This website was the most helpful source of information for what to take to the hospital and how to prepare for post-operative care. The three most helpful items were a memory foam pillow, a shower bench and a hand-held shower head. I couldn't wait to wash my hair when I got home form the hospital, but dizziness and weak legs in the shower were not a good combination. I am surprised at how long it is taking for my eye muscles to strengthen on the surgery side of my face, so the recommendation to have "No More Tears" shampoo available was an excellent one.
Many of my neighbors brought me soup, flowers and offers of assistance. I took one of them up on it, so she and I now go for a daily walk around the neighborhood to help reestablish my equilibrium and to build stamina. We have become closer friends and I hope some day I can repay her for sharing this time with me.
Patience truly is the key word to this healing process. It's been over four weeks since my surgery (Trans-laberynthine incision to remove a 2cm diameter neuroma) and my left eye still has about 1/16" to go before it will fully close. For all the time it is taking, it seems like the gap is a mile. However, at this point in time, I am counting my blessings - a full facial muscle recovery is expected (based on my face immediately after surgery); the daily walking plus physical therapy is restoring my equilibrium; and I am getting a BAHA sound processor in May - no more single-sided deafness!
I would like to make one last suggestion for the recuperation process. If you are watching DVD's, turn on the English subtitles for the hearing impaired. You'll enjoy the movie more.
April 17, 2007 - Update
Okay, maybe I should not have scheduled my day surgery for Friday the 13th. Anyway, I went in to get the BAHA attachment exposed and we found out that my head is not hard enough. This comes from being past forty years old and a few other benchmarks - my bones are taking their sweet time to heal. Lessons learned - take an X-ray to see what is going on inside before starting the surgery. SSD is not the worst thing to deal with for six more months. There are people out there who have dealt with it for a lifetime. Also, my left tear duct is showing some activity - one tear at 10am on Saturday mornings only...go figure.