Sunday, February 2, 2014

Nine Months Post-Surgery Update

This was from my "6 months post-surgery update" post that I started, and never ended up finishing or posting. 
Time Since Surgery: 6 months!!! (26 weeks to be exact, so more like 6.5 months, but my surgery was on May 1st)
Physical Therapy: I'm all finished with going to physical therapy except for 1 check up appointment in a month to make sure things are going well. I had my last session last week! I still have a home therapy regimen involving lots of exercises including the stationary bike and elliptical, lunges, squats, 1 leg bridges with kick outs, hip abductions with external rotation, hip adductions, romanian dead-lifts, ab twists, bicycle abs, planks, side planks (apparently strengthening your core helps your knees? so my PT added lots of core stuff), leg kicks with theraband, clamshells with theraband, and stairs.
Activities That Are Improving: speed-walking, going up and down stairs, getting up and down from the ground, standing for long periods of time, sitting cross-legged
Activities That Are Challenging: kneeling, deep squats, kneeling while sitting on my feet (I'm about 3 degrees away from full ROM now, so I can't quite sit on my feet yet)

Now it's been 9 months since my surgery!


Time Since Surgery: 39.5 weeks 

Physical Therapy: Pretty much none, although I should still be doing PT 3-4 times a week. I'm lucky if I do my home PT once a week though. I'm so exhausted after being on my feet all day at work that I typically plop down on the couch and don't move after work, and weekends have been super busy with traveling and wedding planning. I know I just need to make time for my PT though because it really does seem to help my knees. 
Activities That Are Improving: working, cleaning, sitting cross legged, getting up and down from the ground, picking up patients at work, shopping
Activities That Are Challenging: stairs are still tough, hiking, yoga, jumping, deep squats, kneeling

A lot has happened in the past three months. I started working full time, and I'm loving it! The kids are incredible. I'm primarily working in infant feeding and on the oncology floor. I honestly can't believe how it all worked out after having my knee surgery. My dream has been to do infant feeding occupational therapy, and it just amazes me every day how it worked out that that's the area I'm in now. 


Work is amazing, but it's also pretty exhausting. To go from sitting on a couch all summer and recovering to a month of part time and then full time has completely worn me out. I haven't taken this many couch naps since I had mono! My knees are pretty achy by the end of the day, but up until this past weekend it's been manageable. Something happened this past weekend and the left one is really sore again and it's sometimes difficult to walk on, so I'm getting that checked out next week at my surgeon's. I'm not sure what I did. I think it was either too many stairs, yoga with one of my patients, or helping one of my patients lift weights. Not sure, but it's not fun to feel like this again! I'm hoping it's something that quickly heals itself. 


On a completely different note...Kevin and I got engaged!! He proposed on December 20th, and it was absolutely perfect :) The short version is that we went to dinner at our favorite restaurant, drove around to all of the places in Columbus that are meaningful to us, then came back to our apartment. He took my hand and led me out to our balcony which was covered with Christmas lights (and it was the one, oddly warm December evening during the one hour that it decided to stop raining). He gave a short-yet-very-sweet speech, got down on one knee, and popped the question! We were both beyond excited, and I couldn't stop saying "We're engaged! Oh-my-gosh we're engaged!" 

On the balcony, a few minutes after Kevin popped the question 
By our tree in our apartment the night we got engaged
He did a wonderful job :) 
My parents got engaged in December 32 (ish) years ago, so we took a picture with the picture from their engagement, then re-created it. 
Re-creating the picture from the night my parents got engaged. My parents' picture was at my mom's parent's house, and our was at my mom and dad's house.  

The date is set for September 20th!! We've gotten a good start on the planning, but we have quite a bit to do still.  We're starting a wedding blog, too (I know..I can't even keep up with this one and now I'm adding a second one). 

Here's a summary of the last 3 months in pictures: 
Kevin's cousin Stephanie and her fiance Dan got married!
I wore this to work on Halloween. One of the many benefits of working at a Children's hospital.

We (mostly Kevin) cut down our Christmas tree
My feeble attempt at cutting our tree down. It lasted approximately one minute, give or take 52 seconds. Upper body strength is not my forte, and kneeling is still tough on my knees. 
Upper body strength is apparently Kevin's thing.

