Making an impossible choice

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  • Опубліковано 1 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 561

  • @Cernoise
    @Cernoise Рік тому +326

    “You only know what you know when you know it” reminds me of Mama Doctor Jones saying, “You do the best you can with the information you have” (usually about people who feel guilty about things they did while they didn’t know they were pregnant)

    • @melaniekeeling7462
      @melaniekeeling7462 Рік тому +10

      Wise words to live by.

    • @modernghost0
      @modernghost0 Рік тому +12

      I was thinking about that, too! It's great advice.

    • @sssophie9292
      @sssophie9292 Рік тому +18

      You can only do the best you can with the information you have at the time
      Love mdj 😊

    • @angelagendreau3586
      @angelagendreau3586 Рік тому

      @@sssophie9292 Yeah, she's awesome. This channel has good advice too.

    • @LovelyLawla
      @LovelyLawla 10 місяців тому +2

      I had came to the comments to share MDJs phrase as well! I love seeing when two communities overlap!

  • @Jacqueline888
    @Jacqueline888 Рік тому +329

    My mom once told me that no matter what choice we make, we will still mourn the loss of the path not taken.
    It’s ok to be sad for a life we imagined but cannot have. It doesn’t mean we regret our choices or live in regret.
    It’s like a form of nostalgia for something that only existed in our imagination.

    • @Sarcasticron
      @Sarcasticron Рік тому +13

      That's very wise, thank you.

    • @grannyjann
      @grannyjann Рік тому +11

      That bit of wisdom helped me today. Thank you and thank your Momma for me please.

    • @sootycat2740
      @sootycat2740 Рік тому +4

      I really like this

    • @angstydoodles1101
      @angstydoodles1101 Рік тому +5

      I feel that sense of mourning when I choose rotini over rigatoni. I can only imagine what it's like after choosing to keep your leg or amputate it.

    • @eleanoreliz
      @eleanoreliz Рік тому +8

      This reminds me very much of a quote from a "Dear Sugar" advice column written by Cheryl Strayed. (The question asker was torn between having children or not).
      "I’ll never know and neither will you of the life you don’t choose. We’ll only know that whatever that sister life was, it was important and beautiful and not ours. It was the ghost ship that didn’t carry us. There’s nothing to do but salute it from the shore."
      I've found it very helpful to be able to acknowledge that the other path was good in its own right, without having to feel like acknowledging that means I made the "wrong" choice or that I regret my choice.

  • @robertguildner2334
    @robertguildner2334 Рік тому +115

    As an amputee and clinical psychologist, I saw this as informative and supportive to others at the same crossroads. I have always appreciated you and your courage and emotional honesty.

    • @thenopedetective
      @thenopedetective Рік тому +6

      That is so cool! I love working with healthcare practitioners who have lived experience, it's so helpful.

  • @ShadesofShannon
    @ShadesofShannon Рік тому +386

    I made the decision to have a hysterectomy after YEARS of suffering with endometriosis. I know it can in no way compare to amputating a limb, but it is a decision I can’t take back. I will also never be able to have biological children. Making a choice like this is very hard, and it took my years to come to that conclusion. So, I get it.

    • @AshleyHx
      @AshleyHx Рік тому +44

      I've recently had a hysterectomy as well. I'm under 30 and had expected life to go differently. It's definitely not the same decision as limb amputation but you absolutely still made a very tough decision for yourself.

    • @RianShafer
      @RianShafer Рік тому +38

      I feel for you! I was 23 & the choice was not totally mine but when your inside parts are trying to come outside, it needs to be done. I did carry one pregnancy (out of 4) full term which should have been impossible but did lead to the hysterectomy a few years later. I truly did not realize how hard it would be later when I lost two serious relationships in a row. They wanted kids. Of their own. Their loss! Except for that, I do not regret choosing to live for my child & going on to have a good life.

    • @CinkSVideo
      @CinkSVideo Рік тому +43

      Suffering and struggle are not a competition. Your decision to have a hysterectomy absolutely compares to an amputation because it was your struggle. It was your life changing decision. You don’t need to minimize the magnitude because you might see (or others might see) it as less significant. It is significant because it was YOUR struggle. I’m sorry you had to go through that and had to make such a decision.

    • @KaitCervi
      @KaitCervi Рік тому +6

      I almost had a hysterectomy at 25 but was fortunate that the Mirena IUD helped. New research us emerging that supports a bacterial cause and a course of antibiotics resolves it. If this is the case it's excellent to make these steps on figuring things out but so sad that it's a fairly simple solution yet so many women have had a hysterectomy to solve their pain.

    • @RianShafer
      @RianShafer Рік тому +13

      @@KaitCervi That is fantastic that it worked for you. Shannon & I had endometrioses. I can only speak for mine but I do know many women have it & don't know how extensive it is until they go in (mine was through my belly button) & see it. Mine had actually been growing since birth, they actually called it a birth defect. I was a mess from puberty on & had no idea what was wrong & every doctor treated it different until they saw via a scope what was really going in there & it was pushing my cervix to the surface where I could actually touch it. I'd tried IUDs twice because I was not planning a child at the time, I was clueless I could not hold a child until after my 4th pregnancy but that is the one that stuck, the result was a perfect baby but also my parts being totally shot & all the stuff growing inside was pushing it's way out.

  • @ElliottRodgers
    @ElliottRodgers Рік тому +299

    I fell and shattered my ankle. Messed about for ~7 years. It wasn't impossible decision for me. The surgeon in small hospital didn't believe I was serious about chopping off my leg. Until I took out a combat torniquet and told him I was saving for a surgical saw...

    • @Am3lia77
      @Am3lia77 Рік тому +5

      You did it yourself?!

    • @RavenIsAnArtist
      @RavenIsAnArtist Рік тому +80

      ​@@Am3lia77Based on the comment, he seems to have just said he was saving for the saw, and never actually got one. Then was taken seriously and had it done professionally.

    • @Am3lia77
      @Am3lia77 Рік тому +25

      @@RavenIsAnArtist oh, that makes sense if it was meant as a threat

    • @funkyk5086
      @funkyk5086 Рік тому +30

      I said the same thing when I had non-stop leg pain caused by a degenerative disc in my spine that impinged my sciatica. My general practitioner didn’t seem to care until I said I’d prefer to have no leg.

    • @wandamusictube
      @wandamusictube Рік тому

      Did you amputate?@@funkyk5086

  • @TheGallicWitch
    @TheGallicWitch Рік тому +200

    The reason I started to follow you was because I'm considering amputation for my own ankle injury, with a very similar story to yours. Like you said, my first instinct wasn't to go to the surgeon, I wanted to see how other people were living with an amputated limb first, especially an ankle, and I found you a few months ago. Your videos are immensely helpful to me and have taken some of the fear and uncertainty out of this decision, while also giving me insight into challenges I never even thought about when my only thought was "if I don't have this ankle anymore, this pain will stop". So thank you for your nuanced view and your videos as I enter into talks with my medical team for this big decision.

    • @vickiwaatti1076
      @vickiwaatti1076 Рік тому +19

      I started watching her right before my amputation from an injury to my right ankle / leg. I am now 2 years into having the amputation and am much happier because of it.

    • @9983sp
      @9983sp Рік тому +5

      If it will never heal properly, cut it off.

    • @zazajf
      @zazajf Рік тому +1

      Good luck!

    • @conradmcdougall3629
      @conradmcdougall3629 Рік тому +1

      I'm in agony and can't walk without crutches. I find out soon about amputation. Do you guys think you made the right choice?

    • @vickiwaatti1076
      @vickiwaatti1076 Рік тому

      @@conradmcdougall3629 YES! I am much happier

  • @RianShafer
    @RianShafer Рік тому +53

    I actually knew someone who had to make your decision. After a leg wound from an accident never healed closed, he opted for the amputation. I could not believe how happy & healthy he looked the next time I saw him! My decision was to have a hysterotomy very young. My body was making it for me anyway. It took a lot of mind work to get past it once it was done. I think there are times when our quality of life has to be the number one factor.

