Dear Rebecca and other Dry Eye Zoners:
I have not visited or posted on this excellent website for ages. I’m overworked, rather tired and battling to get really fit again. You know what – this is a horn-blowing, drum-rolling, troupe of baton-twirling majorettes TRIUMPH!
It means that life is back to what passes for normal in this neck of the woods. My post-surgical dry eye has improved to the point where I’m now fully engaged with the everyday business of living without my every waking moment being dominated by fear, pain or both. Fear that my life was effectively over, that I would never again enjoy a long hike on a windy day, never go anywhere without a swag of eye-supporting paraphernalia, that I would be severely compromised in my ability to earn a living or to fulfill a long deferred hope to travel. And pain – or constant nagging discomfort that reduced my being to a miserable bloodshot suffering pair of >>EYES<<.
It has now been two years and six months since the sky fell in.
Before posting any sort of ‘triumph’, I wanted to be really sure that recovery was not just a flash in the pan and no false hope or misleading advice was offered. This has been the trajectory:
One year of physical and mental suffering with the condition essentially ignored. It did NOT ‘go away’ by itself!
After receiving proper treatment, some 9 months of gradual improvement to near-normality by subjective feeling and measurably improved indicators such as TBUT, absence of dry spots etc. (for treatment, see thread ‘Dry Eye Clinic – Sydney Australia' in Plug-a-Doc Intnl, or my earlier posts).
Then continued slow improvement, followed by complacency, overwork and the reappearance of itching, redness and dry-spots. Eeeek.
Panic stations resumption of anti-inflammatory drugs and drops for a short period, resulting in a rapid return to almost-normal.
Nasty little setbacks:
Is Dry Eye a chronic condition once experienced? It is so common on this website to hear of people who were doing just fine for years, then experiencing a disheartening and persistent resumption of symptoms. My dry eye Doctor put the likelihood of relapse at a discouraging 100%. So do we panic?
Let’s not. As indicated above, it is possible with good treatment and patience to vastly improve a badly inflammatory condition (can’t speak for other causes). Then the trick I believe is to pounce at the first hint of telltale soreness, itchiness, stinging in water, desire to rub etc. Nip it in the bud! I use over-the-counter single serve anti-allergy drops sparingly (Zaditen), plus omega supplementation, occasional TheraTears and a low dose of doxy. So far so good. Dr says the idea is to learn to identify and control downhill slides to avert the need for medical intervention.
Look after yourselves:
Easier said than done when you feel miserable (or worse!), resentful of onerous eye routines, stressed about pain, money etc. Eating sensibly, resting and exercising can seem an imposition at the best of times but sometimes a bout of serious ill-health can lead to all sorts of re-evaluations, so if flogging yourself consider some long term changes that will also (indirectly) help your eyes, and certainly your sanity. Yeah - I know circumstances often dictate.
Finally – a huge thank you to Rebecca. Countless numbers of people owe you an immense debt for being there for us in desperate times. The best way to repay this is to help one another when and where we can.
I may be contacted via this website. It would be a good idea for Australian sufferers to network a bit. Anyone have ideas? Are there existing mailing lists or newsletters where we could throw a dry-eye lifeline?
Regards and best wishes to All.
Simpson Desert (knee deep in water, flowers, wildlife…)
I have not visited or posted on this excellent website for ages. I’m overworked, rather tired and battling to get really fit again. You know what – this is a horn-blowing, drum-rolling, troupe of baton-twirling majorettes TRIUMPH!
It means that life is back to what passes for normal in this neck of the woods. My post-surgical dry eye has improved to the point where I’m now fully engaged with the everyday business of living without my every waking moment being dominated by fear, pain or both. Fear that my life was effectively over, that I would never again enjoy a long hike on a windy day, never go anywhere without a swag of eye-supporting paraphernalia, that I would be severely compromised in my ability to earn a living or to fulfill a long deferred hope to travel. And pain – or constant nagging discomfort that reduced my being to a miserable bloodshot suffering pair of >>EYES<<.
It has now been two years and six months since the sky fell in.
Before posting any sort of ‘triumph’, I wanted to be really sure that recovery was not just a flash in the pan and no false hope or misleading advice was offered. This has been the trajectory:
One year of physical and mental suffering with the condition essentially ignored. It did NOT ‘go away’ by itself!
After receiving proper treatment, some 9 months of gradual improvement to near-normality by subjective feeling and measurably improved indicators such as TBUT, absence of dry spots etc. (for treatment, see thread ‘Dry Eye Clinic – Sydney Australia' in Plug-a-Doc Intnl, or my earlier posts).
Then continued slow improvement, followed by complacency, overwork and the reappearance of itching, redness and dry-spots. Eeeek.
Panic stations resumption of anti-inflammatory drugs and drops for a short period, resulting in a rapid return to almost-normal.
Nasty little setbacks:
Is Dry Eye a chronic condition once experienced? It is so common on this website to hear of people who were doing just fine for years, then experiencing a disheartening and persistent resumption of symptoms. My dry eye Doctor put the likelihood of relapse at a discouraging 100%. So do we panic?
Let’s not. As indicated above, it is possible with good treatment and patience to vastly improve a badly inflammatory condition (can’t speak for other causes). Then the trick I believe is to pounce at the first hint of telltale soreness, itchiness, stinging in water, desire to rub etc. Nip it in the bud! I use over-the-counter single serve anti-allergy drops sparingly (Zaditen), plus omega supplementation, occasional TheraTears and a low dose of doxy. So far so good. Dr says the idea is to learn to identify and control downhill slides to avert the need for medical intervention.
Look after yourselves:
Easier said than done when you feel miserable (or worse!), resentful of onerous eye routines, stressed about pain, money etc. Eating sensibly, resting and exercising can seem an imposition at the best of times but sometimes a bout of serious ill-health can lead to all sorts of re-evaluations, so if flogging yourself consider some long term changes that will also (indirectly) help your eyes, and certainly your sanity. Yeah - I know circumstances often dictate.
Finally – a huge thank you to Rebecca. Countless numbers of people owe you an immense debt for being there for us in desperate times. The best way to repay this is to help one another when and where we can.
I may be contacted via this website. It would be a good idea for Australian sufferers to network a bit. Anyone have ideas? Are there existing mailing lists or newsletters where we could throw a dry-eye lifeline?
Regards and best wishes to All.
Simpson Desert (knee deep in water, flowers, wildlife…)
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