Our first tree!
A glimpse at the gloriousness that was the 7th Annual Votino Christmas Party. Jessica with one of the most beloved white elephant gifts of the year. 
Kevin and I went to Gatlinburg with the Anderson's for Larry's big 5-0 and to celebrate Christmas with the Andersons. It was a blast!
We celebrated New Years at the other Anderson household (Jay & Ashley). It was tons of fun, and it was the first New Years Kevin & I had together where one of us wasn't sick. It was also the first New Years I've had in almost 10 years that something bad didn't happen. Hooray!! 
Happy New Year! 
This little munchkin turned two. Happy Birthday, Eevee!
This dude hinted that he wanted some cousins soon by choosing this book for Aunt Maria to read.
And these two cutie patooties stayed as adorable as ever, bringing me endless amounts of joy.

Back to the knee though...I have an appointment with my surgeon tomorrow morning to check on my left knee since it's been hurting again. I'm hoping it all goes well! Have a good night, y'all. 

Friday, September 20, 2013

Vacation and (Almost) Beginning to Work

Time Since Surgery: 20.5 weeks
Physical Therapy: body weight squats, body weight lunges, romanian deadlifts, balance steamboats with orange theraband, clam shells with green theraband, 1 leg calf raises, hip abductors with external rotation, hip adductors, 1 leg bridges with kick-outs, step downs, planks, side planks, crunches (apparently improved core strength helps knees), stationary bike, elliptical
Activities That Are Improving: going up stairs, going down stairs, squatting, getting up and down from the ground, getting up and down from low chairs/the toilet, riding the stationary bike, getting in and out of cars, shopping
Activities That Are Challenging: going down stairs (this is getting better, but it's still very difficult)

I feel like I haven't had any major accomplishments over the past month, but I've had so many little ones that all add up, and I feel way stronger than I did a month ago. I can sort of go down stairs now, as long as I'm holding on to something. I can carry my own grocery bags in, and am back to fitting as many bags as possible on my arms so that I only have to make one trip. I can carry my nephews again. I can now do air squats, and half lunges. I can get up and down from the ground. These are all things I probably took for granted at one point. Now, it's absolutely fabulous to be able to do more for myself. 
First date night we had since before my surgery!
I have really been pushing myself at PT and with my activity level. My legs are exhausted and my knees are sore nearly every night, but my PT and doctor say that it's good that I'm working so hard, as long as I don't over-do it and cause a set-back. Which I definitely don't want, so I'm being careful.

I really enjoy physical therapy. It's always challenging, but it's also wonderful to be off of the couch and able to "work out" again. I was never one of those people who loved working out and was obsessed with it, but when you're suddenly unable to, it certainly makes you appreciate being active. I love when I increase the weight on an exercise or move up a resistance level with the theraband. It shows that my hour of home therapy every day is actually doing something. My legs are even starting to look a little stronger, too!
Hooray for moving up to the green theraband! I even coincidentally matched it that day.
I didn't think I'd get a beach vacation this year because I thought I'd be working by now, but I ended up being able to go to Destin, Florida with my family. After the traumatic start to vacation, it was wonderful. We found out that we could get into the house as early as we wanted since nobody was staying there the week before us, so we decided to leave last minute on Thursday around 5pm. At 10pm, we packed up and left. My mom, dad, John, Kel, Little John, James, and Daisy all went in the big van. Kevin and I took a separate car, and Kelly's parent's and niece Gwen drove separately from Pittsburgh.
Long, sleepy drive. I think we're too old for overnight trips now. 
After driving all night, we were all exhausted because nobody slept that well. We got into the house around 11, then went out to lunch. We came back, and within 10 minutes of being in the house, my brother was screaming "We need to get to the hospital!!!" Never what anyone wants to hear, ever.

Little John had slammed his thumb in the sliding glass door and was screaming bloody murder. All of us were trying to figure out where the closest hospital is, and there was blood all over the place. The tip of his thumb was completely smashed across the nail bed down to his bone. Our doors at home are difficult to push, so he usually opens them and closes them without us worrying about his fingers because they move so slowly. The door in the house we stayed at was incredibly heavy, and went flying with the lightest touch. We weren't really aware of this yet since we had been there less than 10 minutes.

My mom, dad, John, and I took John Nathan to the ER. The Porters weren't there yet, Kel stayed with James, and Kevin helped Kel clean up and stayed at the house to be there for her. The entire experience at the ER was horrendous.

