $115 "for the use of power tools". I'm now worth more too, as I have $71 worth of stainless-steel wire in my chest, about $1345 in silk sutures, and $1800 for a ring sewn into my heart ("one ring to fix it all"?)

I have to have daily blood tests for the next few weeks, which is problematic as my arms have track marks a junkie would be ashamed of, and the veins have lots of scar tissue and bruising. My stomach looks like someone has been stabbing me with a syringe loaded with ink, as it has some 'interesting' black dots, courtesy of subcutaneous clixane injections, my least favourite indignity, due to the pain of administration. I have somewhere north of 1000 pills still to take; these include aspirin, warfarin, ferusemide, panadol, mirtazapine, amiodarone, metaprolol, and some others I can't recall. Happily, some have now been discontinued, which is good, as they tasted bad or added to the side-effects. I can't keep track of them all, so the vifferbabe has kindly made a schedule for me on the fridge - I just have to gather up a handful of pills and tick them off on the chart.

So.
I'm alive, and while I can't say I'm particularly enjoying being alive (mainly because of the pain, weakness, and not looking forward to eating), I'm making progress each day, albeit very slowly. I've almost used up all my leave, and I'm not looking forward to going back to work, partly because my job is very boring, and partly because of the complete lack of contact from anyone in the last three weeks. You'd think given they have my contact details they might have phoned my wife to see if I was still alive, but apparently they don't give a crap. Time to start looking for a new job somewhere, me thinks.

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Comments

  1. BMWST?'s Avatar
    chin up mate...on a much much lesser scale i am recovering from a ruptured achilles,progress seems painfully slow(its not painfull at all actually) but all the people involved say i am making good progress!
  2. Crisis management's Avatar
    Good to see you're still with us Viffer, I can sympathise (in my own little way) with the recovery time, since I turned 50 every ailment seems to take forever to get over......I'm not sure I would cope as well as you are with having some plumbers apprentice poking around in my chest.

    If you're desperate for reading material I have a few motorcycling books that may be interesting, flick me a PM.

    Other than that, I thought recovery from surgery was supposed to be lying down eating chocolates while being attended to by scantily clad females? Is the Vifferbabe not providing these services?
  3. Ocean1's Avatar
    Relax, dude, plenty of time to find a new job later.

    One involving stuff you like doing. With people you like.

    In the meantime make the most of your time off eh?
  4. vifferman's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by Crisis management
    Other than that, I thought recovery from surgery was supposed to be lying down eating chocolates while being attended to by scantily clad females? Is the Vifferbabe not providing these services?
    There's chocolate, but like most things, it tastes BAD. In my mouth's mixed-up world, sweet=sour, salty= VERY salty, sour=metallic, and anything with a combination of flavours does my head in. Bland food is OK (apart from making me want to spit it out) as it just tastes slightly metallic. I can sometimes get the real tastes of things, then after 3 seconds, TasteInsanity kicks in. Oh - and my sense of smell is hypersensitive: tissues smell really woody, the smell of some food is overpowering.
    I'm checking out each day what things taste like. I've tried low-alcohol beer, and that was just slightly metallic, but wine just about blew me away; I could taste the alcohol REALLY strongly, and the complex flavours were overpowering. Luckily, I'm not supposed to drink alcohol.
  5. p.dath's Avatar
    That sounds pretty major vifferman. I kinda had the impression you were expecting more of a recovery by now. Things still sound a little bad.

    Maybe try some things to stimulate your mind. Cross words, reading, porn, board games, etc. Might take your mind off the recovery.
  6. gsx83esd's Avatar
    hey, going to have a new knee soon , not looking forward to this but have dec ided to give my all to recover from this and get my arse back on the bike , chin up and get into it mate !!
  7. vifferman's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by gsx83esd
    hey, going to have a new knee soon , not looking forward to this but have dec ided to give my all to recover from this and get my arse back on the bike , chin up and get into it mate !!
    'S' not that simple - can't overdo the exercise, or I'll either blow a foofoo valve, or separate the join in my sternum, either of which would mean more hospital time, and more recovery time. At present, I'm walking some smallish hills, which I'm not supposed to do, and which feel like mountains: my legs feel like wood, and I can't catch my breath. Luckily, I recover pretty quickly from this.