  • @brooke286
    @brooke286 Рік тому +91

    Hey Jo, I'm going through this decision right now after 11 years living with constant pain. I had a motorbike accident 11 years ago and shattered my femur tibia and ankle. I also had a high impact wound lower leg. This all happend to my left leg. Now, after 6 surgeries, I'm facing the decision to amputate my lower left limb due to nerve damage, chronic pain, blood flow to my lower Left limb decreasing over time. Also I have a shorter leg that has messed with my back and hip.
    I've done everything possible to save my leg, and now at the point I've seen a vascular surgeon that would be ok with lower limb amputation. I've thought about it for the past 2 years and am now going through the process to get this happening. I enjoy your videos as it shows that it is possible to do it and live a better life. So, thank you for your videos.

    • @9983sp
      @9983sp Рік тому

      You shattered your left femur, tibia (lower leg bone), and your ankle. What exactly was your lower leg trauma? Did you break your fibula, or are you talking about the road rash?

    • @jessovenden
      @jessovenden Рік тому +4

      My heart goes out to you.
      On decisions: If possible, wait and see. New information, or medical advances may come.
      Once waiting is no longer an option act accordingly.
      Sounds like you’ve been waiting and trying everything you can already, but what would I know?
      My very best for your future.

    • @thenopedetective
      @thenopedetective Рік тому +4

      I would assume they're not dealing with road rash given the blood flow and nervous symptoms they described.

    • @01poppyblue
      @01poppyblue Рік тому +1

      Best wishes

    • @JuliaJames-zx5xy
      @JuliaJames-zx5xy Рік тому +1

      Which is going to have a higher quality of life for you? I know that's difficult when you've had your foot & ankle for so long. I live with significant back pain, so amputation is not an option. I hope you have no pain if you travel the path of amputation. I broke my foot in early May & it's still not healed. Jo is the person that kept coming to my mind.

  • @LaCafedora
    @LaCafedora Рік тому +29

    The word you want is "diverge." As in,
    "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
    And sorry I could not travel both
    And be one traveler, long I stood
    And looked down one as far as I could
    To where it bent in the undergrowth;"

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet Рік тому +2

      One of my favorite poems!

  • @justinsmith1698
    @justinsmith1698 Рік тому +46

    Jo thank you for your informational videos.
    I had a bad motorcycle accident 6/23/23 and on 6/28/28 I was unfortunately faced with the choice of years of surgery for a still possibly un-viable foot, so I chose amputation.... you were the first, and one of the only content creators I've found truly helpful in this trying time, thank you ❤

    • @tboneaja
      @tboneaja 8 місяців тому

      Exact same thing happened to me, good luck with your journey..

  • @fayewhite-willinger8068
    @fayewhite-willinger8068 Рік тому +31

    This resonated so much with me. Hysterectomy is a serious life altering decision as well. Losing a body part that is dysfunctional is tough decision. I mourned the loss beforehand. This was my child’s first home, but I was in serious pain and slowly bleeding to death. It needed to go to allow me to have a better life. Not a perfect life but so much better.
    Thank you for your frank conversation about making tough life altering decisions.

  • @mkang8782
    @mkang8782 Рік тому +133

    The points you made about not knowing what you don't know, extending yourself grace, and being compassionate to yourself are so, so important. Thank you for putting them out there for others to hear.
    P.S.: Sofie was definitely in maximum cuteness mode on the couch with you.

  • @cherylsanatore7631
    @cherylsanatore7631 Рік тому +413

    Hi! I find your videos very helpful. My trans daughter spent 37 years as a very unhappy male. She's been on hormone replacement therapy for 2 years and is going through a divorce. In March 2022, she had foot surgery, and in May, she was diagnosed with a MRSA-LIKE infection. In July, she was admitted to the hospital for IV antibiotics, which didn't work. She made the decision to go with a below the knee amputation to save her life. I am so proud of her. She is an incredibly independent person. She's going to PT while she heals. Oh, she's had insulin dependent diabetes since age 10, so healing is slower than normal. She's amazing!

    • @Ariplaygames
      @Ariplaygames Рік тому +68

      Your daughter is incredibly strong and Im so happy she has you as support and hope she heals great and has a happy life!

    • @melaniekeeling7462
      @melaniekeeling7462 Рік тому +62

      And it sounds like you're an amazing parent.

    • @karendeakin9628
      @karendeakin9628 Рік тому +33

      What a strong pair you and your daughter hope things improve from now

    • @floopyboo
      @floopyboo Рік тому +34

      That is a lot for one person to go through. Big big hugs to your daughter.

    • @waffles3629
      @waffles3629 Рік тому +29

      From another trans person, your daughter sounds awesome.

  • @hy1684
    @hy1684 Рік тому +31

    hey jo, I love what you said about blaming ourselves for the decisions we made, I used to blame myself for using unhealthy coping mechanisms like shutting my emotions, badgering myself with constant criticism, always striving for more in life, being extremely success oriented etc.but through the help of my therapist I realized that I was a very hurt person who did not know any better and I was doing the best I can with the tools I had at the time, if I knew any better I would have done anything to get better because at the core that was my intention at the beginning and it is the same now. I just now know better than that.

    • @thenopedetective
      @thenopedetective Рік тому +3

      And if you've always "known better" that doesn't mean you had the capacity for safer consistent coping at the time! This is a big one for me.

    • @hy1684
      @hy1684 Рік тому +1

      @@thenopedetective yes, exactly this!

  • @billpederson8397
    @billpederson8397 Рік тому +14

    On July 21, 2023 my left leg was amputated below the knee. This was the most difficult decision I've made in my 75 years on earth. Like you, I am surrounded by family and friends who are incredibly supportive, but in the end, we are the ones that deal with all of the mental anguish, pain, fear, dread, etc. I spent 4 weeks in the hospital and TCU because of an infection in my residual limb, so I have still not had a prosthesis fitted. I spend most of my time in a wheelchair at home, trying to stay busy with some type of technical project, since I'm an ex engineer, software developer, pilot, entrepreneur, corporate exec and ex military. Being so restricted physically is a mental struggle for me. I think many amputees must face the same issues. Like you I dread the potential loss of my good leg, since it has almost exactly the same circulatory problems that the left one did. In the end, I had no choice on the left leg. My foot pain increased week to week, and I had virtually no future with the condition as it was, so amputation was my last hope to decrease my pain and regain some kind of future where I could walk. I appreciate all of the time you've taken to share your experiences over the past 4+ years. Sharing your joy and pain have reminded me of our shared humanity and our need to communicate and share with each other.

  • @bstar2294
    @bstar2294 Рік тому +20

    Thank you so much for sharing your story, I'm forever grateful!
    I'm currently living with severe chronic pain in my left ankle, and I'm in the process of looking into amputation.
    I fractured my left ankle in 3 spots, dislocated it, and tore almost all of the ligaments and tendons in my left leg. I got this injury when I was 14yo in 2016 while rollerskating with a friend. I've had 4 surgeries and 3 procedures on it, and I'm constantly in and out of the hospital. I've had to relearn how to walk 3 time's, and have been in physical therapy once a week ever since it happened. My mobility is very limited, and I'm in constant pain. There's so much scar tissue that my left ankle is twice the size on my right. The 3 procedures were to get rid of scar tissue, but it always came back.
    If you happen to read this, do you have any advice for me? What questions should I be asking?

  • @ardenchaplin5389
    @ardenchaplin5389 Рік тому +15

    I have a condition called complex regional pain syndrome. Some with my condition do make the amputation decision. For me that’s not an option but I’ve definitely considered it prior to deciding it wasn’t an option for my presentation.
    Pain is one of the hardest thing to live with. I have lost the use of my leg and you don’t just cope with pain but you lose parts of yourself in those new limitation.
    Nobody just ever jumps straight into an amputation decision. It takes so much work and courage and I respect those decisions so highly.

    • @andrewslagle1974
      @andrewslagle1974 2 місяці тому

      I hope you feel better i really mean that, I had failed multi level fusion on my neck/spine .I live in chronic pain .I have learned to live with it but it cost me almost everything my job my marriage you get it .I have gained most back but the pain remains both physical and mental so i can sympathize .I have been in long term pain mgmt for years .

  • @rainaraspberry4945
    @rainaraspberry4945 Рік тому +16

    the point about sitting with your feelings actually made me pause this video and take some time in silence to feel out how i was feeling with a hard thing im dealing with, and that actually helped me calm down a lot. thank you so much for voicing these things and posting them online, you're so amazing!