John cried almost the entire time, and was bleeding and bleeding. Unfortunately it wasn't a pediatric hospital, so they had pretty much no idea what to do with kids. They didn't give him anything to come him down, and gave him zero pain meds. NOT EVEN FREAKING TYLENOL or any topical numbing medicine before the numbing shots. He was absolutely hysterical as they injected his thumb with 6 shots to numb it for the stitches, which obviously hurt because it's SIX SHOTS IN A TINY LITTLE TWO YEAR OLD'S THUMB. He had to soak his thumb in a sterile bath thing after that, and the nurse left the room and goes "Let me know when it's been 10 minutes," then left John to hold John Nathan's thumb in the tub of water. While he's screaming and crying. Thankfully he calmed down a bit, but every time the nurses came in the room he'd go "No no no no go back. Go outside. Noooooo." He also repeatedly said "Go back home. Go back home. Go back home." in between sobs and coughs. It was the saddest thing I've ever seen.

After 10 painfully slow minutes passed, I went and fetched the nurse, because obviously that's that patient's family's responsibility, not the nurse's, especially in an ER that isn't even that busy at all. USE YOUR WATCH AND TIME IT YOURSELF, LADY! We're a bit busy trying to calm down an hysterical two year old. When she finally strolled to test if his thumb was numb, it somehow wasn't, which they all appeared shocked about. So they gave him six MORE shots in his thumb. By this point, we've been there an hour or two, John hasn't slept more than a couple hours in the past 24 hours, and hasn't eaten anything or drank much the whole day because he napped during lunch. So take a two year old in those circumstances and then imagine them with a smashed, bloody finger and tons of pain.

After his thumb was finally all numbed up came the worst part. They stuffed John Nathan in a pillow case, taped his arm to a board, taped his fingers to a board, wrapped him in more pillowcases, wrapped tape all around his whole little body like a mummy, then made John hold him down on the table. It. Was. Horrendous. They asked my mom and I to leave at this point, which was probably good because seeing him like that made me cry as hard as he was. I wish one of us could have stayed to be there for my brother though, because he needed some support, too. They apparently then ripped off little John's nail and gave him 5 stitches while John held him down. Awful, awful, awful.

I understand that it was necessary to restrain him in order to properly stitch his finger, and that it could have been SO much worse, but it was probably one of the worst days of my life seeing him cry so hard and not being able to make the pain go away or help him. I could honestly feel my heart breaking. I also understand that he could've lost his fingertip without those ER doctors, but it would've been nice if they had any clue how to treat children.
Poor little buddy finally back from the ER with his hand wrapped up. We had to change the bandage every night, and give him antibiotics 3 times a day. He also wore a surgical glove, AKA the "Mickey Mouse" glove with tape over it on the beach to prevent sand/water from getting in it. 
We were eventually allowed back in the room, and Little John finally passed out and slept for a while. We made it back to the condo, and the rest of the vacation was much more relaxing. On to the good stuff...
We stayed RIGHT on the beach! I'd never been to Destin before, and it's gorgeous. The sand is white and fluffy, and the gulf is crystal clear. Some of the highlights of the week were seeing dolphins jumping like they were in a SeaWorld show right off the coast from the beach, riding waves in an inner tube, seeing a gigantic jellyfish at night, Kevin catching a stone crab with a net, going for long walks on the beach without my knee hurting, going on a dolphin cruise, and playing with my nephews (as always :). We walked to an awesome breakfast place called the Whale's Tail that's right on the beach, and to an amazing coffee place multiple times called Bad Ass Coffee. They even had almond milk and ice cubes made out of coffee for their iced lattes. It turned out to be a wonderful week with everyone.
Kevin, Gwen, and I
Mom & Dad 
Kelly, James, John & John Nathan
Don, Gwen, and Suzanne
Me, John, Kevin, Gwen and John. This was before a giant wave came and flipped John and I off of the inner tube. The second we got him back out of the water, another wave smashed him in the face even though we held him up as high as we could. Luckily it didn't traumatize him too much and he went back in the water the next day. 
Kel and Jamesy-baby 
Gwen with a bunch of hermit crabs 
Kevin & I
Miss Daisy-do
View at breakfast from the Whale's Tail
Walking to Bad Ass Coffee
I was surprised at how well my knees did. The house we stayed in had 3 full flights of stairs, so I got a lot of practice with those. Walking in the sand was good therapy, too, and so was going in the water. My knees felt pretty good until the end of the week though, so I was happy they lasted throughout the vacation. Kevin only had to carry me up and down the stairs a couple times.
Happy knees :)
We had another long drive back on Saturday, and since then I've been going to PT and running a lot of errands before I begin work. I've also been trying to relax a bi since both knees have been pretty sore recently. You think with so many months off, I wouldn't need one more minute to relax, but the past few months have been jam-packed with PT, appointments, and activities, and I'm learning that even nearly 5 months post-surgery, I am still having to take it a bit easy. I am really excited to finally be able to work, although I'm not going to lie, I will definitely miss sleeping in and long, lazy summer mornings.

