01-24-2016, 12:29 PM
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#173
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Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?: Butch (Silver Fox) Dom Daddi
Preferred Pronoun?: 50 Shades of Clay Darker & Deeper
Relationship Status: married to my forever
Join Date: May 2011
Location: salt air & sandy beaches
Posts: 13,136
Thanks: 97,020
Thanked 31,667 Times in 7,748 Posts
Rep Power: 21474864
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((((((((((((((((((((Kelt)))))))))))))))))))
You know I am with you on this...and send you user reps, but wanted to stand strong here as well.
This is no easy journey by any stretch of the imagination. The hardest part is on the caregiver...and the wait is really stressful.
The blessing is in that she can make her mind up even though she forgets after a bit. I think she is making wise decisions and you are able to support her in them.
Things will progress as they are supposed to, and I have really positive hopes for a good outcome for her. I send you energies for this journey....stay strong...and know I am always here for you....you are a wonderful
person....she must be so proud of you....hang in there my friend...blessings for mom & you...you both are in my heart & thoughts every single day...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kelt
Since we're not going to do anything reconstructive there won't be any binding post surgically, and apparently she's going to have pretty much full range of motion in her arm within a few days. Of course this all depends on how far they have to go with the lymph nodes, but it's expected to be a pretty smooth recovery. We are going to do some radioactive tags for lymph node mapping during the surgery to try and get all of the bad ones while sparing as many of the good ones as possible.
Then of course is when the fun begins. Three or four days after surgery we should get the pathology and then it's onward to oncology. Mom and I have been having some pretty good talks, (which she remembers for about an hour), about how far she wants to go with treatment. If the treatment can be handled with something like hormone blockers, a possibility, then that would be fine. If they recommend extensive or harsh chemo, she doesn't want to do it. She would want me to switch her to hospice comfort and care.
My main job at this point is to get her out of the hospital as soon as possible, it shouldn't be more than one night, and then to make sure she doesn't end up in a nursing home. After watching my father die in one of those last year, there is no way I'm going to let that happen to her.
To say I'm having a hard time with all of this would be an understatement. The "hurry up and wait" is the hardest part, there's just no way to know how this is going to go until we have the pathology report post surgically.
Surgery tomorrow morning.
<<<< Would like to crawl into a hole and pull it in over myself.
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__________________
To find someone who will love you for no reason, and to shower that person with reasons, that is the ultimate happiness. ~Robert Brault
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