Full board at the Costa del Colostomy..
I swore Pre Op that I would write down and record everything, but I had no idea really just the effect the surgery would have on my consciousness, my concentration, or my ability to string things together in order to write down and record, or to do things, or to communicate. I barely even processed much of the time that passed immediately after my Op or most of that first full day I spent with my eyes open. The notes I had promised myself to make were at first very minimal and sketchy, but as time wore on, I gradually became more aware of what was going on. My stay in Hospital following major surgery was, despite all of my forward planning for almost every eventuality, everything that I hadn’t expected.
DAY 1
My recollections of my first full day are scant at best, even with recorded notes. I made no observations really of what was going on around me, anything I was doing, even what the weather was like outside. I can’t recall whether I was drifting in and out of consciousness like I had been the previous afternoon. I noted briefly that it was like being drunk, unable to think straight or concentrate. Where I expected to be in almost constant agony, instead it was itching. Every inch of me was itching as if it was having an allergic reaction to thin air. I even had to ask the nurses who came to check my levels and blood pressure if they could do a full body scratch, as just about everywhere was unreachable. The pain seemed to just be delayed, and properly set in after I had made an attempt to have a quick wash and get out of my scratchy hospital gown and into my own nightdress. Just trying to change position in bed was exhausting and agonising, and no position felt comfortable for very long. Trying to relieve one pain somewhere just caused another somewhere else, I was in a sensory nightmare and a tangled mess of limbs and wires. That day passed quiet and lonely, hungry but not allowed food as it was still too soon after the operation.
I found in dismay that my Tablet wasn’t working despite me prepping it up before I came in, so I had to settle for my using my phone for all forms of entertainment. The first thing I opted for to pass the time was Attenborough’s Green Planet on BBC iPlayer, as I didn’t have the energy to concentrate on anything where I needed to follow a storyline, and I could happily drift away to the sounds of his voice, something I would often do as a tonic to days of illness. One of the evening shift nurses who came in to check my levels was quite interested by my choice of entertainment, rather than radio or daytime TV or sport like the other patients in the Ward were occupying themselves with. The whole time that first day I could feel something within me was missing, and couldn’t quite figure out what that was, until I realised it was anxiety. The rampant anxiety that I had endured pre op, that I had written about in all of my past posts here, where my mind had convinced me that anything that could go wrong with my stoma would definitely go wrong, since that was what generally happened to me. It was gone. Absent. I remember looking at my new baby Stoma, bright red in her huge see through bag, and thinking “ok. Whatever happens, happens.”
DAY 2
While I had drifted through the first day mostly left alone to rest, the second day couldn’t have been a more different experience, which left me feeling like all of my efforts to be comfortable while in hospital were becoming grievances for my nurses. They weren’t gentle and patient like they had been the day before. This time they came across to me as bossy and pushy and overbearingly assertive, and left me feeling worried that I was coming across like an uncooperative diva. When they blustered in that morning, after I had gone through a night of interrupted sleep after a patient from the male end of the Ward had wandered across to ours and spent a good few hours arguing right outside my door as to where he was, why he was here and how he shouldn’t be here, they wanted me up and on my feet at lightning speed with little regard for how I felt about it. It was a little taste of being a statistic or a box to be ticked rather than a patient to be treated, least of all with respect. I have difficulties in communicating my needs already as someone with an Autistic brain, but in my condition as I was I could barely get anything coherent between myself and them as they hustled me into the side chair and got me to do my body wash. They complained at length that I had too much stuff out and they had no room on the small table to put things down that they needed to use. I was in too much pain, feeling dizzy and sick and absolutely not ready at that point to be doing anything for myself, let alone explain that I had brought sensory comforts from home because I was autistic and had mental health conditions and was in hospital for major surgery for the first time in my life with no one but myself due to the ongoing covid restrictions. I even tried to point out my Autism Hospital Passport, meant to be there to explain for me when I couldn’t, but that was tossed aside on a windowsill well out of my reach, forgotten and ignored. It wasn’t like there was anything I could have done about it anyway, I couldn’t even reach my water jug because I was in too much pain and they still complained that I wasn’t drinking enough. The last thing I needed in those earliest days of recovery was to feel so under pressure to get on with it and heal quicker.
At least I was now allowed to eat. I was so desperately hungry that any thought of upsetting baby Stoma and having some kind of blowout or leak or other embarrassing poo disaster didn’t even register. My breakfast was just toast with a bit of jam, but I scoffed it all the same, albeit it in small, well-chewed nibbles. Maybe my pain was so relatively absent the day before because so much of me was still numb from various forms of anesthetic. It must have been during the second day that it truly had begun to wear off, and as my feeling started coming back I started experiencing some different scales of pain. One especially was where my rectum and anus had been removed. It felt empty and hollow to try and hold my pelvic floor in and realise that there were muscles that were no longer there, and it felt like trying to grip a void. When I had to haul myself onto my feet and try to sit in the chair the pain that gripped me was beyond anything I had experienced, even well beyond the pain of my last surgery. I felt like I had been stuffed with soggy sponge and then had my actual bum cheeks sewn together, so far beyond the feeling I was expecting. I thought all the trouble would be with this alien opening in my belly and I would mourn the missing piece between my legs, where all that had been sewn up was where the hole had once been. I wasn’t expecting this wet spongy bulge that I couldn’t put any form of pressure on without pain that was making me scream out loud before I even realised I was screaming.