I start work on Monday at a Children's Hospital in acute care. I  just found out that I'll be working mostly with infants at first, too, to make it easier on my knees. I am absolutely thrilled beyond belief about this because it's always been my dream to work with babies! Everything happens for a reason!! :D I'm also starting part-time for a month to make the transition easier on my knees. It's been quite a journey, and I'm ready for this next step. Hopefully my knees are, too.
Celebrating that I'll finally begin working!
Family Update: My dad is doing okay. His eye surgery went well and his eye seems to be bothering him less and less. He's still getting horrendous headaches but his back has felt okay. James was fine after he came home from this hospital, and his oxygen levels stayed up. Hooray! My grandma's shingles are still pretty bad, and we're all just hoping and praying they go away soon. My great aunt began walking with her physical therapist, and the bones in her pelvis and wrist are healing. Little John's hand is doing much better now, too, and he's using it as if nothing ever happened to it!

Have a good weekend, everyone :)  




Saturday, August 17, 2013

Physical Therapy and Protein!

Family Update: My family could use some prayers and well wishes right now. It's been a bit crazy since May. My dad was rear-ended 10 weeks after his back surgery, and now he has horrible headaches again and new hip pain. Thankfully, nobody was seriously hurt. He also had an emergency laser eye surgery on his retina this week to prevent it from detaching from a hemorrhage in his eye. We aren't really sure what caused that. He started physical therapy this week too, which he likes, but it's leaving him pretty sore afterwards. My great aunt is in a nursing home recovering from a fall that resulted in a broken pelvis and broken wrist, both of which required surgery. My grandma has shingles on her face and in her eye and the medicines don't seem to be helping much, and my 6 month old nephew went to Children's Hospital for a horrendous case of croup that left his oxygen levels way too low. It's been one thing after the other around here since May, and we're all just taking it a day at a time. 

As far as my knees go...


Time Since Surgery: 15.5 weeks

Physical Therapy: I started "real" PT 3 weeks ago! I have therapy 2 times per week at the gym, and I have a bunch of exercises to do at home 2 times per day. Home therapy exercises include: leg raises, hip ab/adductions, glute bridges, 1 leg calf raises, the clam, balancing on one leg while standing on a pillow, mini air squats to 45 degrees, sitting on the counter and straightening my legs, and walking sideways with orange theraband around my ankles. It's a lot of work, but I can feel my legs getting stronger which is awesome! Also, I finally got the OK to get rid of quad presses. HOORAY!! I've been doing those every. single. day. since the day of my surgery, and discontinuing an exercise means I'm getting stronger!
Activities That Are Improving: shaving my legs, cleaning, shopping, cooking, obtaining items from low cabinets/the floor, my overall energy level, going up stairs, walking quicker, driving further distances, getting in and out of the car, getting up from chairs
Activities That Are Challenging: squatting, going down stairs, happy dances, speed walking, lifting anything heavy, getting up down onto and up from the floor

The past month has been jam-packed. My baby brother moved to Chicago, my baby sister moved onto campus and is starting college this week, and I moved out of my house and into an apartment with Kevin. I think my mom is having a little bit of a hard time adjusting to all three of us moving out within a 2 week span (very understandably so) since Nathan was home the past year and a half, I was been home the past 3 years for grad school, and Caitlyn had never left home yet. Luckily she babysits John Nathan 3 days a week, so I'm sure that's keeping her busy! Her and John Nathan have been visiting me at the new apartment a ton. It's a lot of fun :)

