One story about two people navigating three surgeries in four months
[Note: If you’re squeamish about eye stuff, maybe skip this one? I don’t get into too much detail, but there are some details about eye surgery.]
I now know too much about eyes and eye surgery. But hey, at least I don’t make as many disgusted faces about it anymore.
The Saturday before Thanksgiving, R’s eye was, in his words, “buggin’ out”. He figured he was tired or the Colorado sunshine was messing with his vision, so he shook it off. But there was no improvement Sunday… and we said if he was still seeing funny, he’d try to get seen on Monday.
Well, it was no better on Monday. Our eye doctor was fully booked, surely with the end-of-year-before-my-benefits-reset appointments, but they referred us to a sister office who was able to see R that afternoon. Great! I dropped him off at the doctor’s office and was off to run some errands. After I checked off my to-do list, I called and asked if he was ready to be picked up.
“Uh, I think you should come here and come in. The doc is on the phone with a retina specialist now.”
Without getting into too much detail, he had two retinal tears that was causing the “buggin’ out” with his vision, and was referred to a retina specialist who recommended surgery. ASAP. (The cause? Likely bad genetics, and it was just time.)
And so the day before Thanksgiving: surgery.
Or as it would turn out to be: the first surgery of many.

He was almost in the clear, after two months of eye drops and pirate jokes. And at his Valentine’s weekend appointment, they discovered his healing process produced too much scar tissue, which was causing new issues, including distorting his lens. Cool. (It happens about 10% of the time, and being younger is a risk factor. Cool cool.)
The last week of February: surgery #2. This one came with an annoying recovery process that required him to be positioned face down for a week. This was because a gas bubble was inserted in his eye to act as a splint holding everything in place, and it needed to remain in a certain place initially. I explained it to people like an air bubble in a snow globe, where in order to move the bubble, you had to rotate the globe. Oh, and changes in altitude could cause it to explode, leading to blindness. Yup.

First follow-up appointment went well. Everything was healing well and looking like it should, after his week of face-down time. The doctor would like to see him again in two weeks to ensure everything was still progressing nicely.
Welp.
Everything was still progressing nicely where the operation was… but the other side of that same eye was showing signs of detachment. So he now needs a third surgery.
We added a third surgery to the calendar the same way we added the first two. Another mound of e-paperwork, even though nothing significant has changed in four months, besides the surgeries. Another frustrating anticipation period, counting down the days until surgery day. Another stretch of time shaped around waiting rooms and follow-ups and recovery. Another medical bill. And another. It feels almost… routine? Which feels absurd, considering it’s EYE SURGERY.
The good(?) news is, for surgery #3, they’ll be inserting an oil layer to act as a splint, and there will be no face-down positioning, and he’ll be able to see through it. The bad news is oil doesn’t dissipate on its own like gas does, so there will be a fourth surgery sometime in the future. Woof.
I think part of what makes this — for lack of a better word — annoying is the constant recalibration. Each time, we believe we understand the scope of it. We’ve set our expectations. We ask questions. We prepare, mentally and practically, for what’s ahead. Then the scope keeps changing, right when we think we’re in the clear.
This feels ongoing, without a clear end in sight (ha, sight. See what eye did there? I need this to end).
What’s weird is I think I’m more upset about the whole situation than he is, considering he’s the one going through it. He’s accepted that this is just something that has to happen, and is for the best, and that eye surgeries are now part of routine health maintenance. Which is probably the right attitude to have.
What isn’t obvious is the in-between, the part where nothing is actively wrong, but nothing feels fully settled either. The waiting. The wondering if this is the last thing or just the most recent thing. The mental math of best-and-worst case timelines and recovery logistics and what-ifs. The having to update our friends and family AGAIN. Have I mentioned all the eye drops?

It’s the ongoing-ness of it that is unsettling. The way this timeline stretches. The way we think we’re at the end of something, and then the rug gets pulled out from under us.
I will say: I am grateful that I have enough flexibility in my schedule to show up for him. To drive him to and from surgeries, to take him to all the follow-up appointments. To sit in the waiting rooms. To not have to constantly choose between being a supportive partner and being responsible at work. Because there is so much life and responsibility outside of work. I digress.
Because this isn’t a one-time thing. It just… keeps going. (Yes, I’m talking about eye surgeries, but also not.)
And for now, that mostly looks like more appointments, more eye drops, more patience, and us getting a little better at dealing with all of it.































