Surgery Blues

festooltim

Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2009
Messages
332
Went to see the Doctor on Thursday about my Gallstones and on Friday had surgery to remove Gallbladder. All happened pretty fast. I told him I may have sometime between jobs in a couple weeks between jobs but he was pretty insistante on Friday. So now here I sat at home on rest and no lifting. Will be seven days before I can start back with light work. So my poor Festools sit out in my van all cold and lonely. While I read thru the topics on the FOG to pass the time. So if you have any good stories I could use some. But not to funny it hurts when I laugh.
 
Tim,

Godspeed and good luck for a speedy recovery!

Peter
 
Thanks Peter everything seems to be healing fine. Amazing how they can pull something out your body uses at 10:00 and send you home at 2:00 with four small cuts in your belly glued back together and say see you in a couple weeks. Maybe in a couple days I feel better I will drive up to Headquarters and drool over some of the new stuff on display. I can just blame on the pain meds.
 
Hi Tim

I had my gall bladder removed by keyhole surgery about 15 years ago. The day after the operation I was allowed home and my wife picked me up from hospital. At that point I was just easing down from the pain killers. My wife said that she had found a short cut through the New Forest and off we went. The road was full of potholes, cattle grids and speed humps and I felt every one. I was in bits by the time we got home.

If you want to read a story then take a look at my e-book 'Stone Message' which is on Amazon. It is the perfect story to while away a little time.

Take care.

Peter

PS If you read the book please leave a review on Amazon. Thanks.
 
Get well soon. I have some idea of what you are going through.
While I have not had any gall bladder problems, I recently had a small kidney stone (pebble) which hurt like a bugger...I wasn't and then I was p'd off - no pun intended. I was lucky it passed in 24hrs.
Tim
 
You asked for it, so here goes. 

i discovered a rather large lump in my lower abominal wall back in the winter.  i did some research and decided i had a hernia.  I hung in ther until spring, thinking i would have t be plowing for several storms thru the winter.  After the previous winter having been the toughest ever for my sno biz, we ended up with practically nothing thru the past "winter that never happened."

i finally went to the MD when i figured no snow was going to happen and almost time to get back to the lawn work.  the doctor checked me over and decided that i had been correct in my assessment; I did, indeed have a hernia.  He suggested, as i had expected, surgery.

I asked how long i would be laid up.  I had never researched anything about hernias beyond the determination that i had one.  "You will go home the same day and within about three days, you can go back to your normal activities."  I have been told this before and find i must ask for clarification on the statement.

I keep telling people i am only 39, but since i have been 39 for a good deal longer than i wasn't, i sometimes run into a certain amout of misjudgement about what my nrmal activities might be.  "Doc, i think you should have an idea of what you are telling me.  Just because you see al of this white stuff on my chin and top of my head doesn't mean i don't totally believe i am only 39."  With that said, i went on to explain a little of what my early spring time "normal activities" might consist of.  My first projects would be to spend a week pruning fruit trees and cleaning up yards from winter debris. For the next couple of weeks after cleanup, i would be seeding and feeding lawns and shrubs.  I would be lifting bags of fertilizer and grass seed every day for about two weeks. each bag would be a weight of atleast 50#'s

"Well, i think you had better decide you won't be doing any of that for at least a month."

I promised to take it easy, but we decided to hold off on the surgery until past the seeding part of my schedule.  I did hire a friend to help me for a couple of weeks right after the surgery, but i did keep working.  i just avoided doing any of the heavy work.

About the last day I had help, i was mowing (I have a big rider so i don't have to walk, but that goes quite fast) around under a low branching Japanese Maple tree.  All of a sudden, a hornet found my hand and did what angry hornets seem to take joy in doing.  As my hand started burning, i kicked in the afterburner on my mower and headed for open lawn.  I got about twenty feet away and slowed down.  All of a sudden, two more of the angry critters were boring into the back of my hand.  A scary situation in the past for me.  there was a time when i was VERY alergic to bee stings and was in danger of serious problems any time i did get stung.  i could have been killed.  About thirty years ago, it was discovered that live bee venom could be used to immunize idiots like me who constantly worked around projects with possible bee attacks.  i was immunized, supposedly for life, but it is still a scary thing when i run into multiple angry bees.  This time, my hand swelled up and swelling extended to my wrist, but no other symptoms showed up.  i kept working  every day and about a week later, i had to go back to the doctor for post op checkup.

I had been waiting for a half hour, or so, beyond my appontment time, but somebody had come in to tell me the doc was running late with an emergency operation. Eventually, he showed up and had a young lad with him.  He told me she was a student (didn't ask what she was a student of) and wanted to know it it was ok with me that she observe as he inspected.  "OK by me."

he asked me some questions about how i was doing, and about pain, etc.  I told him everything was fine until i had run into a hornets nest.  The hornets had taken offense and had drilled my hand several times.  "Here at the Hospital?" he asked.

