Originally posted by edison
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Reply to: Blam and dast...
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Previously on "Blam and dast..."
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Originally posted by edison View PostRead some of the OP's experience earlier in the thread - that's given me the kick I needed to actually use the bowel cancer screening kit I was sent about six weeks ago that has sat in a drawer.
Better to do it and find out sooner rather than later!
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Read some of the OP's experience earlier in the thread - that's given me the kick I needed to actually use the bowel cancer screening kit I was sent about six weeks ago that has sat in a drawer.
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Wow, Christ on a bike. Or a VFR.
To what you have been through and your descriptions of it all, I doff my cap.
qh
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I just figure if I don't I'll just put on weight, get diabetes, turn into a keyboard warrior or something.
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Originally posted by Lost It View Post
I turn 66 on Monday 10th, I'm going to start drawing my pension (because why not) and I'm going to continue working until I can't get out of bed. Or my wife can think of a good reason why I shouldn't go to work.
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Originally posted by Zigenare View Post
That is exactly what happened to my MiL when she was over here from Ireland visiting for my son's birthday - she ended up staying with us for the best part of a year! She was treated at Salford Royal by one of the best Stoma Surgeons apparently. She still has a Stoma but seems generally well in herself. Her Stoma is called "Syd", what's yours called?
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostHaving read the continuing story, stubborn barely covers it.
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Originally posted by Lost It View PostWell is it time for an update?
Now it's over two years further on so over time I've been able to put together a few salient facts. Apparently the ambulance was outside my house for almost an hour before they moved me to hospital, because of C19 I wasn't allowed into the intensive care bit, the catheter went in just before I went in for what they call and "Intervention" operation which basically means they just cut and dive in to see what is wrong, what was wrong was that my bowel had finally disintegrated and I was filling the cavity with poo. After 4 hours of operation they had to stop because the women trying to keep me alive said iof they don't stop my heart will give out, then it did, they got me back.
they told my family not to expect me to survive that night I was in a really bad position appaently.
Two days later they went in again to complete the jetwashing of my insides I presume, fit me with a Stoma and do whatever they could to seal the bowel off, I still have a "stub" where my backside is but it's only a few inches.
That is exactly what happened to my MiL when she was over here from Ireland visiting for my son's birthday - she ended up staying with us for the best part of a year! She was treated at Salford Royal by one of the best Stoma Surgeons apparently. She still has a Stoma but seems generally well in herself. Her Stoma is called "Syd", what's yours called?
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Well to continue the story...
I asked the surgery team and my GP about going to work and I was told that because I didn't have a bowel now I would be forever struggling to get enough "goodness" out of my food, the two typoes of bowel do two different jobs, the small intesting more or less mashes and prepares the food, the Colon gets all the fluids, vitamins, starches, salts out etc. and of course that's missing now so I had a look online as you do and saw where people had managed to deal with it, one guy in the US runs a car recovery business, OK he's a lot younger than me, some people drive yatchs, there are people getting on with it so I had another look at nutrition.
basically I have to have salt on just about all my meals, I drink like a fish because your bowel removes fluid, I eat lots of multivits and high protein foods, the general thinking seems to be that even though the samll intestine isn't designed for that, if you can slow the flow through it some of the vital bits do get absorbed so I have to take a lot of tabs to ind me up, Loperamol and sometimes Codeine Phosphate and what I have found is that yes, stamina is an issue, if I do a 12 hour shift now I really struggle but I found that if I took things easy and excercised right, well that was another story.
Basically when they cut into me they cut through all the stomach muscle, and at my age that takes a long time to reknit itself, so the first few months I had to be very careful I didn't get ruptures where the stitching was or around the illiostomy and I was very much too aggressive with myself. So I suffered a bit until I learned just how much I was able to do.
I was told cycling was out of the question because the core stomach muscles do lots of other things besides holding your gut in (or not) they are worked continuously for balace, walking, even twisting around, breathing (diaphram is kind of attched) and lots of other stuff too that you might not even consider, like going for a pee... I was also told to forget driving 250kg motorcycles around because that would be way in excess of my abilities.
Well... Get back to work first eh? No. You won't be able to hold a job down unless you can work from home, and I'm a construction site manager.
So I took to walking to build my stamina, kept away from the pushbike, washed the bikes and covered them up... And once I got to a stage where I could walk 10,000 steps in a reasonable time I started looking for work.
My CV isn't bad and I got a job after two weeks, a 15 month stag at Southampton Combined Courts installing new HVAC kit, which I admit was a huge struggle to start with but eventually my guts settled into a "I need to empty at a certain time of day" routine and I went with that.
Started it in March 2021, I changed my vehicle of choice to a tatty old Lexus RX400h so I could open the door and just fall out, and leather seats meant any accidents just wiped up and got on with it.
By September I decided to get myself back on two wheels, I ought a chinese 125, they weigh next to nothing and a bit of studious "tuning" big ore kit, a silly camshaft and a decent variator later I was whizzing around the countryside at 60mph or thereabouts. Only weighed about 115kg so not a bad move, I suffered a bit with my guts again until I got used to it, then I moved to a Honda 250 scooter, a little heavier but one I could use on the motorway, did 80mph that was enough then finally I bought a Suzuki Bergman 400. Again I struggled a bit with it weight wise, but it was a stepping stone to my VFR which I got back on July 2022. I'm still not using it for work yet, that will take a bit longer but at least I'm back at work.
So no matter what, if you are stubborn enough you can crack it I think.
I turn 66 on Monday 10th, I'm going to start drawing my pension (because why not) and I'm going to continue working until I can't get out of bed. Or my wife can think of a good reason why I shouldn't go to work.
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