  • @Doedee311
    @Doedee311 Рік тому +19

    Wow. Jo, I have not had to go through amputation but what you said today made me feel better about the decisions I’ve made and have in my future. I’m still working on them but your words were taken to my heart. Thank you.

  • @51623allissa
    @51623allissa Рік тому +51

    "Give yourself some freaking grace".... something I'm leaning to do following a decision that I made 32 days ago when I realized I was no longer "safe" in the environment I was living in. I don't blame myself for his actions; however I do blame myself for the seemingly countless events and lives devolving the "situation" had afterwards. I'm currently and will forever be in a "safe place" away from him but there seems to be no escape from these thoughts memories and flashbacks related to that day and other events involving him. People tell me "it's not your fault"... How could it not be when I stayed until he did and said what he did and said on that day. Thank you for having the strength to share these last couple of videos. Though I've never had to make a decision such as "chopping off" a body part; I do know what it's like to make a life altering choice to speak up. My life was "simple" before. Now; I'm faced with essentially starting over and not knowing what will happen or where I'll end up when the dust settles. I'll get through it though; as you did/have and will continue to! You're amazing! Thank you for reading this and for sharing the content that you do! We've never met and likely never will but I feel like I can relate to you. Like I know everything will be okay because someone out there somewhere else is brave enough to share that she's going through/has gone through something similar from the mental health aspect. Thank you!

    • @SheilaCrosby
      @SheilaCrosby Рік тому +10

      No, it's not your fault. You had reasons to stay until it happened, and they seemed like good reasons at the time. Most domestic abusers are skilled manipulators and make it very hard to leave. You are not responsible for other people's choices.
      And good luck.

    • @51623allissa
      @51623allissa Рік тому

      @@SheilaCrosby thank you.

    • @anac9313
      @anac9313 Рік тому +6

      Nobody chooses to be manipulated and abused. It wasn't your fault. It's often harder to leave abusive relationships than healthy ones, because in abusive relationships people are often confused, isolated (emotionally if not also financially) from others, and with a shattered sense of identity. It's hard to leave but you did it when you could. (I hope I understood correctly, so that this makes sense)

    • @51623allissa
      @51623allissa Рік тому

      @@anac9313 thank you. Yes it does make sense!

    • @conradmcdougall3629
      @conradmcdougall3629 Рік тому

      Are you really comparing a bad relationship with losing a limb? I was physically, emotionally and mentally abused by my ex wife for years until I left. Every time the cops came because of her hitting me, I was put into handcuffs. It's been a few years and I don't think about it.
      I may need to have a foot removed. That is permanent

  • @thatswhatshesaid14
    @thatswhatshesaid14 Рік тому +16

    I need you to know how helpfull these videos are to me. In march 2020 I tore my left anterior tibialis tendons by stretching it. The most super simple stretch caused the most worst damage of my life. I had surgery to repair it and was left with a numb top foot and more pain than before the surgery. Ive had 3 years of pt, one year of omt, and all the shots and medications i can get. Although i am not near the point of needing an amputation, im very hopeful of that as my last resort. Right now im left with CRPS, and i use a pain cream with like 7 different things in it. Thank you for all the videos you make. They truley are helping and honestly, seeing you and how youve gone through your journey, has given me hope, that maybe one day ill be able to run again 💚

  • @GaelyneGasson
    @GaelyneGasson Рік тому +9

    I've lost a body part - and made other "impossible" decisions. I left my family and home and moved to another hemisphere. That was hard and for some would have been impossible. This was in the very very early days of the Internet so I couldn't really research but I had a faith that this was right for me and stuck with it. I also came here for a year and lived with the people I'd be spending the rest of my life with - I thought.. So when I made the big final decision I knew what I was getting into, and for twenty-five years it was my happy ever after. Sadly, my husband got lung cancer and died in 2018, just a year short of our 20th wedding anniversary. I'm living in the home he grew up in from the age of 11 when his family moved to Australia from England. I had breast cancer that appeared just shy of our 1st wedding anniversary. To just write 'that was hard' is such an understatement. But I was never given a choice about losing my right breast. There were four tumours and the doctors said it has to be removed. I didn't argue about it. But there was a lot of feelings I had about it that I didn't get to express or think about (process) at the time. I think in some ways we process stuff like this over years and years of time. I had had 3 children that I'd breastfed. I felt it was a significant loss of a reminder of the loves in my life (kids and otherwise). So I'm still now and again processing things. I had reconstruction surgery and I'm ambivalent at best about the replacement. It's not the same size, has no feeling and seems to just be there so others in the swimming changing room aren't freaked out. It even has a fake nipple that's got tattoo colouring (it was part of the reconstruction). But, it was a botched reconstruction. They had to do an emergency skin transplant to keep part of the reconstructed tissue that was moved from my back from dying due to a lack of blood supply. There are some hellacious scars, both on the front and my back is a criss cross mess of scarring that has hardened and the nerves are wonky on them. I have lymphodema from the original surgery that is in my trunk, so it also affects those scars and limits movement. But given all that, I am still here. I was able to be there for my husband when he needed me most, as he was there for me when I had to go through a life altering circumstance. I just wish his had been a lot less altering for both of us. So I live alone with my two cats and most of my conversations happen on the computer. I've been asked several times about moving back to Michigan but ... this is my home now. And that's that decision. As I get older (I'm 62), I do worry about being alone without any family here and it's a worry, but again, there's a faith that somehow it will turn out ok. I just don't have all the answers to that yet but it'll come eventually and I'll recognise it when I see it. ((Hugs))

  • @jedikaren8112
    @jedikaren8112 Рік тому +12

    I did the same mental process about struggling at living home or moving 2000 miles to a bunch of strangers and see what happened. I picked option B and now have a full time job, a car, pets, friends, hobbies, and found happiness.

  • @ebl36
    @ebl36 Рік тому +3

    DIVERGING! It’s DIVERGING! You’ve probably remembered or googled the word by now.

  • @hurricane7800
    @hurricane7800 Рік тому +12

    When I was about 11 we moved abroad and this makes me think a lot about the choice my parents had to make. In the end, it was the right decision and we all have a much higher quality of life, but there were points where it was hard on all of us. As a kid, most of it went over my head, and this gives me so much empathy for how truly difficult it must have been at times.

  • @dodiblumstein7559
    @dodiblumstein7559 Рік тому +5

    When i was 14 i was in a hiking accident and had 7 surgeries with no success i had my elective amputation 6 years ago with success and no more surgeries. I'm involved in achilles international have you ever looked into it

  • @BrandonWestfall
    @BrandonWestfall Рік тому +2

    I used to joke about cutting both of mine off because I have atrocious muscle spasms and most of the time they are in my legs. (So bad that I've torn 5 muscles in the last 2 years)
    Then I found out it's possible to have phantom muscle cramps. What the hell????

  • @bekkatheman
    @bekkatheman Рік тому +8

    I had to make a decision to get a vagus nerve stimulator when most of the seizure meds I had tried failed. Even dealing with the fact that Ill be dependent on meds regardless, but this will be a step in taking less medication. I got the implant in 2015, and i never looked back. I had made the best decision, even if it meant no more MRI's, and metal detectors.

    • @neva.2764
      @neva.2764 Рік тому

      Interesting. The vagus nerve gets plenty attention in the last few years. It's an important one.
      Did you get rid of the seizures?

    • @bekkatheman
      @bekkatheman Рік тому

      @@neva.2764 it helped with the smaller ones. I still take medications for the larger ones.

  • @robertfindley921
    @robertfindley921 Рік тому +6

    You made me realize some people struggle with indecision over decisions with no consequences (dinner), and some struggle with indecision over decisions with huge consequences (amputation). Perhaps some with both and some with neither. I wish you well.

  • @RSW6666
    @RSW6666 Рік тому +8

    Fellow BKA here. My fifth anniversary is coming up on Dec 7 2018. Unfortunately my choice was amputate or die due to a diabetic infection that had MERSA and Gangrene. I went for months trying to get my heel to heal and then I had 24 hours to make my decision. More infections followed and I didn't go home for 13 months (01/2020). It actually changed me from a self hating alcoholic to a person who was glad to be alive. By comparison getting shot was way easier. But I now know that if I'm awake and alive I will fight for each breath. So from here to the end it's all gravy; the game gave me a free extra life. I have more time, the ultimate gift. I'm a little off your topic, but sometimes the aftermath is as important as the decision.

