Thanks, cmack! It's such a huge help to be able to connect with people who have been through similar experiences. No one in my life that I can talk to has gone through major surgery at all, so it's a brand new things for me.
When I'm not freaking out about the big stuff (like whether or not I'll be able to eat normally ever again post-op, if I'll need a feeding tube, the fact that I'm scared I'll die etc.) I freak out about the small stuff. I'm going to have a large, about 6-inch long scar from my sternum to my belly button after this surgery. Which is a small small price to pay for health, if the surgery is successful. But it's still a small concern. I'm single and am going to have to actually try to date at some point in the future and I'm worried the scar will be ugly and I'll feel unattractive. A petty thing to worry about in the midst of illness and pain, but it's still something I'll have to deal with.
Social aspects are a big deal to me. My social life has gone to hell the past few years because I've been unable to eat with other people without a lot of awkward discussion and/or pain and flaring symptoms. I feel like my world has shrunk to the size of my apartment, my doctor's visits and procedures, and talk about my medications and symptoms and pain. The risk of needing a feeding tube post-op worries me mostly because of how I'll have to deal with it in social situations.
When I'm not freaking out about the big stuff (like whether or not I'll be able to eat normally ever again post-op, if I'll need a feeding tube, the fact that I'm scared I'll die etc.) I freak out about the small stuff. I'm going to have a large, about 6-inch long scar from my sternum to my belly button after this surgery. Which is a small small price to pay for health, if the surgery is successful. But it's still a small concern. I'm single and am going to have to actually try to date at some point in the future and I'm worried the scar will be ugly and I'll feel unattractive. A petty thing to worry about in the midst of illness and pain, but it's still something I'll have to deal with.
Social aspects are a big deal to me. My social life has gone to hell the past few years because I've been unable to eat with other people without a lot of awkward discussion and/or pain and flaring symptoms. I feel like my world has shrunk to the size of my apartment, my doctor's visits and procedures, and talk about my medications and symptoms and pain. The risk of needing a feeding tube post-op worries me mostly because of how I'll have to deal with it in social situations.