Husband having open neph tomorrow.
Comments
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The ride homeforoughsh said:It's always good to hear
It's always good to hear "confined to the kidney" and "clear margins". I'm wishing you both strength to fight and win this battle.
Coming home from surgery is the one ride I will never forget. Take the car with the best shock absorbers. You know those sections between pavement in the concrete. Each one felt like a pothole on the ride home after the neph. Take the ride slow and easy.
Icemantoo
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I had to be driven home fromicemantoo said:The ride home
Coming home from surgery is the one ride I will never forget. Take the car with the best shock absorbers. You know those sections between pavement in the concrete. Each one felt like a pothole on the ride home after the neph. Take the ride slow and easy.
Icemantoo
I had to be driven home from NYC to NJ--about 60 miles. Some of the NYC streets had cobblestone sections. I think I counted every cobblestone we traversed.
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Getting homePositive_Mental_Attitude said:I had to be driven home from
I had to be driven home from NYC to NJ--about 60 miles. Some of the NYC streets had cobblestone sections. I think I counted every cobblestone we traversed.
The drive home from through Baltimore was like a jaunt through World War I battlefield on a penny farthing! How grateful I was for the much vaunted go-cart feel of my mini cooper!
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Potholesicemantoo said:The ride home
Coming home from surgery is the one ride I will never forget. Take the car with the best shock absorbers. You know those sections between pavement in the concrete. Each one felt like a pothole on the ride home after the neph. Take the ride slow and easy.
Icemantoo
Oh, man, Ice, you said it...
The hospital was in center city Philadelphia, and the streets are horribly overworked... Very rough streets. And you'll never realize that more than when you come home after major surgery. I was hanging onto the overhead handle for my dear life, trying to keep my back off the seat so I could absorb more of the shock. My wife kept saying, "Sorry... Sorry..." Over and over. I said, "just get us into I-95." Good times.
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You can bet that things will be different now.Allochka said:I can totally relate to what
I can totally relate to what you are feeling right now. My fiancé and I went through the same thing in November- December.
I would advise to stay away from Internet resources telling about prognosis, etc for a while. Stick to this board, it is very positive and contains a lot of valuable knowledge. Post here helped me to calm down, hopefully they will help you too.
And try to support your husband as best as you can. I was hiding my fear and pretending to be very positive all the time. I just thought that nobody would like to see his/her spouse being desperate, being sure of certain death. Not helpful for sure. But you will be scared - so come here for comfort.
Time flies fast, and pretty soon surgery and pathology will be over, and things will start getting better. Stage 2 is not a death sentence.
Good luck to you and your husband!
Lots of new words in your vocabulary. It occupies all your thoughts. And you are just starting life as a spouse of cancer patient. Let's all hope that all is well.
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