Hey Heidi,
Talk about freaking out!! I am 5 months post-op today
I was 25 when diagnosed and 26 when I had my translab surgery in Feb. '09 to remove my 2cm AN. I had the same sort of situation, woke up one day with like zero hearing in one ear, went to the fam doctor, ENT and actually drove down to Buffalo NY (I am in Ontario) for the MRI b/c my awesome (sarcasm) ENT decided waking up with no hearing one day was normal and put "elective" on my MRI form. I paid $500 for the MRI even though our health insurance would have covered it here in Ontario.
Anyways, when I finally got the results from the ENT she was like confronting me on why I went to the US to get the MRI, I explained I just "knew" something wasn't right in my head, so she's like "well there is something there, it's an intercranial tumour, go see this Otolaryngologist, til then that's all the info you're getting", so I was left to my own devices to research this online (very scary, I know!!)
I remember going back to my office that day and closing the door to have a private little cry fest, the first of many leading up to surgery.
Anyways, the point I wanted to make and now I'm rambling, is that my neurosurgeon was so cool, calm and collected he was like "listen, you're more likely to die from getting hit by a bus than this surgery, it is not a difficult procedure just very long and precise." Well that took a load off for sure.
But, it is SO much easier on the other side, regardless of what option you end up choosing. It's almost harder that there are different ways to approach it because you're always wondering if it's the right decision, but everyone is different.
I was walking the next day and home from the hospital on day 5. I was on facebook less than a week later and starting to feel more like myself after a few weeks. I definitely milked it w/ my husband and got out of taking the dogs out for their morning walk for like the rest of winter
I got mild headaches for 2 weeks post-op and haven't taken anything since then. My face is still paralyzed on one side, but my AN was so intertwined with my facial nerve that they actually thought it was a facial nerve tumor after the surgery, although pathology tests showed it was schwann cells, so they're not really sure.
Anyways, you will be OK and as everyone else has already stated, this is the thing to have if you're going to have a brain tumor.