Getting Hip The Hard Way
Why did the best advice about preparing for
hip replacement surgery come from a stranger in London, a stockbroker, and a
friend and not from someone wearing a white coat?
Having just navigated through the replacement
of a hip and the first stage of recovery, I am now able to reflect on the last
couple of years…the decline of function, the increase of pain, and my
continuing impression of Treasure Island's Long John Silver, with his peg-legged
gait, before I was wheeled into Surgery and put in the hands of a doctor whose
work gives every indication of allowing me to live in a world with a much wider
orbit than previously.
There is
nothing on earth which can appropriately measure my gratitude for his and his
colleagues’ skills in helping me get another shot at being able to walk
comfortably. I even dream of a trip to Scotland and a hike around my favorite
loch.
But here is what I don’t
get and probably never will: Why did I get the best advice in dealing with my
declining hip from a complete stranger in London, my stockbroker, and an old
friend?
The people in the white
coats were helpful, interested, and happy to prescribe physical therapy, the
now rejected anti-inflammatories like VIOXX and Celebrex (and for a time these
meds did help some), and home
exercise.
Last year when the pain
got to the point where I would do anything just to get through a day and a
night without being driven bonkers by the pain, I felt I was hitting the wall.
Then on a trip to London, my medical luck began to change. On a guided walk one
Sunday morning, I was struggling to keep up with the group, when one of us came
over to me and asked for my cane, and I was so surprised, I just handed it over,
feeling like such a dumb cluck. The cane was adjustable, and she lengthened it
some, and gave it back, saying, “Try this.” Recovering somewhat, I
said something like, “Well, but..how…why.” I can be very good
with words sometimes.
She
responded, “Oh, well maybe it’s my thirty years as a physical
therapist, maybe it’s because I got a new hip at Johns Hopkins seven
months ago, or maybe I just recognized your walk.” For the rest of the
morning, when the guide wasn’t talking, I was asking questions about hip
replacement and getting good answers. She recommended some meditation tapes,
and after I overcame my intuitive dislike of the prospect of some middle aged
woman with new-agey flute music playing behind her telling me I should feel
better about myself, I bought a couple and found the damn things actually
helped.
Fast forward to last
September and a phone conversation I was having with my broker. She asked about
the hip, received a frank answer, and asked if I had ever tried water therapy.
I described an attempt to do some of that in a YMCA pool, without much success.
She told me about a center with a
therapy pool and recommended I get an evaluation. At that point, the pain told
me I had little to lose, so off I went for my assessment, first on dry land and
then in the 91 degree (F) therapy pool. The therapist said they could help me,
and when I got back to the car, I did not know whether to laugh at the irony of
finding this place so late in my struggle or cry.
So I signed up and began the long
process of preparing for my surgery. Three to four mornings a week I was in the
pool being trained by a therapist, and once my program was developed, I showed
up and did it on my own. And this was the best thing I did. Period. Full stop.
By the time the doors to the Operating Room swung open, I was ready, not just
for the operation, but for the recovery from the
surgery.
The old friend asked about
my hip and recommended I see a masseuse she had discovered. I demurred,
probably the usual guy thing. A few weeks later, the friend prodded, and I
knew better than to resist. And so the masseuse helped get me and my hip ready
to receive the titanium, polyethylene, and ceramic
replacement.
I went straight home
from the hospital to my home where my two sisters came over consecutive weeks
and gave me the greatest gift I’ve ever received – their attention,
support, and love. It was the first time we’d been alone together in half
a century without spouses, children, pets, and so on, and my recuperative
incapacities notwithstanding, it was a wonderful
time.
I’m still using the
meditation recordings; I’m back in the pool being trained to help me learn
a normal gait; and I’m still getting massage. I have every hope that what
I have learned and implemented in my daily life will help as I travel
on.
In this day and age, we all have
to be active, indeed aggressive, advocates for coping with our disabilities,
whatever they may be. Books, web-sites, networking, asking questions of
everyone who is or has dealt with a situation like yours can be incredibly
useful in improving your coping skills, providing the resources for better
questions when you do deal with the medical establishment, and improving your
life and perhaps delaying surgery for a
bit.
Yes, I have been very lucky,
stimulated by pain and assisted by friends and strangers, accompanied by
perseverance, something I learned from a paraplegic scotty who owned me years
ago, but that's another story for another
time.
©2005 Nicholas
Nash
Posted: Thu - March 17, 2005 at 01:10 PM