I don't use this Scrapbook much. Can't say I like using it, but I thought I'd go ranting and rambling about things today.
So, earlier today, I got the summons to the hospital that I've been waiting for. For a long time now, I've been waiting for them. It's a relief, but at the same time it's making me very nervous. It means I'm in the system, so to speak; that I'm getting in line for that surgery I wanted. For real! Don't get me wrong, it's fantastic. I really need this surgery and all the help the hospital will be able to give me to deal with this. Let's just say it's a long time coming, like you might figure if you've read any of my previous scraps. ... They're not very many.
What will happen now is basically this: I go to the hospital on the 10th of January together with my mother. We will be there from 7:45 am to 11 am, and we'll be listening to doctors talking to us and other patients in the same line as us about the surgical method, the risks of the procedure, suggested diets, so on. We'll also be given lunch at the hospital, like an example meal of what sort of stuff you'll be eating for the rest of your life but, most importantly, after the surgery is over and the few months to follow. After that, we'll go back in to see doctors and diet experts while we wait to be processed for the surgery itself. We'll be keeping journals to keep track of just what sorts of things we're eating, how much and how often in order to prepare us for the time after the surgery when we will be eating
six times a day. I don't know about you, but that seems like a lot.
... It might be because I'm used to no more than a meal or two a day. I don't really eat more than that. Usually, I skip breakfast. I don't really feel like eating in the morning, and other days I just sleep in and miss breakfast hours altogether. I don't eat lunch very often. Usually I'm just not very hungry during the day, but I wait until dinner instead and have myself a good meal then to make up for what I didn't eat during the rest of the day. Of course, not every day looks like this, but that's usually the case. There are some major habit changes coming up when it comes to food, for me. First of all, I need to eat three proper meals a day with snacks inbetween. Breakfast, lunch and dinner with a fruit or some yoghurt between meals and as an evening snack. I need to start drinking a lot more water and cut back on coffee. Additionally, I know I'll have to eat vitamin pills for the rest of my life in order to get the necessary nutritients every day. I won't be able to get all of it from the food alone since, first of all, I won't be eating near as much as I'm used to... And because the food's just going to fly through the system. That's part of the point of the surgery, after all.
Speaking of journals. My doctor I've been seeing about my diabetes gave me one. Now I have this small measuring device and a needle-puncher that I use to measure my own blood sugar levels a few times a day. It's really nifty, and it's very interesting to see how they fluctuate depending on what I do or eat, or what happens to them when the medicine wears off. My mother's calling me a hobby-diabetic, though. She laughed at me the first time I was told I had diabetes and thought it was hilarious. I realize now that it was just because, when our doctor was talking about all the signs of the disease while my mother was also in the room, she recognized more of the symptoms in herself than she did in me. A few days later, she went back in to said doctor and tested her blood. Surprise, she's also a diabetic. While I shouldn't really be happy about that sort of thing, that just means me and her are in this together. Somehow, that makes everything much easier on the both of us. ... Even if hers is much worse than mine, and it's a wonder she hadn't gone in earlier to test it. Her feet are either in pain or completely numb and her eyes are starting to get blurry.
Read the signs!Anyway... What this means with the summons to the hospital is that, in the coming months, I'll most definitely go under the knife. It's with horror-mixed anticipation that I'll be floating through the Christmas holidays, waiting for my doctor's appointment. At this rate, I'll be a new person before summer next year.
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