Hanging out with Greema and Aunt Maria
Moving Caitlyn into her dorm!!
Kevin and I have been down to Cincinnati 3 times the past month, too, one of which was for Aaron and Amy's wedding! Their wedding was a blast. I was actually able to dance quite a bit, and my knees held up throughout the night! There was a stage conveniently placed next to the dance floor, so I was able to sit and dance. I'm sure it looked a bit goofy, but it was awesome being able to join in the fun instead of just sitting back at the table. All of my siblings were there, which is always a good time. We had SO much fun.
The whole gang :)
Congratulations, Aaron and Amy!
Typically, I still have to use my crutches to do stairs, so I usually carry them around if I'm going to new places in case there are stairs. I had a very exciting day when I went up a whole flight of stairs without using crutches at all! It was the first time I had gone upstairs without crutches since the first week of April, so this was a HUGE accomplishment and I was thrilled!! I don't go up stairs without crutches all the time though because I don't want to over-do it and it kind of hurts sometimes, and I can't go down stairs without crutches at all yet.  
The first flight of stairs I went up since April without crutches!
I had my crutches at the wedding (which was before I did the flight without them), and when we were checking out of the hotel, the lady at the front desk starts laughing and says "Oh were the crutches a prank for the wedding?!" since I was carrying them and walking perfectly fine. People say stuff like that all the time, because I don't look like I need crutches at all. What's even more entertaining is when I forget to bring them and don't have them with me. Then, Kevin carries me up or down stairs with people who are around who don't know that I had surgery. I wonder what they must be thinking, but I've stopped worrying about it and have just decided to be entertained by their reactions instead. 

Another big event of the past month is that I started real physical therapy. I LOVE it!! It feels amazing to be able to kind of work out again and to see my strength start to come back. My knees have felt fantastic, too. It doesn't hurt (yet) like everyone said it would. My therapist said my range of motion is excellent, and that he can tell I've been working on the home exercises. My hard work is finally paying off! The main thing we're working on is strengthening both legs. My hips are apparently really weak and that can mess up your knees, so we're building up all of the muscles from my hips to my ankles. I have quite a bit of home therapy to work on. 

Last pics of my legs before PT
My legs are always exhausted and sore after therapy, but it's not necessarily painful. Some activities are though, like the first time I did air squats and the first time I did a one leg calf raise on my left leg. Those I could definitely feel in my left knee, and not in a good way. Overall, it's been great so far though. 
My dad said I was probably flashing my PT my underwear since my athletic shorts were too wide-legged and too short, so I bought some yoga pants to wear to PT. Dad was thrilled. 
In addition to the calcium + vitamin D and glucosamine + chondroitin, I've added protein smoothies to my healthy-knee-regimen. I've lost a bit of weight since the surgery from sitting around so much. I think part of it was muscle atrophy, and part was that my appetite shrunk from not being nearly as active. Since I've started doing PT and walking around a lot more, I'm so much hungrier all the time. I've added protein smoothies to try to build my muscles back up and maintain my weight since Kevin has convinced me it's nearly impossible to build a lot of muscle while losing weight. I've always thought eating extra protein was ridiculous and unnecessary, but we'll see it helps my legs. Every time I make a protein shake, I feel the need to say "Mmm PROTEIN!" in a ridiculous burly man voice, because I always just picture giant muscle builder dudes having protein shakes. 
I found some lactose-free whey protein! 
It looks a little weird since it's green, but it's delicious!!
I feel like my knees are slowly but surely getting better overall. There are way more "good knee days" than "bad knee days" lately, and I've been going non-stop with moving, unpacking, and getting the apartment all organized. I've been on my feet a ton, and my knees typically still feel good! They're sore at night and stiff in the morning when I'm really active, but it's usually not unbearable. 

As far as work goes, I'm hoping to start sometime in September. My PT says I should be ready to start part time by the end of September, but my surgeon wants me to wait until October or November. We'll see. It's a little frustrating having everything so up in the air, but I'm sure it'll all work out somehow. I can definitely walk better now, but I still can't really squat/lift patients at all, so I'm not totally ready for the physical part of being an occupational therapist in acute care. Each week I feel like I'm making gains though, so we'll see what September brings!

Jamesy-baby! He got to come home from the hospital, so lets hope his oxygen levels stay up!!