It was also the first time I had my new stoma drained. I was in a clear drainable stoma bag so I could see everything that had been going on. All day I had kept it hidden under my night dress, refusing myself permission to watch it’s activities despite all the new and strange feelings it was creating. I hadn’t eaten since breakfast by this time as I had felt too queasy to face any food at lunchtime, and still didn’t want much for dinner either, and I couldn’t believe that my stoma could have produced so much when I had eaten so little. I felt so bad for the nurse who had “drawn the short straw” and had to do the draining. She had to squeeze the bag over one of those kidney shaped cardboard dish things and when it came out, the smell hit me like a truck. That unbearable, pungent stink filled the whole room and I instantaneously retched. Is this it now? Is this what I have to look forward to every time I take a trip to the bathroom, having to stop myself being sick when changing my bag? I broke down for feeling so utterly humiliated by my body’s own actions, feeling awful for that poor nurse who now had to dispose of the contents, stinking out the whole Ward in the process. Why do human bodies have to be so disgusting, and there is nothing we can do about it?
I had run out of Attenborough to watch by the afternoon so decided to try out my concentration by watching a fluffy historical drama. It was a series called “The Gilded Age”, written by the guy who wrote Downton Abbey, and since I found Downton generally a snore-fest I didn’t have high expectations on this and didn’t think it would require too much concentration to follow it. After 2 episodes I was hooked. It was a drama between the rivalling families of New York City’s upper crust in the 1880s, and the challenges of breaking into the established society when you were self made or ” nouveau riche”. As a Historian, I was bowled over by how well they portrayed the vacuousness of social concerns and reputations and the lengths they went to in order to fit in, and just how shallow they all were for the people who were meant to be the epitome of society’s progress and future. It was also inclusive with both a successful black female main character who was very well accepted amongst the main cast of characters, and a gay character willing to live in denial of his sexuality in order to gain a good dowry from finding a rich heiress. It was so engaging I managed to let a good few hours pass by without focusing on pain and discomfort.
DAY 3
Being awake in hospital was just a different kind of sleep. A sleep where my eyes were open and I was acutely aware of the pain I was in, and how alone I was despite all the activity and noise around me. Long, dead hours with little to focus on save for the discomfort I was in. I couldn’t get comfortable no matter how hard I tried. Lying on my front was out of the question. Lying on my back hurt the surgery wound. Lying on either side gave me pins and needles in my arms and hands and a chronic aching in my hips. I was either far too hot or too cold. The desk fan I had in my room was constantly going so I didn’t get too sweaty, especially since I was starting to notice I was getting sweat around the stoma and getting worried about possible skin reactions. Plus, the previous evening I had to call the nurse back to empty my bag a second time as baby stoma had decided to be productive for four hours straight. I simply couldn’t bear the idea that it would be behaving like that every day and it further put me off my food. The whole inertia of hour after hour was starting to make me go silently stir crazy.
When the nurses came in to do their morning rounds I was hastily pushed out of bed again and onto the chair, which I still couldn’t sit on in any way remotely comfortable, and this time I was left to wash without assistance. Again, I was certain I was being expected to do far too much far too soon. Moving just a few inches was exhausting, while sitting and standing felt like all of my organs were trying to fall out from between my legs. Washing was such hard work on my own that I ended up feeling more sweaty and messy than I did to begin with. I couldn’t understand why or how I was being expected to do this so soon. I had been told only on my surgery day that I wasn’t supposed to be up and in the chair until Monday, and yet I was pushed to get up barely 48 hours after my op. I had also been told this morning that I wasn’t due any morphine for the pain after being told earlier that I could have it every hour. I had absolutely no idea who to believe, and I was stuck in the middle, ignored and in pain and trying my best not to be a difficult patient, doing far more without than with what I needed. I found communicating even more challenging with the Asian nurses than I did with the British and European ones. Because English was probably not their first language there was a communication difficulty straight away, add in Autism and it became virtually impossible to get anything across to them. I found that when I couldn’t understand what they were saying, they just said the same thing louder, and that made me feel stupid for not understanding them the first time, and I still didn’t get what I needed. I was seriously reluctant to even use my alarm and call them unless I really was in unbearable agony, putting up with pain was marginally better than the added communication breakdown.
By the end of that day I was overwhelmed by just about everything. The nurses had been getting concerned with my blood levels so they put me on a blood transfusion, so I had yet another wire to contend with in my battle to get comfortable. I was desperate to get other things from my case like my new dressing gown but I didn’t dare ask the nurses for help getting anymore stuff after they had moaned so much about what I already had. I at least got to have some good old comfort food for dinner, a bowl of Mac and Cheese with veggies, and as I had run out of Gilded Age episodes I went over to a series I had been meaning to watch for a while, Peter Jackson’s epic Beatles documentary “Get Back”, interspersed with another old sick day favourite, My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic. Even with my entertainment I couldn’t help just wanting to drift off and get a few hours peace, free of thought or pain. The whole experience was a prolonged assault on my senses.
After realising how many words it’s taken to describe just these first few days, I have decided to split this post into 2.