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Hi Sue,
Cathy, one of our facilitators, is likely a VERY good source for information for you, since she’s in the thick of the nursing business, and she’s also experienced issues with her eyes. We’ve also got one other member in nursing school, so I hope you’ll get some comprehensive answers from those who have been there.
What I can tell you is that with successful treatment and stable thyroid hormone levels, your muscles should get back to a state where you can effectively use them, and once your eyes go fully to the cold phase, you can easily use prism glasses to resolve your double vision, if that symptom even continues after you’re fully stable.
I would hate for you to drop a lifelong dream, believing that you’ve reached a state where you would be unable to perform the job duties. You may have to be gentler on yourself until you are truly well, and you may need to pay really close attention to stretching and exercising so that you keep your muscle strength up, but you CAN do it. We had a speaker at a conference a few years ago who was diagnosed with Graves’ Disease, treated, and then trained to CLIMB EVEREST. And DID IT (trained AND climbed ~ clumb?)
. It was a truly inspirational story. He was already a climber, had summited several big mountains, and he acknowledged that his training after Graves’ was much tougher, but he DID IT. And you can too. I know it.
Thanks so much Ski for giving me encouragement when I feel there’s no hope. I’ll be going in April to get another opinion on treatment, in hopes that I can get my muscles back to feeling better. I don’t want to have a thyroidectomy, but it might be the solution to this monster, I don’t know. What I do know is that I’m tired of walking around, feeling like I have weights inside my shoes all day long…it’s wearing me down physically and mentally.
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Dear Sue,
There is a lot more to nursing than starting IV’s! You have taken all this time to get your prerequisite courses done–go for it! Long before I had Graves’, I went to nursing school, and always knew I wanted to work in psychiatry. For the most part, that meant a lot of talking and interacting with people. I can still draw blood (if absolutely necessary). Most of that is a "feel".
YOu do need to get some glasses with prisms in them. You have lots of videotapes to watch and lots of notes to be taking. Good luck to you, and keep in touch.
NAncy Patterson, "ARNP" PhD (Just so you know that you can do it!)
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