Nothing, really. Well, eating too much can certainly have a bad effect on your hips! I am thinking of other issues however, one of them being food, meaning that Randy is having a very difficult time with the whole “nutrition” idea. Ordering from Jimmy Johns? Really? After you promised me you would not be ordering junk food? Really???? You total ass! And yes, Randy has e coli. In the lung. He tried to tell me it didn’t come from food, but e coli is a food borne illness, and you can come into contact with it a million ways. He’s on antibiotics again.
I tell him again and again how important it is for him to follow the guidelines as closely as possible. Why do people not survive the first year? Mainly because they don’t take their meds correctly, don’t eat right, do not take care of themselves! THAT is not what we are going to have here. He doesn’t like the rules. Well, tough. I don’t like to cook, but that is what I am going to be doing. Here are the guidelines (common sense for us all, really):
Risky Foods To Avoid:
Limit Alcohol Intake
Alcohol intake should be limited to a rare cocktail or glass of wine only on special occasions. The medications you are taking will not react well with alcohol.
Foods to Limit
Avoid the following foods before and after lung transplant to maintain a healthy weight.
- Salty foods (chips, popcorn, nuts)
- Canned, preserved, and/or processed foods
- Red meat
- Butter
- Egg yolks
- Whole milk, cream, cheese, buttermilk, ice cream
- Fried foods
- Soda, candy, cookies, cake, pie
- White bread, instant mashed potatoes, other starches
Foods to Enjoy
The following foods are nutritious foods that will give you the energy you need to sustain your health.
- Lean meats
- Egg whites
- Fresh fruits and veggies (please make sure they are washed thoroughly)
- Whole grains
- Six to eight glasses of water per day”
The transplant coordinator said he could drink only on special occasions, and I made sure he understood that it means maybe 2 times a year, one glass of wine, not 2 times a month with 4 margaritas. My son Wes says Randy is having “obstructive behavior”. The goal is to not eat junk food, but the immediate wish is McDonalds, thereby obstructing the goal. Well, yeah.
Okay, now for the hips. Mine don’t work very well. I do yoga, pilates, swim, dive, walk….but not all the time, because I have to go and get cortisone injections into my hips. I’ve started back working out regularly…except that my hips won’t let me walk. So I had shots yesterday, and the Doc found the exact spots, because I practically screamed all day. I finally gave in and took pain pills to make it less miserable. Sleeping was tough, I like laying on my side, and that didn’t work very well. I felt better today, but still quite sore. I’ve worked all day in Randy’s office and bath, and a closet, so at this point I have availed myself of pain pills again.
My son Wes came home to help out with some final big items before Ran’s homecoming, and now he and my brother Michael plan to “jam”. They are both guitarists, and I love hearing them play. Well, I cannot believe it, but soon Randy will be home! That, I am sure, will be its own saga!
Kathy
Well on the upside – the more veggies you eat, the less junk food/salt/sugar you want! You get used to the way food is supposed to taste, instead of with all the crap added to it.
Tam Warner
LOL, I’ll keep saying that.
Kim
I’m thrilled for all of you that Randy will be home soon. It’s been such a long road, and I know that the journey isn’t over, yet. I send my hopes that all goes better than well, that there no upsets or surprises, and that every new day is better than the day before. Hugs
Tam Warner
Thanks, Kim. You are such a sweet friend.