There are still women today that are single moms who have a total hysterectomy. In my life, I’ve experienced a few of those and the most recently was a miracle one. I was in a serious car accident and ended up having my uterus removed. After that surgery, I was back to work and it was a very hard time of my life.
I was also in a very serious car accident and ended up having my uterus removed. After that surgery, I was back to work and it was a very hard time of my life.
This is a very rare scenario, so you can’t expect to hear about it very often. The reason that this story is so rare is because the majority of women that have hysterectomies are under the age of 35. This is in part because women are usually too busy to have babies, but its not just that. Hysterectomy is painful and can lead to complications like urinary tract infections and pelvic infections.
I was just in my forties at the time of my surgery and I’ve been having pain for a year now. I’m also a bit more comfortable now, but the fact that it’s still there is a bit of a bummer.
I had to have a hysterectomy in my twenties and it was a total loss of years. I’ve had a lot of women tell me when they were in their fourth/fifth/sixth trimester that they were having trouble conceiving. It was a complete shock and a huge relief when I found out I was pregnant.
It was a total shock for a lot of women, but the joy of having your uterus and ovaries back was palpable. I was pregnant with my first child at the time and I didn’t know the joy of having a baby that would be my daughter until my youngest was a month old. I have a 16 year old daughter now, and I know now what the joy was.
In the same vein, imagine you are having a hysterectomy and are expecting a baby. When you go into the recovery room, the nurse who is going to take care of your medical needs is an eight-year old girl. She doesn’t have your medical history, she doesn’t have your medical history, and she’s not really concerned about your medical history. She’s just going to take care of you.
I mean, I know this is something of a stretch, but I think that the idea is that she’s so young that she might not even have a full understanding of the medical terms, and thus might not have the same level of medical knowledge that you do. Just ask any of the women I know who have been through a hysterectomy and are expecting a baby.
This is actually a really good point. In a way, it’s easy to get hung up on the medical jargon. One of the things that makes hysterectomy special is that it’s a major, invasive surgery. And the medical jargon gets pretty boring and difficult to follow if you don’t have a degree in it. Most of us have a basic understanding of the surgical steps, but a lot of women who’ve had a hysterectomy do not.
The problem is that if you know too much medical jargon about what the surgery does, you have a high chance of becoming pregnant and having a C-section. Hysterectomy is an invasive surgery that is designed to remove your ovaries and fallopian tubes. It is not designed to be permanent. So the procedure is sometimes called a “total hysterectomy” because the parts that are removed are all the other tissue inside your body that has been removed.