Good old Scientific American has an older article on some of the weird things general anesthesia can do to us:
QuoteAlthough anesthetic drugs have been around since 1846, many questions remain as to how exactly they work. To date, the strongest evidence suggests that the drugs are effective in part because they bind to and incapacitate several different proteins on the surface of neurons that are essential for regulating sleep, attention, learning and memory. In addition, it seems that interrupting the usual activity of neurons may disrupt communication between far-flung regions of the brain, which somehow triggers unconsciousness.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/hidden-dangers-of-going-under/There's likely a bit of "pump head", the fuzziness and recall problems associated with general anesthesia, in play in my head as well. This should also dissipate over time.
While I am having these problems, in all honesty they are minor, although they do affect my thinking.
I am very pleased with my surgical outcome, the lack of significant pain, and the feeling of finally being complete, myself! And of course, how skinny jeans and pencil skirts fit now!
I'm recovering well, easily hitting my 5,000 steps/day limit, dilations still at full depth (although temporarily getting harder, as the bits of fibrous scar tissue on the "seams" try to contract on weeks 4-6), and am very active within my limits.
Far more to be happy about in my life than sad! (Stupid depression. Go away, already. You lose, I win.)
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk