I waved my hand a little and told him, "This is not the hip you're looking for".
I heard Sir Alec Guinness' voice when I read this, and then I smiled.
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I waved my hand a little and told him, "This is not the hip you're looking for".
I just had a thought. Do the operations make us 'hipsters' or 'hippies'?
Ready for some limbo dancing?![]()
For at least several more days I have to avoid rotary motion with the operated hip
There's one thing I did that got lots of grins: at the pre-op visit the week before, the surgeon wrote his initials on the hip to be replaced. They wore off during the week, which gave me an idea, since teams doing the wrong hip isn't all that rare (never happened at this hospital, but there's nothing wrong with being careful). So when I got wheeled in and they checked my hips, the right side had this:
C A U T I O N
* please open other side *
When the anaesthesiologist tapped it and pointed it out to a nurse, I waved my hand a little and told him, "This is not the hip you're looking for".
doing a few minutes of no-resistance stationary bicycle,
Wow. I had a 3-month limit. It ended just 6 days ago.
I wasn't allowed crutches. Straight to the walker. I learned how to walk with a cane, but used the walker until my surgeon told me I could use the cane. I haven't used the walker in over a month now. I don't even need the cane, but I use it for balance. My balance was never good to begin with, and it's even worse now.
Wow. I had a 3-month limit. It ended just 6 days ago.
I wasn't allowed crutches. Straight to the walker. I learned how to walk with a cane, but used the walker until my surgeon told me I could use the cane. I haven't used the walker in over a month now. I don't even need the cane, but I use it for balance. My balance was never good to begin with, and it's even worse now.
I found this was extremely helpful in restoring mobility. I got on my exercise bike the day after I got out of hospital
I'm not allowed bending plus rotating for another six weeks, and the amount of rotation I can do is minimal. One I think is related to that: I'm allowed to put the right ankle (not-operated) over the left ankle, but not the other way around.
^ Mine was a different replacement. Mine was the ball. Kuli's, I believe, was the socket. Mine was much more invasive so they could get the top of the femur outside my leg. I'm so-o-o-o-o-o glad I slept through it all. I heard a few horror stories about people waking up during surgery.
I hope you have a speedy recovery. Best wishes!
Those were my limitations as well, except that I was told 'no leg crossing'. I still crossed at the ankles, though. Never felt any pain when I did. My biggest beef was having to sleep sitting up in bed or on my back, and I haven't been able to sleep on my back for many, many years. It's only been these past few weeks that I've been able to sleep on my sides for short periods.
It's really a life-changing event.
