Ostomy bag
Comments
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Hello colocan
Yes life does return to normal, seriously. My husband at 50 was dx with stage IV colon cancer. After all of the radiation/chemo and surgery he has a colostomy. It does take awhile for the pain to go away, that time is individual. Take this time to learn all you can about diet and appliances. His surgeon told us at the beginning that there are many people who have colostomies and you'd never know it. At that time I thought that if someone else could be "normal" so could we. Now 2 1/2 years later, it really no problem. Kevin goes and does whatever he wants whenever he wants. We went camping and kayaking last weekend and had a great time. Hollister.com has some great instructional videos and personal testimonies.0 -
ostomykevinpayne said:Hello colocan
Yes life does return to normal, seriously. My husband at 50 was dx with stage IV colon cancer. After all of the radiation/chemo and surgery he has a colostomy. It does take awhile for the pain to go away, that time is individual. Take this time to learn all you can about diet and appliances. His surgeon told us at the beginning that there are many people who have colostomies and you'd never know it. At that time I thought that if someone else could be "normal" so could we. Now 2 1/2 years later, it really no problem. Kevin goes and does whatever he wants whenever he wants. We went camping and kayaking last weekend and had a great time. Hollister.com has some great instructional videos and personal testimonies.
thanks for response....just getting comfortable is a chore tho pain is slightly abating.Sleep is still almost impossible and its one month after op. Try to walk thru apartment for exercise. Need to somehow gain strength/weight for chemo thats coming up...0 -
SuggestioncoloCan said:ostomy
thanks for response....just getting comfortable is a chore tho pain is slightly abating.Sleep is still almost impossible and its one month after op. Try to walk thru apartment for exercise. Need to somehow gain strength/weight for chemo thats coming up...
Allow me to suggest you brouse around the Ostomy assn web site. www.uoaa.org You will find more information on the care and feeding of an ostomy than you can ever absorb.
Just like here you will need to register to Post but I think you can browse without registering.0 -
Ditto what Jimbob said....Jimbob- said:Suggestion
Allow me to suggest you brouse around the Ostomy assn web site. www.uoaa.org You will find more information on the care and feeding of an ostomy than you can ever absorb.
Just like here you will need to register to Post but I think you can browse without registering.
I agree with Jimbob - I had a temporary ileostomy for a year while I went through chemo/radiation. The group on UOAA was a life saver.
It took me awhile to adjust physically and probably longer mentally/emotionally to my ostomy - but I got there. A month after surgery I couldn't even make it through the grocery store and back to my car by myself (I tried). Give yourself time to heal - a month is still very early.0
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