Good morning, Julie!
Congratulations for all you have achieved, for SRS is a long, hard road. For now, relax and enjoy it. The food is great and the scenery idyllic.
Getting the packing and catheter removed is no big deal. I didn't find it painful at all. In fact, none of the first week or so was very painful, but I made ample use of the morphine pump in the hospital and was using Vicodin afterward. I thought, "This isn't so bad!" But it's not like getting FFS. That was severe pain for a few days, and then it was more discomfort. SRS is more discomfort... that never seems to stop.
I was not typical in that I had constant pain for weeks. I had to go back to work after five weeks, and that was tough. I couldn't function without Vicodin. I had an open incision that was draining and had to have it packed at the six-week follow-up. McGinn told me, "You're the first patient I have refilled a Vicodin prescription for in three years." Great. It took me five months until I could sit down without pain.
In my opinion the scariest thing about day five, your first visit to McGinn's office post-surgery, was getting a look at your new parts. Stitches and angry red scars, plus I had some necrosis at the bottom of one of my labia as well, so it looked black and awful there.
Funny memory: the morning of surgery I was getting ready to leave the hotel for the hospital, and I had to pee. I stood before the toilet, thinking, "Last time I'll be peeing standing up." Then, of course, after you leave the hospital you have to pee - standing up - only through a catheter. How ironic.
Again, congratulations!
Blessings to you,
Terri