Having a stoma, temporarily or permanently, is a big change in a person’s life. For some people, it might take a lot of time and adjustment to accept life with a stoma. Others, however, adjust more quickly. How you deal with it depends on you and your situation — there is no right way or wrong way to living life with a stoma. We have gathered the stories of other people living with a stoma who share their experiences.
Ever since I was a little girl, I'd had stomach problems. No one suspected I might have some sort of illness. I was just a kid with a 'sensitive' stomach! By the time I was 12, things had gone beyond a simple 'sensitive' stomach. I always had diarrhoea, and I was in a lot of pain. The situation was becoming desperate, and I felt really, really sick. My parents could feel that I was reaching my limit and something was seriously wrong. So I went into hospital and my condition was critical — and the doctors decided to give me an emergency operation even before they had made a proper diagnosis. Things just couldn't carry on like that without an operation. So I had an ostomy, and it turned out I had Crohn's disease.
I had an emergency operation, which meant I had only a few hours to get used to the fact that I was going to have a stoma. At that time, I was in so much pain, I just felt like anything that made me feel better was worth doing. Having a stoma was not a crisis for me — or for my family either. When you’re as sick as I was before I got a stoma, you see life in a totally different perspective. The stoma was my salvation.
The staff at the clinic did everything they could to reassure me. They provided us — me and my family — with all the information we needed in a very calm and concrete manner. I can see that now when I look back. Some hours before the operation, I met a stoma nurse who calmly told me what a stoma was and what it looked like. That kind of information, simple and practical, was really valuable for me — and for my parents as well, no doubt.
I was very nervous the first time I had to change the stoma pouch myself. But the stoma nurse was right next to me. That helped a lot. I felt looked after — he was right there next to me! While I was in hospital, they gave me a leaflet, which had step-by-step instructions on how to change my stoma pouch. Today — 10 years later — I still change my pouch in the exact same way as described in the leaflet, the way my stoma nurse taught me to do it.
'Will anybody ever go out with someone like me?' When I first got my stoma, I couldn’t help asking myself that kind of question. I was 12 years old — the age when you start to discover boys. I saw some of my friends were kissing boys, and I wanted to do the same. There’s no reason why a stoma should be an obstacle. Believe me — I managed to find someone to kiss me then, and I’ve had no problems with boys ever since! Neither as a teenager nor as an adult have I ever felt that my stoma has been an issue where boyfriends are concerned. But I think that’s because I myself am pretty relaxed about my stoma.
I can hardly remember what life was like without a stoma — I’ve had it for half of my life now. Sometimes I have to remember that other people don't have a stoma!!! I think that you are accountable yourself for having a good life with a stoma. You get a stoma for a reason; after all, you don’t just do it for the fun of it. I have a stoma, and I can live my life however I choose. I’m 22, living life at full speed. I’ve got a magnificent boyfriend, and soon I'll be a qualified nurse! My advice to other people is: Go with it. Accept your stoma. If things are hard sometimes, imagine what your life would’ve been like if you hadn't had a stoma!
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