  • @maribelgaynor8959
    @maribelgaynor8959 Рік тому +4

    "Fork in the road." 😊 I didn't have a choice , bypass after bypass and toes removed. I would have lost my life. You make it look easy. I'm a bilateral bka. It has been a long 2 yrs. 😢 You are really a true inspiration , I've been watching you since I had my first amputation a year ago. Thank you for your vedios.

  • @muddpie4785
    @muddpie4785 Рік тому +11

    This topic really resonates with me. I was born with a severe cranial cleft affecting pretty much my whole head except for my right eye. It's a long story involving waaay too many surgeries, pain, and illness over the course of my entire childhood. Pertinent to the topic is that when I was 10 yrs old my parents and I were faced with the fork in the road you mentioned. For me it was about whether to remove my left eye. It was just a terrible, 99% blind, infected, painful mess then, and the road forward seemed murky and scary with or without the eye. My conservative Christian upbringing, childish magical thinking, and limited understanding of the ramifications of choosing one path or the other led me to what I now believe was a misguided attachment to my eye, simply because it was mine - a part of me - and the thought of not having it anymore seemed like a bigger tragedy than the difficulty of keeping it healthy and pain-free. I decided I was going to "believe God for a miracle". 😛 Now it's 50 years later and I know I made the wrong decision. It's still a drain on my efforts to live a normal, active, pain-free, stress-free life. I'm finally ready at this point to be rid of it, buuuut my "insurance" won't cover it, and I can't get in to see a specialist anyway. (a whole other kettle of stinky fish- the mess our health care system is in this country) I've been told Medicare will cover it when I'm eligible for that. I hope my other health issues won't worsen in the mean time, preventing me from having my long-overdue enucleation (eye removal). I guess time will tell.

    • @01poppyblue
      @01poppyblue Рік тому +5

      Best of luck on your journey

    • @muddpie4785
      @muddpie4785 Рік тому +1

      @@01poppyblue TY. 🥰

    • @jessovenden
      @jessovenden Рік тому +1

      Oh your country’s lack of decent healthcare makes me sad! I have heard of US citizens going to Cuba, Mexico or even Canada for health care that they need but can’t get at home.
      It was a while ago, could you possibly still do that?
      Almost any other country but the USA. Which is appalling and sad.

    • @marymegrant1130
      @marymegrant1130 Рік тому

      If you were receiving Social Security Disability, you would be eligible for Medicare. There may be a waiting period to join Medicare

  • @imogenoliver
    @imogenoliver Рік тому +9

    This might be one of the things that helps get me through the last couple months of highschool. As a disabled person it’s only gotten increasingly harder to just get to the end so thank you Jo, I needed this ☺️.

  • @keithwillis4524
    @keithwillis4524 Рік тому +4

    People think that the pain will go away without a leg. So not true

  • @Ro11erDemon
    @Ro11erDemon Рік тому +2

    Hi Jo, so I just saw your vid and I'm currently contemplating amputating my left arm. I was recently diagnosed with stage 3 soft tissue cancer in my arm. As they keep surgically removing the tumors from my arm, it ends up coming back almost instantly. I haven't spoken with the doctors yet about the option to amputate yet since I'm literally still recovering from my surgery that I had 4 days ago. I'm most likely going to have to go through chemo soon to see if that does the trick or if they think amputation would be the best option. I'm not sure what to do or how I'll be able to function with one arm. I should also mention that I'm also physically disabled (from birth). So essentially trying to go about life with two wobbly legs and one arm would be extremely difficult. Do I keep my left arm and live with the constant pain or do I amputate and try to live life with one arm when it's already difficult enough for me to get around. I know it's not an easy question to answer, nor do I expect you to give me the answer for it. It's sort of (and sort of not) a rhetorical question at the same time I guess. But if you can give me some advice on who I can talk to to get the answers I need, that would be helpful.
    Thanks for sharing your vid, it was definitely helpful.

  • @kirstymd5878
    @kirstymd5878 Рік тому +4

    I needed this video Jo thank you 🙏 I’ve mentioned in a few posts ive watched of your videos that I’m deciding if I amputate my right leg or not and last week I met with a surgeon and I’m booked in for the end of the month and have been back and forth in my mind if I have made the right decision. So hearing all of what you said has helped so much. Thanks Jo 😊
    You have no idea what you have done for me over the last 2 years or so since I found your channel.

  • @jessicastevens5782
    @jessicastevens5782 Рік тому +3

    "two roads diverged in a yellow wood..." 😀

  • @3dprintingtrucker628
    @3dprintingtrucker628 Рік тому +8

    Just had my below the knee amputation in July still healing and learning how to do things now

    • @ElliottRodgers
      @ElliottRodgers Рік тому +1

      Just keep give yourself time to heal, time to adjust and get used to it all.

  • @j3o5h8n5j5a3y8
    @j3o5h8n5j5a3y8 Рік тому +3

    You are awesome. Not only that decision that you made for your body, but to put yourself in the spotlight and in doing so, help so many others. Yeah, the self criticism and judgement is a bitch. You / we don't deserve that,

  • @newcastleman86
    @newcastleman86 Рік тому +8

    Your dogs are adorable! Love the new layout. 😊

  • @TomTomLLong
    @TomTomLLong Рік тому +5

    Wow... this is why I follow your channel. I suffered an injury on May 23, 2018, that put me on a very similar path as yours. Surgeries, pain, mobility loss and my life slipping away... all so very much your story. I actually came across your videos while googling about amputations in 2019. Also like your choice mine became "elective" and I even called it plan "B" in a discussion with my first surgeon. What you talk about in this video share is so incredibly accurate and true. I've had near matching setbacks as well, but through it all when asked if I still thought I made the right decision my answer is a resounding yes. Even on my "not so good" days now I'm better now than my "really good" days with my mangled-up foot. Your openness and discussions played a part in my decision to pursue amputation. I thank you for all you have done and are doing to make people aware of the real side of the story. It's not all guts and glory as some believe, sometimes it's not good and very difficult. Again, I thank you for all that you have done and all that you are doing. Stay strong... keep pushing forward.

  • @suesmith5746
    @suesmith5746 Рік тому +3

    I would add do not give up keep fighting. If plan A does not work out go to pan B,C and keep trying there may not be a "perfect solution" you do not need one. We just need good enough to get by for now. New information, feelings, experiences keep the situation changing. The worse your situation is the more likely it is that you can improve it. Twice I have had to hear my team of Drs tell my family I was worse every day there was nothing more they could do they expected me to die in 2-3 days. No one in my state had ever had the damage my body had and lived. I was only 49 and decided no one was going to tell me when to die. I wanted to live and I fought and worked though therapy after therapy. The second time was a few weeks after the first time and was much worse because I was awake and could see what was happening. I have some permanet damage but it is manageable. I went back to work full time in 6 months. I am now in my late 70's, to others my life appears normal. As I age some of the small problems have become worse, but I live alone and am driving on a 2000 mile plus trip for fun next week. If I have a bad day I may have to rest for a couple of days to recover. The only things I can not find a way to do are the things my Drs have told me not to do, Skiing, white water canoe racing, i switched to sailing, and climbing a ladder to cut trees with a chain saw. I still climb ladders and use change saws just not together. Also you can not do this alone you need a lot of help and support from family, friends and professionals. Most of my friends know I have some medical problems and may have to cancel out of something at the last minute, but they have kindly never asked what the heck is wrong with you and accept me as I am.

