Quote from: Valeriedances on April 04, 2010, 10:08:28 AM
I've found that I have developed a degree of paranoia and am more and more protective as I think about safety ...of something happening that will prevent the surgery. I have declined invitations to go out with friends, to travel to Miami for an event, or to go out on the road except as needed for fear of an accident. I was originally planning on staying with my girl friend's family in Montreal at their home, but after hearing that a male in the family doesn't approve of the surgery, I have decided to stay at a hotel. The long road trip there would be a great opportunity to stop and visit some museums or to take a scenic route, but again, my paranoia tells me to check in at the hotel nearby and sit until the date arrives to check in. So that is what I am going to do ...go, sit, disengage brain (except for reading/writing/eating), and wait for my time :-) I don't think i can focus on anything else besides.
Don't worry Valerie you are perfectly normal in your fears.
On my first SRS in 84 I went in on a short notice cancellation so I literally only knew I was going in the night before. No time for panic then!
For my revision surgery - I decided to use public transport so my family would not be inconvenienced. I thought, (wrongly as it turns out), that it would only be minor surgery. It was only supposed to be labiaplasty, and I wasn't expecting, nor had I paid for, the full revision and clitoroplasty that my surgeon very generously did, out of the goodness of his heart!

But I became convinced that there would be a rail strike or a train crash, or that some idiot would pick this day of all days to make a bomb threat or scommit suicide by jumping in front of the train. So I went up to London a full 24 hours early. I rented an appartment for one night, right next door to the hospital, and a sat and waited!
The next morning I had only a few hundred yards to walk to the hospital. My Partner and adopted son both thought I had gone mad when I could have just asked either one of them to drive me up on the day
We all get the panics - I think it just shows how much it must mean to us to make sure we succeed!
Needless to say I paid for my paranoia on the way home in full! That train journey, on my own, without any pain killers, (I didn't have any first time around so figured I could do without again), lacking a doghnut, because I hadn't expected so complete a job to be done, was pure agony!