Soooo I just watched my near 2 year old cat take a piss in the kitchen sink instead of his litter box. This is the first time I caught him but was wondering for about a week why my kitchen sink had an odd smell to it in the morning. He has also tried to do it in the toilet too, but the porcelain edge makes him unstable so he slips on it some.
The actual funny bit is he is apparently very particular in aiming for the drain hole of the sink going by how he kept adjusting his position before peeing.
The even funnier (weird) bit is he still likes the litter box, still uses it and still looks at me like only half his brain is operational if his bowl is even the least bit less full than when I fed him that morning.
I do not know what this means, but I'd spend more time and energy trying to find out than in trying to make up a god to explain it.
about six years ago, my retina detached. Part of stapling it back in place involved draining the vitreous humour from my eye.
A consequence of this vitrectomy is that a cataract started to form in that eye.
Four years ago, my ophthalmologist warned me I'd need cataract surgery (and also, for the first time, explained that cataracts are a common side effect of vitrectomies. It's not like I'd have turned down the retinal reattachment if I'd known of this consequence, but I think they might have mentioned it at t the time...). He stated the warning that for 5 people out of 100, the surgery does not end up improving their eyesight....
Last month, we scheduled the surgery. I've been going through the screening appointments, and every single time I see Doc, he mentions MORE possible consequences. Things that can go wrong. Results like not-improved-eyesight, worse eyesight, blindness, my two eyes seeing one object at two different sizes...
Once more, my eyesight is bad enough that I don't really have a choice of not having the surgery, but EVERY TIME more of this stuff comes to light. Stuff that's listed as an extremely small risk... Except, well, there is an increased risk for ME, due to either having had the retinal surgery before, or being diabetic, or right-handed, or near-sighted, or having once dated a redhead, or being accursed of Zorg...
I feel like I'm investigating one of the Trumps' security clearances, with revised disclosures rolling out like a conveyor belt.
I can't wait for Monday. I just can't imagine what he'll reveal once I'm in the surgery... "Take a deep breath and count backwards from 100... By the way, for one patient in two hundred, their dominant eye shifts to their nose... Okay, let's begin!"
I've had cataract surgery ... It was like a Pink Floyd concert...about six years ago, my retina detached. Part of stapling it back in place involved draining the vitreous humour from my eye.
A consequence of this vitrectomy is that a cataract started to form in that eye.
Four years ago, my ophthalmologist warned me I'd need cataract surgery (and also, for the first time, explained that cataracts are a common side effect of vitrectomies. It's not like I'd have turned down the retinal reattachment if I'd known of this consequence, but I think they might have mentioned it at t the time...). He stated the warning that for 5 people out of 100, the surgery does not end up improving their eyesight....
Last month, we scheduled the surgery. I've been going through the screening appointments, and every single time I see Doc, he mentions MORE possible consequences. Things that can go wrong. Results like not-improved-eyesight, worse eyesight, blindness, my two eyes seeing one object at two different sizes...
Once more, my eyesight is bad enough that I don't really have a choice of not having the surgery, but EVERY TIME more of this stuff comes to light. Stuff that's listed as an extremely small risk... Except, well, there is an increased risk for ME, due to either having had the retinal surgery before, or being diabetic, or right-handed, or near-sighted, or having once dated a redhead, or being accursed of Zorg...
I feel like I'm investigating one of the Trumps' security clearances, with revised disclosures rolling out like a conveyor belt.
I can't wait for Monday. I just can't imagine what he'll reveal once I'm in the surgery... "Take a deep breath and count backwards from 100... By the way, for one patient in two hundred, their dominant eye shifts to their nose... Okay, let's begin!"
about six years ago, my retina detached. Part of stapling it back in place involved draining the vitreous humour from my eye.
A consequence of this vitrectomy is that a cataract started to form in that eye.
Four years ago, my ophthalmologist warned me I'd need cataract surgery (and also, for the first time, explained that cataracts are a common side effect of vitrectomies. It's not like I'd have turned down the retinal reattachment if I'd known of this consequence, but I think they might have mentioned it at t the time...). He stated the warning that for 5 people out of 100, the surgery does not end up improving their eyesight....
Last month, we scheduled the surgery. I've been going through the screening appointments, and every single time I see Doc, he mentions MORE possible consequences. Things that can go wrong. Results like not-improved-eyesight, worse eyesight, blindness, my two eyes seeing one object at two different sizes...
Once more, my eyesight is bad enough that I don't really have a choice of not having the surgery, but EVERY TIME more of this stuff comes to light. Stuff that's listed as an extremely small risk... Except, well, there is an increased risk for ME, due to either having had the retinal surgery before, or being diabetic, or right-handed, or near-sighted, or having once dated a redhead, or being accursed of Zorg...
I feel like I'm investigating one of the Trumps' security clearances, with revised disclosures rolling out like a conveyor belt.
I can't wait for Monday. I just can't imagine what he'll reveal once I'm in the surgery... "Take a deep breath and count backwards from 100... By the way, for one patient in two hundred, their dominant eye shifts to their nose... Okay, let's begin!"
Appreciate the support, guys. Hopefully, will be thinking of y'all on MOnday. Y'all, rather than THE SCALPEL COMING AT MY EYE! But we'll see in three days...
Appreciate the support, guys. Hopefully, will be thinking of y'all on MOnday. Y'all, rather than THE SCALPEL COMING AT MY EYE! But we'll see in three days...
Yeah. I give the eye doctors fits with the glaucoma test--it usually takes several tries before I manage to avoid flinching away. There's just something about the gadget coming towards me, I know it won't hurt me but I flinch anyway.
When they reattached my retina, the sedative for the optic nerve turned off that side of my head... And they draped a cloth over my face. So, yeah, never saw the knife. And the other sedatives i was on meant i didn't care the scalpel i knew was out there.... Somewhere..Appreciate the support, guys. Hopefully, will be thinking of y'all on MOnday. Y'all, rather than THE SCALPEL COMING AT MY EYE! But we'll see in three days...
You don't see the scalpel coming, but the tugging sensation as they pull out the old lens is disconcerting.