  • @bradbrowatzke7236
    @bradbrowatzke7236 Рік тому +4

    A lot of great advice given in this video. It sometimes comes down to knowing what you want to be the outcome, as you said. We were raised in similar backgrounds, my depth in the church community being moderately less than yours (I was too independent a child and hungered for knowledge all the time). My first choice was whether to have a spinal fusion for scoliosis or not. A simple choice, since the choices were to possibly expire during surgery or expire in a few months to a year from simply jostling the wrong way and suffocating. The expiry was guaranteed in the latter and was a 10-15% chance with surgery. I am here, nearly half a century later, and have had to make more choices, where your advice is, honestly, the absolute truth. My one hard lesson was learning to think of myself, and ask for help. Oh, the opposite of convergence is divergence, thought I should slip that in there. One question, did you ever pursue what affects or affected your healing? I was blessed with the exact opposite issue, and surgeries though few, have always been successful. Look into that, and it may help, as nerves are one of the most complicated systems in our body, but the easiest for the body to correct. Thank you for sharing your life lessons, keep strong and keep moving forward. See you next video.

  • @PB-vb4ob
    @PB-vb4ob Рік тому +5

    My friend was hit by a drunk driver and had terrible damage to her leg. She wanted to have her foot amputed but doctors refused because she was so young. After about 10 years of pain, she just died of a drug overdose. They wouldn't let her make decisions about her body, but were fine to prescribe her opioids. Glad that doctors listened to you.

    • @jennster360
      @jennster360 3 місяці тому

      I am so sorry for your loss 😢

  • @thunderfury_fgc
    @thunderfury_fgc Рік тому +23

    I have to say some of this does resonate with me. Completely different context, I'm not an amputee, but I am somewhat recently trans. After being in denial for a long time, taking the decision to finally look into it and allow myself to explore was probably the most difficult decision I took in my life (so far). It was in a sense a similar thing to what you say, I had to consider the outcome it would have on me, put that first over what it'd mean for other people. But also it was so full of ... unknown and scary things, much more than the decision to not do anything. I fine about the way I was, dysphoria wasn't really a thing for me, more apathy. But I had to consider the idea that yes, even if the path on the left is much scarier and full of unknowns, it also has a pretty good chance of ending up with me happier. Ultimately, that is what allowed me to finally take the leap of faith that it was. I'm still on that path full of unknowns for now, but already, I do not regret making the decision I made for now. I also still very much have more difficult decisions to make, not least of which ones that will have permanent effects on the rest of my life (starting HRT, gender affirming surgeries, name changes, etc. etc.), but I will be using the same logic and process for making all of them, and hopefully it will continue to serve me well.

    • @conradmcdougall3629
      @conradmcdougall3629 Рік тому +2

      You are obviously a kid. This is a phase you will grow out of. Don't do anything that will be permanent.

    • @arinnnnnn7
      @arinnnnnn7 11 місяців тому +3

      Hey, you got this, realizing that you're trans is a quite scary, but it also is an important step, to hopefully, be happier. The world is scary, especially right now, take your time with it, don't rush yourself. I wish you the best of luck and I sincerely hope you're doing okay, have a nice day stranger :)

    • @paincreatesfame
      @paincreatesfame 11 місяців тому +3

      Glad you found who you are ❤ I hope your journey is nothing less than everything you want it to be

  • @ChronicReader
    @ChronicReader Рік тому +5

    I get this! I had chose to get a transplant or not when I was 21, and I’m really glad I did, because if I had waited to get listed until it was necessary and no longer a choice it would have been too late. It’s so funny, people always say “you have been through so much, I don’t know how you do it” or something similar. They just don’t get it - there is no other option. You make the best choice for you and don’t look back, just focus on moving forward.

  • @JennaGetsCreative
    @JennaGetsCreative Рік тому +6

    Yes, we can do hard things! It sucks, but we survive. I like how you ended up saying the same thing that Mama Dr Jones always says: We do the best we can with the information we have at a the time. I haven't had to choose to chop off a body part but I've certainly made my share of hard decisions. I've broken off an engagement, I've changed career paths multiple times, I've moved across the country, I've decided not to have the 2-3 kids I always thought I'd have and stop at 1 because I had to admit to myself that "it'll be different when it's your own kids" didn't actually play out and the support network I married into sucks when it comes to motherly things. I still feel horrible for admitting that I, a mother who wanted to be a mother, really don't like babies.

    • @pearcat08
      @pearcat08 Рік тому

      There's nothing wrong with not liking babies. It doesn't make you a bad mom, or bad in any way. Please don't beat yourself up over it.

  • @jennyohara607
    @jennyohara607 Рік тому +5

    So much wisdom, applicable to all kinds of decisions. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and experiences, and for the reminder to grant ourselves grace.

  • @modernghost0
    @modernghost0 Рік тому +3

    I see that a lot of the comments on here are also leg pain stories but I'm unoriginal and would like to vent about mine. So many of your words and emotions resonate with me. I had what was a seemingly minor sports injury in January of 2022. I pulled a tendon on my foot from pointing it too hard, and nobody thought it would be a big deal. My coaches stopped believing me because they thought it should've healed after 3 or 4 weeks but it still hurt incredibly bad. I couldn't move my foot hardly at all from a resting position because it hurt incredibly, which meant I was really struggling to perform. I kept pushing myself too hard because I've always been taught to rely on myself entirely. I was going to school for 8 hours a day, working 4 days a week, and swinging weights around for 3. Learning to be dependent on someone is really difficult. I can hardly walk, even with a cane. I've been gaining weight because I can't exercise anymore and I feel myself getting weaker. I used to be the strongest person on my team and always took a lot of pride in how muscular I was, and it's all going away now. I feel like I'm throwing my shoulder out walking with a cane because I've started waking up with incredible pain in my shoulder going down my back. I don't even know what's wrong with it. Hearing your story of pushing on for years and years is really inspiring. I'd be interested in knowing how you deal with that. I feel like I'm only a burden to my partner and roommate. We're all about to move out together into a house (my partner and my current roommate as well as one of our mutual friends and her partner) and I've been trying to find houses without any stairs because I don't wanna get stuck outside or in the garage. I so often can't do things. Since I walk with a cane, I usually can't carry much, and everyone else is left to pick up after me. I work with my roommate now because she's a manager and was able to get her boss to let me sit down most of my shift, but there's rarely that much I can do sitting and they often need extra help in standing roles. I still find myself pushing myself way too hard. I hop up and down at work even though I shouldn't but I feel so upset and useless if I don't. It's not that they force me to, nearly everyone there is extremely considerate and will ask me where I'm at and what I'm able to do, but the fact there are things I have to refuse makes me so upset and embarrassed.

  • @Gemelli2906
    @Gemelli2906 Рік тому +3

    I think I would have made the same choice, living in constant pain or amputating, even though its not problem free.
    I had to choose between chemo or no chemo * stage 3 colirectal cancer. I honestly didnt want to do it. I did it for my adult kids. Had I had no family I would have said no. Not to be selfish but the chemo ruined my teeth and soon I'll have to get dentures. I have nerve damage in my feet. If I walk without shoes it feels like walking on sharp rocks. Nothing to compare with losing a limb but you are a brave woman!

  • @ncc74656m
    @ncc74656m Рік тому +6

    "Ya gotta give 'em hope." - Harvey Milk
    One of my favorite quotes, and you and Harvey are right. Without hope what do we have to get through the dark times? Sure, there's the support of friends and family, the reminder that things can get better and improve, but we have to believe it, too. That's hope.

  • @niknoks6387
    @niknoks6387 Рік тому +3

    I had pain and loss of feeling in my hand and arms. Turns out I had spinal discs pressing in my cervical spine. I had to make a gamble that I may be paralysed or it would work, after 2 operations, it worked. My arms aren’t as strong as they were, but I can use them. One look at the MRI scan and I knew what I had to do. Now I have metalwork in my upper and lower spine and I set airport scanners off. I also have a knee replacement, all this before the age of 46. So I know how you feel Jo. It’s pants, but we are still here to tell the tales eh! ❤️🇬🇧

  • @thecelticsea
    @thecelticsea Рік тому +8

    This rings true for me as a transwoman who also comes from a conservative Christian background. My decision to come out would impact everyone I knew, but especially my children. I stayed closeted because I was worried about about them getting bullied at school, their safety if someone decided to harass or threaten me in front of them, and I could go on nearly infinitely about this because I saw all of those things. I also knew my spouse was straight, and we wouldn't continue on if I came out, which terrified me.
    What brought focus to it for me was that I was seriously injured in a car wreck. Someone struck me, and if I had been just 24" forward (60cm for the rest of the world), I would have died. I realized life was far more dangerous and tenuous that I had been able to admit, before. I didn't want to reach the end of my life and have those big regrets I watched many around me have.
    Coming out has, in the long run, been the best thing. I'm extremely close with my kids, their classmates have been respectful and supportive, and I have a life I am at peace with.
    Sometimes we need a catalyst to help us wake up to what is really important/valuable. I was lucky to survive, and I was determined to make my life one I'd be happy with and proud of.

