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husband wavering already!
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<blockquote data-quote="gsingjane" data-source="post: 582379" data-attributes="member: 15986"><p>Well Daisy that's funny! Maybe I should have tried it instead of getting all dramatic!</p><p></p><p>I am not entirely sure it would have worked with difficult child though ... he did have a major organ transplant in the summer of 2011 and I *think* what he might be hinting at is that he's going into rejection. He's been sort of back and forth all winter with it and was hospitalized last month for 5 days, although they did ultimately decide he wasn't in rejection but just had a virus that caused his numbers to bounce up which looked like rejection. Another possibility is that the underlying condition, which led to the transplant, has returned; or, although this would be very early for this, his long-term use of steroids and anti-rejection medications (he was on anti-rejection drugs even before the tx) have led to cancer. He IS going to get cancer, the question is just, when.</p><p></p><p>husband agreed with me today that, because - by difficult child's own decision - we aren't part of his care team, he can handle whatever this is by himself unless he chooses to share further. I had asked husband what we would do differently if we did know what it was, and husband eventually agreed that there really isn't anything that we would do differently. Certainly whatever is wrong with difficult child medically, isn't cured by stealing! The two are completely unrelated!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gsingjane, post: 582379, member: 15986"] Well Daisy that's funny! Maybe I should have tried it instead of getting all dramatic! I am not entirely sure it would have worked with difficult child though ... he did have a major organ transplant in the summer of 2011 and I *think* what he might be hinting at is that he's going into rejection. He's been sort of back and forth all winter with it and was hospitalized last month for 5 days, although they did ultimately decide he wasn't in rejection but just had a virus that caused his numbers to bounce up which looked like rejection. Another possibility is that the underlying condition, which led to the transplant, has returned; or, although this would be very early for this, his long-term use of steroids and anti-rejection medications (he was on anti-rejection drugs even before the tx) have led to cancer. He IS going to get cancer, the question is just, when. husband agreed with me today that, because - by difficult child's own decision - we aren't part of his care team, he can handle whatever this is by himself unless he chooses to share further. I had asked husband what we would do differently if we did know what it was, and husband eventually agreed that there really isn't anything that we would do differently. Certainly whatever is wrong with difficult child medically, isn't cured by stealing! The two are completely unrelated! [/QUOTE]
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