HJY ~
Hi - and welcome. The short answer to your question is:
yes. As you know, every AN patient (
surgical, radiation or both) has a slightly different recovery experience. Some recover rapidly, others more slowly. With a few exceptions, the vast majority of AN patients do 'feel normal again' - but with a caveat. After undergoing complicated, extensive brain surgery, there is almost always some residual effect, albeit slight. I had a successful AN debulking surgery followed by FSR and recovered nicely but not without a few lingering 'reminders' of what I went through; a small 'numb' spot on one side of my tongue (
no effect on the taste of food or my ability to talk and eat normally). I occasionally experience a very slight 'dry eye' condition (
on the 'AN side' ) that needs no external 'lubrication' (
blinking does the trick) and my balance, while very serviceable 95% of the time, can be lost if I stumble (
rare). All of these deficits are invisible to others and have little to no effect on my quality of life. I drive and do everything I did before my surgery. I don't have the energy level I once had but I'm also retirement age, which is likely a factor. Frankly, in my experience, it takes months if not years to regain normalcy. I thought I had recovered completely by 6 months post-op. However, I noticed that my balance was better a year post-op and now, close to five years post-op, I believe I've adjusted as well as I'm going to, which is pretty darn good. So will you, and it won't take five years. I understand that 13 weeks seems like a long recovery period to you now but from what I've read on these forums, it is just a beginning. I'm sure you'll improve and at some point find your 'new normal', as we all do. I wish you well as you recover. Please keep us informed of your progress. Thanks.
Jim