  • @Starkyrie
    @Starkyrie 6 місяців тому +1

    I am BINGING your videos right now because I am revisiting the thought of amputation. Broken foot with neuropathy for about 15 years now due to misdiagnosed mild spina bifida, physio hasn't worked, injections haven't worked, painkillers not really that great. Got another physio appt coming up, will revisit their suggestion of Talonavicular Fusion Surgery which may or may not lead to amputation. The difference between us is you sound like an active bean, whereas my lifestyle is a lot more mellow. Though I would love to go paintballing or trampolining with my friends, I'm also quite content in being on my computer being creative. So it's not like it's ''ruining'' my life, but the constant chronic pain has driven me to some dark places throughout the decade and a half. So we'll see...!
    I do take your advice with a pinch of salt, (so don't worry!) but at the same time you are the ONLY one I ''know'' who has gone through something similar to myself.
    Thank you as always for sharing your story :)

  • @PickBit
    @PickBit Рік тому +2

    Try to figure the amount of pain and discomfort a person has to experience to come to the point of seeing amputation as the best course of action, when it's not strictly a life-saving measure.
    I'm not going to say I understand, that would be ridiculous, but I can at least imagine. Certainly not an easy choice, but on the other hand there are people who have become athletes very much at a professional level with BOTH of their legs missing, so what's better: living with a crippling pain that certainly limits your physical capability gravely already, or rely on prosthetics that in time you can get extremely comfotable with? Moreover, with the kind of progress cybernetics is making, I wouldn't completely discount the possibility of even getting a new functional limb one day...

  • @johnmoloney5296
    @johnmoloney5296 Рік тому +3

    I agonized with my amputation for weeks and having to do 3 hours at a time on iv antibiotics several times a Day, turned out to be much easier than i had imagined, didn't even need a full anaesthetic, all done with an epidural in an hour,silly me

  • @keel0611
    @keel0611 Рік тому +3

    7:35 I believe the word you're looking for is "diverging" 😄

  • @TeacupTSauceror
    @TeacupTSauceror Рік тому +6

    underpits is a great new word i think

  • @kestendavis8753
    @kestendavis8753 Рік тому +2

    I have a really similar modality to the way I make decisions. The one thing I do is when I when I push the off button on my feelings when I know I'm stuffing my feelings away because I can't handle it right now there's a date or point in time at which you hit the button again and turn them on and deal with them.
    There was weirdly fortunate in an unfortunate way to have lost a lot of my family when I was younger. And my whole family we don't stuff our feelings We try very hard not to do that because it's not a healthy thing to do. So learning to allow myself to grieve with something I learned early in life. And the only difference between that and my decision making is the button to stuff the feelings.
    I understand needing that button I've used it a couple times before a couple much lesser surgeries and the button came back on after having a stroke in February I'm okay I made it I really didn't like it No I did not. But I made it I turned the button back on I dealt with the feelings and I'm still dealing with some after effects but hey I can walk and talk and drive my car at express myself and be understood and I feel like I get to be upset when things are hard for me but I also need to turn by myself with how lucky I was to come back.

  • @normc62
    @normc62 Рік тому +2

    Your pupper is such a cuddlebug :)
    I just realized, I'm facing the reverse of your situation - I'm currently on the wait list for a new/additional kidney. I haven't quite faced the implications of it all yet, no doubt I will in the coming months [I have a while to wait... aren't enough kidneys floating around for transplant at the moment]. Going to have weird feelings when the day comes, I'm sure.

  • @ghostrig34
    @ghostrig34 Рік тому +2

    I got left foot amputated month ago. Still healing and appt prosthetic on 22nd

  • @iCookMe
    @iCookMe Рік тому +6

    Deconverging isnt a word but diverging is!
    Thank you for sharing your experiences and better yet the thought processes you have gone through, you will never know the the extent of the beautiful connections you have brought into the world.

  • @waffles3629
    @waffles3629 Рік тому +3

    I've made the decision to remove a body part, though in my case my uterus. For me deciding to evict it was easy, I'd wanted a hysterectomy since I was 10 and didn't even have periods yet. The hard part for me was deciding I was ready for the aftermath due to PTSD from doctors. But I did it, doubting myself the whole way. And quite frankly I wasn't ready, I just convinced myself I was because I wanted my period hell to end. Recovery was hell, well physically it was a joke, the pain didn't even get anywhere near as bad as my average period. But mentally it was an absolute trainwreck. With the help of friends I got through it, but it wasn't easy. It's been more than a year now, and though it was hell, I'm glad it's just over. Plus now transphobes can't say I'm a woman cause I have a uterus cause I don't have a uterus. I'm non-binary, I've always been non-binary, surgery doesn't change that.

  • @bookish_heather
    @bookish_heather Рік тому +11

    So grateful for this today. Not exactly the same but I made the decision to have the hearing bones taken out on my left side. I'm so tired of surgery after surgery (9 in 5 years) I'll have to have another surgery after in a few months to put in a prosthesis. But I'm so weak and so tired. Constant infections are awful. My family like you talk about call me a burden and being a people pleaser it's hard to make that decision to be more of a burden. I know they won't learn asl I know me not being able to hear will bug them and they won't be supportive but like you I had to stop and do what was best for me not them. So October 24 I'm saying goodbye to my hearing and dealing with the windfall after. I'm so happy I watched this today you helped me stay strong in my decision and helping me choose me .

    • @neva.2764
      @neva.2764 Рік тому

      Good luck on your journey!

  • @Eucis93
    @Eucis93 Рік тому +3

    This was a video I needed right now. I have to make a decision about a surgery this coming week, and I have no idea what to do.
    For context, I have been in a wheelchair for about 20 years, give or take a couple years. I can stand, but not walk or take a step (anymore). I have osteogenesis imperfecta (common name is ‘brittle bones disease’) and I have had an open femur fracture at an osteotomy site for about 8 years now, and finally my titanium rod implant gave in and broke in half. I had a surgery for this a little over a year ago. They put in a new metal rod fastened with 3 screws and did a bone transplant to try and help heal the fracture. It eased my pain for a couple months after the initial recovery, I was living my best life nearly pain-free and I felt like I finally had some hope for the future. But the fracture still didn’t heal, one screw broke in half and another has burrowed a hole just above my knee joint causing a whole different pain that has greatly broadened my list of things I used to be able to do but no longer can do. I feel like the small amount of independence I had has been taken away.
    This has also inevitably caused my other leg to become worse because I overexert it, I have muscle spasms in it and can’t stand for more than a minute or two before I have to sit or lie down.
    The team of surgeons are hesitant to operate again, I get the feeling that there is nothing they can do or that they literally don’t even know what to do or how to do it because of my condition. I know from researching and asking fellow OI patients that the options the surgeons have given me have a fairly low success rate in patients with my condition, so while I’d do nearly anything if it eased my pain even a little bit I’m scared to try this surgery because it might very well make my leg even worse.
    There are so many factors to consider in these health-related decisions, it’s absolutely exhausting.

  • @adelealdridge2080
    @adelealdridge2080 Рік тому +2

    My son had to make the decision on losing his leg he did try for 5 years to save it but after several failed surgeries and even more infections he made the choice to become an above knee amputee and wished they had removed it at the point of the original injury rather than try saving it

  • @kenzuganjacobs1010
    @kenzuganjacobs1010 Рік тому +2

    I had no idea your amputation was a result of a broken ankle. I am so fortunate because I broke both the bones in my right leg at the ankle and had to have surgery on both sides of it with a metal plate and tons of screws put into it, but I came out with a nearly perfectly functioning ankle again. It's mind blowing to think that it not healing properly and living with chronic pain from it could have happened. Very sorry that happened to you.