"Oh yea, right here in the lobby.  i will have my lawyer contact you within a couple of days." I suppose he was relly shaking, i did not see.  my eyes were elsewhere. I finally relented and told him it had happened while I was mowing a few days before.

"I thought your were going to take it easy."

"I was.  If i had been running the mower at my usual speed, those bees would never have caught up with me."

The doctor looked at the student, shaking his head, he said, "He's only a little crazy." 

Take care of yourself
Tinker
 
Ok so here's one...
Years ago I was on a job with a buddy. We were doing plaster restoration in the large entry foyer of an apartment building. It was morning, we had only been working a couple hours. I started to feel bad, had a stomach ache that just seemed to keep getting worse. I started drinking lots of water figuring maybe something I ate was bad. My buddy was worried and kept telling me something was wrong, we should go to the doctor. I of course said No, we need to get some work done. After a couple hours of trying to work half doubled over and in pain, I finally relented. He drove us to a friend of his who was a doctor.
The Doc took a look at me and prodded my abdomen a few times and informed me that my appendix was about to burst. A couple more hours on the jobsite and I might have ended up dead. They rushed me to the hospital a couple blocks away and admitted me into the ER right away. The hospital put me in a room until the surgeon and a surgery room opened up. This took maybe an hour or so.
While I was waiting, a few other doctors and nurses came in to prod my abdomen and see what all the fuss was about. Then a doctor came in with about a dozen medical students. The whole thing seemed like a big fuss over nothing to me but they all thought it was a big deal.
The doctor who brought the medical students in explained that he had brought the students as a teaching exercise and did I mind. Of course I said, no not a problem, we all have to learn at some point. He asked if I minded if they each felt around my abdomen to experience what its like, etc. I said, sure no problem. He then asked if it would be ok if they could check me for a hernia because there was some sort of relation or something, can't remember. I said, sure no problem.
The doctor then asked me to roll over on my stomach and the nurse put a pillow under me to sort of elevate my stomach and butt. At this point, I'm not really thinking anything ... yet. The next minute though I turn my head to see what's going on ... as I'm watching all the students put on rubber gloves and lubricant on the gloves is when I start thinking , How exactly do you check for a hernia?
The next minute it becomes all too clear. The Doc lifts my rob and I think this isn't going anyway I want it to go. Gently but nonetheless not all to pleasant the Doc sticks a couple fingers up my butt, probes around and explains to the students what he's doing. He finishes, asks me if I'm Ok and if the 1st student can go ahead.
At this point I would prefer to say Hell No. However, I figure everyone has to learn and my butt is already in the air. I say Ok.
The students one by one take turns sticking their fingers up my butt to check for a hernia or something related to the appendix. Talk about humbling. After student 6 or 7 I just can't take anymore and tell the Doc its over. He and the students all thank me for my cooperation and leave. A couple minutes later the nurse comes back in and tells me the Doc and her are very impressed with my patience.
"Most people barely make it beyond the 1st or 2nd student'.
Hope you feel better and don't do any work prematurely.
 
A Festool owner lives next door to a Maffel owner. The Festool owner has his wife's aged mother living with them and they keep a cat.

The Festool owner and his wife wanted to go away for an anniversary weekend and asked the Maffel owner to look after the cat and keep an eye on the aged mother in law.

When they returned from their naughty weekend they went straight to their neighbour and asked after the cat. The Maffel owner replied 'Oh, that thing. She got into the road, was hit by a truck, broke her neck and died in absolute agony.'

The Festool owner's wife broke down in tears. He husband took the Maffel owner to task. 'That was so unkind. You should have broken the news gently and said that the cat was quietly playing on the coal shed roof, slipped and died painlessly. That way my wife would have taken the news far better.'

The Maffel owner looked down in shame knowing that his tools were inferior and wishing that he had a PSC420 to show his friends in the Netherlands.

To lighten things up the Festool owner asked '...and how is my mother in law?'

The Maffel owner thought carefully and said, 'Well, uhm, er.' He drew courage, 'Well, she was playing on the coal shed roof...'

Get better soon and read that book - it will make time disappear!

Peter
 
Holzhacker that's a good one although that did hurt a bit because I couldn't stop laughing.
 
Markus,

I was waiting for a back end to the story.  Well I guess I got one.

Happy Holidays my friend!

Peter
 
HaHa, yes the ignorance of youth. I was around 20-22 when that happened. Not sure how patient I'd be today.
Markus
 
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