  • @angelabernhardt6761
    @angelabernhardt6761 Рік тому +15

    It never ceases to astound me how relatable everything you say is. I made a HUGE decision to go through an experimental spinal shortening last year to relieve a congenital condition that was quickly causing me to be bedbound. I was so anxious about making this decision that I piushed myself into tachycardia. I know what you mean though about going into survival mode though and just buckling down when you’ve made a decision. I e been fighting against my condition my whole life and it’s hard to even remember what it was like NOT to be in survival mode but that’s what therapy is for. Thank you Jo, again, for so eloquently expressing so many of the things I feel but don’t know how to begin to express. ❤

    • @wandamusictube
      @wandamusictube Рік тому +3

      How did the surgery go?

    • @angelabernhardt6761
      @angelabernhardt6761 Рік тому +1

      @@wandamusictube Aww thank you for asking! All things considered, it went well! I'm no longer bedbound, I got some of the feeling back in my legs, and was able to return to work. I'm still dealing with some pain and discomfort and other symptoms but am much better off than I was which I am thankful for. :)

  • @vernondavis6095
    @vernondavis6095 Рік тому +3

    facing that right now lower left leg my doctor actually suggested it see a surgeon next mo. to consider options

  • @lisarice4402
    @lisarice4402 Рік тому +4

    Jo, you are an excellent speaker and an all-around great person!! I support you in whatever choices you have made, and will make in the future!! I’m the mom of an amputee. My daughter was very precocious at her young age of 1 1/2 year old when I talked everything over with her concerning her surgeries. I wanted her to have the information to make the choice to amputate her foot, and that would affect her and her everyday life. (I know this sounds scary - but she really was like a little adult, not just in my eyes, but everyone around her thought that also. We talked everything over with the chief of surgery (he was her doctor there until she turned 18) and the plastic surgeon. We didn’t stop until she was completely comfortable with the choice. After her surgery, she really was very relieved. She felt really good physically for the first time in her life!! (backstory: I was pushed down to the ground very hard while she was waiting to be born. She ended up with a clotting disorder (it was really weird - clotting in some places, & bleeding for no reason in others). Once her bad foot was gone, her health improved dramatically. That foot would hold onto infections like nothing I’ve ever seen before! Her attitude improved greatly and she adapted extremely well to working with a prosthesis. I’ve lost track how many “legs” she’s gotten over the years, & she would have difficulty with them until they were honed down to fit her leg properly. She hasn’t gone without health issues though - she caught MRSA when she was 16 and had to have that dug out of her knee on the good leg - we understand the anxiety that comes with this so very well!! I pray that your orthopedic surgeons and doctors are kick ass at their jobs & they are treating you well!! You have my prayers and good vibes, always!!

  • @mickmash13
    @mickmash13 Рік тому +11

    Something you said about all the research into amputations vs. surgeries and all that really struck home. I've never been in a position where I've had to make a life-altering medical decision, but with other stuff (like moving cities, leaving a toxic job, etc.), I do the same thing. What I've realized is that I'm almost trying to talk myself out of a decision I know I need to make by researching. It is important to research important decisions, but it can also be a shield or lead you to "analysis paralysis" as a friend of mine calls it.

    • @helenbryant404
      @helenbryant404 Рік тому

      I really feel this. I might have ADD/ADHD and that's exactly what I do - I spend so long trying to make a decision that I end up going nowhere!

  • @richardmoss5934
    @richardmoss5934 Рік тому +2

    Diverging I think is the word that you were searching for regarding roads that separate.

  • @malusdraco3793
    @malusdraco3793 Рік тому +2

    So, right- I'm absolutely terrible at decisionmaking, actually going through with things, etc. My philosophy is to wait until a better path is available and to choose that instead. Unfortunately following that with my mental health resulted in a week-long psych ward stay and a very noticeable scar.
    It's definitely not applicable in every situation- especially one such as opting into amputation- but what I tell people when they've expressed they're struggling with mental health is this:
    You can make a decision now, or you can wait until you do not have a decision to make. You can go get help now, or you can wait until it gets bad enough you slip and someone else makes the decisions for you (which sucks, and you'll hate it).

  • @andyb8015
    @andyb8015 Рік тому +6

    I've had surgery on my leg my entire life. I've never known anything different. I'm turning 37 next month, my ankle has been fused for as long as I can remember. My orthopedist advised me to consider amputation at some point in the future. It is honestly one of the hardest things I've ever had to think about.

    • @chavlicek92
      @chavlicek92 10 місяців тому

      Ive also had many surgeries on my ankle and have had it fused since age 16 (now 31). Currently I’m facing a possible sarcoma in the ankle and the thought of amputation is on the table. I think my mind is still stuck on limb salvage but I’m wondering if it’s worth it with foot arthritis, constant swelling, and lack of movement in the ankle. Pretty sure this will be even worse post tumor removal.

    • @andyb8015
      @andyb8015 10 місяців тому

      @@chavlicek92 Good luck to you. Hope it works out.

  • @vickiwaatti1076
    @vickiwaatti1076 Рік тому +12

    Jo, you have been my go to person about having an amputation. I also broke my ankle horribly and after 10 operations, including 2 fusions, developing CRPS, I had my leg amputated below the knee. I started watching your videos right before my amputation. September 7th of 2023 was my 2nd "ampuversary"

  • @n_art_cissist
    @n_art_cissist Рік тому +2

    Please please please put a flash warning, unwarned flashing can be dangerous and even fatal to photosensitive people.
    It sucks having DID (dissociative identity disorder, used to be known as multiple personality disorder but that’s an outdated term) because they told me I didn’t have the ability to make choices like hormone replacement therapy because I “was unable to consent”…. I’m a full ass adult. Also they never did a mental capacity test to see if I could consent, though I am neurodivergent/developmentally disabled so they probably just assumed I didn’t understand the waivers

    • @leslieholland7843
      @leslieholland7843 Рік тому +1

      That is absurd! You write beautifully, and stated your case so clearly I don't understand why that wouldn't be acceptable as consent. Get second or third opinions. Or a statement from a competent psychologist that treatment was your best option. Please don't let people make decisions about your body because of your DID! I wish you the very best of luck!

  • @scobeymeister1
    @scobeymeister1 Рік тому +2

    11:10 I think that's great advice for the sort of person who agonizes over decisions. I never had to choose chopping off a limb, but gender transition is no walk in the park either. It looked like a path I wasn't sure I could handle as well. And I knew, eventually, that staying put was death. (I really liked how you put that, btw)
    I feel like people who haven't had to make that sort of choice see it as an act of bravery. But when you do it you never feel brave, you feel like you're fighting to keep yourself alive, inside or out. Is self-preservation brave? Idk, maybe, but I don't think deciding to be brave is very helpful. Deciding you want to survive, though, is easy. It feels like the only choice in the world.

  • @mcrchickenluvr
    @mcrchickenluvr Рік тому +2

    Not a limb, an organ. My uterus to be exact. That beast will be coming out in under 2 weeks. Was it an easy choice? In the end yes. But the journey to get here was not. I’ve had issues with my cycle since I was a teenager. I wanted to have this surgery done years ago. Like over a decade ago. But insurance and doctors wouldn’t do it because of my age and thinking I’d regret it. Yeah sure, I’d regret no longer being in pain for half the month. Is it kind of a scary thing? Yes. But it’s necessary.

    • @leslieholland7843
      @leslieholland7843 Рік тому

      My life has been so much better after my hysterectomy! I wish I had yanked it out when the pain first got really bad, but I waited until a cancer scare at 50 to get it done. Wish I had done at 20. I had PCOS and endometriosis. Wound up having my period for an entire year before I had it done. I could have skipped all of that misery if only I had acted sooner! ❤. Good luck!

  • @juleronitz5100
    @juleronitz5100 Рік тому +6

    I had top surgery in the end of last year and one of the most question I got asked by the cis people around me was: "You can't take it back. What if you will regret it later in life?"
    And it is true that you do not know what your life will be like after a decision like that, if all the positives you hope for will actually come true. I found it really helps preparing for the outcomes you do not wish for. But what made me confident in my decision was knowing that I made this decision after doing a lot of thinking and reflecting and trying a different way and knowing that in this moment of time and for the last 5 years it is was I wanted. Even if sometime later in life I'd make a different choice, I would still know it was the right one now. And that is no regret to me.

    • @scobeymeister1
      @scobeymeister1 Рік тому

      I made the same decision. Several years on, I know I made the right one. It's literally easier to breathe - my chest dysphoria was causing me to bind in ways that were "safe" but were still causing me significant difficulty and loss of quality of life, because the alternative was constant panic attacks. I have other disabilities to deal with and I can move on to dealing with them now. I wouldn't take it back for the whole world. Wishing you peace and comfort in your body as well, friend ❤

  • @jayshepherd5014
    @jayshepherd5014 Рік тому +3

    Hi Jo. You nailed it when you mentioned that it had been ingrained in you to do for everyone else while neglecting yourself and your own needs. I myself was ingrained that way growing up, but since have found that if I don't take care of me, I won't be any help to anyone else. I have learned too that the one person that stood with me was myself.
    I love your content. Keep up the great work!😊

  • @YasmineJess
    @YasmineJess Рік тому +2

    i was waiting the whole video for an answer i didn't get, do u regret it today?

  • @Judymontel
    @Judymontel Рік тому +3

    All of this rings true for me in many ways, even without having to make a decision about amputation and even without all the years of incredible pain you and others here in the comments have had to live with. The only thing is that it didn't sound to me like there was a choice between something easier and something harder. Change is hard, and I resist change as much as the next person, but what I heard from your experience was not a choice between something really hard and something easier, but the choice between something really hard and UNKNOWN and something really hard and familiar. The problem with the change is the lack of familiarity of the situation. The life you were living with all those treatments and surgeries was really hard. It had become familiar, but it wasn't an easy choice. Thank you for sharing this - it really helps!

  • @walterl322
    @walterl322 Рік тому +1

    I'm a very indecisive person and when and big decisions are usually completely paralyzing to me... so if I was in a similar situation you were in, I'd still be in agonizing pain...
    When I had my knee surgeries, it was my mom and doctors making the decision for me, cuz I was in my early to mid teens, but if that happened today, the surgeries probably wouldn't happen, cuz they're just too scary...

  • @lexinoctura9511
    @lexinoctura9511 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for sharing! I always appreciate and really absorb any and all information that people share about how their life taught them, or what their life taught them and how they keep on going!
    About your question: I never had to make a decision as hard or as severe as an amputation, but whenever I had to deal with issues that were really negatively influencing my life, I sit down and imagine them as another person. I love to write and its one of my most prominent coping mechanisms, so when I sit down and fill that 'other person' with the problem/question that I'm trying to deal with, I can observe their sections and possible outcomes. It's a bit like playing a computer game where you can always create a new character and see what happens when you do XYZ without actually jumping into lava, in front of a dinosaur or killing the chicken.
    It helps me to see all the possible ways and then I can pick the one that promises the best story for that character, take it and apply it to my own situation

  • @lincolnpascual
    @lincolnpascual 10 місяців тому +1

    Mine wasn't a decision, it was survival. Got wounded in combat... they "saved" the leg, but it was turning infected and I was getting actual blood poisoning from it. Either the leg went, or I died. I figured if I was supposed to die, it would've happened in combat. So... begone, leg!
    Showed that leg who was in charge here, I sure did.

  • @Uhohohno319
    @Uhohohno319 Рік тому +2

    As a fellow editor, I just wanted to tell you that you don’t have to edit out every pause you make when talking; sometimes it disrupts the flow of saying.

  • @robertshurilla1954
    @robertshurilla1954 7 місяців тому +1

    Tomorrow at 12:00 noon I become a left foot below the knee amputee, I have watched many of your videos and thank you as they have helped me cope. I know it was my only choice as i have been basically going through 3 surgeries and 16 plus infections. i’m ready to start my new chapter, look forward to seeing many more !!

  • @88WWitch
    @88WWitch Рік тому +1

    I know this is off topic, but I wish people viewed kids like this. It's permanent, life altering, and you can't really take it back.

  • @marcosjcr
    @marcosjcr Рік тому +1

    Hi Jo. I find your videos very informative. Not sure how severe was your ankle injury but my question is why did doctors decided to amputate so high your leg almost to the knee level when the problem was at a lower area.

  • @marshallbaldwin395
    @marshallbaldwin395 Рік тому +2

    I got really lucky with the choice on my foot I left it up to the Dr and told him if he could not fix it to cut it of turns out that it was one of the better decisions that I have made

  • @tyreesetjjoyner1995
    @tyreesetjjoyner1995 Рік тому +3

    Good video, jo. You rock

  • @matthewmcthorn2598
    @matthewmcthorn2598 Рік тому +1

    I am having a BKA on the 19th, I have drop-foot due to a motorcycle accident. I did not do as much research as you probably did, because I did none.... but I just know it is the right decision. No braces will help and the other option is an ankle fusion, which did not sound conducive to an active lifestyle like I used to have. I definitely had that "de-converging" road scenario. Thanks for the info, great video.

  • @judithlashbrook4684
    @judithlashbrook4684 Рік тому +1

    I often say that I would love a lower back amputation or even a full body transplant.. however as these "options" don't actually exist, it's easy to joke about them, without having to go in to the details and ramifications of such a decision and the real life consequences. I just get to keep these thoughts/options as a positive, freeing dream...

  • @Jrcunion
    @Jrcunion Рік тому +2

    You made my descisiom to become a RKNA on Oct 4th 2022 easier. You will never know or even read this but you are an inspiration and a huge factor for my family when it was time to make my decision!! My biggest point I would make is when you get your leg cut off, going to the bathroom sucks for a few days, your stump just hangs out and HURTS! Other than that you did a great job explaining everything I needed!

  • @Veso266
    @Veso266 11 місяців тому +1

    Why would amputating a leg be better?
    You said the leg did not work, what did not work? Could u move ur fingers could u feal the leg?
    I am confused
    So amputating a leg got rid of the pain only?

  • @thesollylama130
    @thesollylama130 Рік тому +1

    I had to beg several doctors to amputate my leg over the course of years before one finally agreed to do it. More than a dozen years dragging around what began as a dead limb to me and ended in agonizing pain with every step. In and out of wheelchairs, eating morphine like tic tacs, rarely knowing what day it even was. Problem was every time I would have a severe episode I would make an appointment but by the time I got seen I was at least able to walk again. So doctors didn't see me when I was totally immobile and suffering. To them it wasn't killing me like diabetes so they wouldn't hack it off.
    Finally my foot gave up for good and I was in a wheelchair for 6 or 7 months with both legs atrophying by the day, when a doctor in Denver agreed to dust off his cleaver and dash my dreams of being a ballerina. .
    But at least 4 or 5 times I looked a doctor in the eye and requested to have my leg cut off. It's fairly unusual for the average person but I've done that a few times.

  • @nicokelly6453
    @nicokelly6453 Рік тому +1

    Hi, could you please add a flash warning for the sponser part? The flashing was very sudden and unexpected. I'd love to appreciate your video, could you add a warning for times to skip or cut out the flashes?

  • @frankmc324
    @frankmc324 Рік тому +1

    I fell 20 feet from a scaffold 10 years ago multible fractures to my calcaneous, which resulted in an ankle fusion my foot pain is excruciating toes are numb and you would think my foot was wrapped in barbed wire and im only 52 it made me permanently disabled I have thought sbout cutting my foot off do I could go running again

  • @makerbell1688
    @makerbell1688 Рік тому +1

    I got my Kenzzi in late July after you did the last advertisement, I really like it! It seems to be taking a bit longer to work on my (leg) hair, but it's definitely growing back slower/more patchy! Thanks for the recommendation!

  • @ookamiblade6318
    @ookamiblade6318 Рік тому +1

    Funny enough, this is a choice I consider fairly frequently, the complicating issue for me is there is nothing actually physically wrong with my leg (it's a brain issue where my brain forgot where the off switch to the pain response to minor injury is. It’s called CRPS) so there is a small chance that I might spontaneously recover fully and in medical research amputation has not solved the pain problem, just changed the existence of the limb in pain. So it might increase my mobility or it might continue to be too painful for assisting devices. It could stop my foot from being a lightening rod of pain everytime I accidentally bump it on something, or touch it, but it could also just change where that light ing rod is. So I feel as long as I can manage how I am now I’ll keep the foot and see if they come up with something new to try down the line as I've exhausted all current options.