Thursday, August 3, 2023

3 - FIFTY PERCENT

URINARY RETENTION


IT'S THE HALF OF US!


As someone with a prostate related urinary problem you are in significant company. Fifty percent of males over the age of 50 develop some type of problem connected to their slowly enlarging prostate so there are a lot of us rattling around in the same boat. 

We men find medical problems difficult to talk about - especially anything related to our nether regions. We just can't go there! They are taboo - too embarrassing to admit to or discuss. 

Given the scale of the problem worldwide I'm writing this blog in order to help break the taboo. I'm setting off on my own, not exactly over the moon about taking the criticism and even ridiculing that will doubtless come my way, but thick skinned enough to take it. In fact I couldn't care less as long as my candidness stands the chance of being of some help to some one. 

Someone has to take the first step.

I reckon that reading about other's experience is important to anyone going through pain and depression related to their prostate.

  50% OF MEN OVER 50 DEVELOP ISSUES RELATED TO

'URINARY RETENTION'


FOR MANY THOSE WILL BECOME CHRONIC, PAINFUL AND DEBILITATING

THEY ARE TREATABLE WITH DRUGS AND SURGERY

DON'T SUFFER IN SILENCE


TALK TO YOUR DOCTOR SOON AND MAKE SURE THEY TAKE
YOU SERIOUSLY! MINE DIDN'T.







Tuesday, August 1, 2023

2 - PEE AT LAST


 HAIKU

Freely, so freely,
the pee from a penis falls.
Relief is in hand.

© JW 2023


In 1964 the great civil rights activist Dr Martin Luther King made a speech that grabbed the attention of the world by the balls. It's called the 'I have a dream' speech. It concludes with the arresting words "Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!".

On Thursday July 27th 2023 in a toilet closet on the 4th floor of the Mater hospital in Dublin I uttered similar sounding words with the same poetic flow and I think as much conviction, as much hope and passion and determination and compulsion and expectation as the 35 year old Dr King. On that day however I was dancing to a different tune.

Though I'm all for them, my agenda wasn't civil rights - it was much more personal, visceral, intrisically bodily. The day I'd never thought would come had come - all my Christmases at once. After years of being slave and hostage to my own bladder and prostate I was finally granted universal piddle rights, and what emanated from my quivering lips was an irreverent but heartfelt and apposite twist on Dr King's immortal lines.


"Pee at last! Pee at last! Thank god almightly, I can pee at last". I uttered these words in a Gollum-like hiss so intense they could have burned a hole in the stud wall I was gently headbutting as tears of great joy welled up in me, hardly able to believe what I was saying or seeing or most importantly - doing. As a non believer I don't do miracles, but this was my freakin' miracle!


After around 15 years, in that toilet closet as I stared intently downwards past my crumpled hospital gown at my red swollen penis, newly released from a catheter clamp, I watched a full flow of bloodied piss come gushing out of its tip and cascade noisily - oh so very delightfully noisily - into the bowl below. One - two - three - four - five seconds of pure unassisted, uninterrupted, effortless pain-free pee-lief. A spectacular stream of coagulated blood filled with bits of my prostate then followed, the texture of a rustic pea soup, spluttering and spitting like an unblocked drain in a messy fan shape all around the porcelain bowl - a perfect blood splatter special effect in a slasher movie. Oh the utter bloody relief!


This moment was a long time coming. With no health insurance in a country beleaguered by a broken down national health system I'd waited four and a half years for the operation that takes less than an hour to perform - a 'transurethral resection of the prostate' or TURP for short. A what? I hear you ask. Basically you have a loop of wire shoved up your willy which is then heated by an electric current and so burns away or 'cores out' your swollen prostate to allow your pee to pass through it again. 

© copyright JW 2023

This was a major event for me; the short operation undoubtedly the beginning of a better quality of life. How strange indeed that my post-surgical manhandled member was its physiological focal point, but I didn't give a shit. I'd peed and I'd peed real good and the relief was transcendently wonderful. Pure almost pain free joy after years of chronic debilitating fucking agony - agony worthy of being written about.

In this wee blog I plan to celebrate the simple act of peeing - an essential but oft overlooked bodily function - and in the process to tell the story of my faulty prostate and waterworks - to share my symptoms and experiences of being unable to pee/ pee properly in case there are others who may benefit from an account of my piss awful times - times I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy ... well maybe my very worst.

During my darkest days I have searched the net looking for the personal stories of people who share my condition - 'benign prostatic hyperplasia' - a non-cancerous enlarged prostate gland causing partial blockage to the pee tube - but found none. 

There are support groups in which sufferers share basic information about their condition and the treatment they've had, but I think the life changing scale of the condition deserves greater insight. 

With 4 billion urinating males on the planet (50% of the human population) there must be at least a few others who could benefit from reading first hand accounts and for whom sharing their stories would be beneficial?


If you're a prostateless woman or a man without a faulty prostate then perhaps this blog isn't for you, but then again it may be worth reading on to find out what urological complications could lie in store as you get older? It is after all a problem many men develop in later life - just look around you next time you go in to a public toilet and shimmy in beside an older man hunched over the urinal, every muscle straining in a futile effort to get the flow going - there as you arrive and still there sweating and suffering silently when you're leaving with your empty bladder and a little smile on your face.



If your prostate is chugging along nicely doing everything it's supposed to do I genuinely envy you and I ask that next time you take a nice big gushing pee REJOICE, ENJOY and CELEBRATE your superpower! Easy pee is not a guarantee.


© copyright JW 2023

MANY MORE POSTS TO COME - PLEASE SUBSCRIBE FOR UPDATES

If you are enjoying and/ or find this blog helpful please subscribe and contribute if you feel able. Having spent the past weeks connected to a number of prostate related Facebook groups, I've seen that other sufferers are looking for information to help them understand and deal with their condition. I have no doubt there are many - many stories and experiences out there around the world of men. My aim in this blog is to provide a platform for just that. There are so many of us and I really think it would be valuable to share. Thanks




Monday, July 31, 2023

1 - INTRODUCTION - IS IT JUST ME OR ....

.... IS IT YOU TOO?

The likelihood of you coming across this blog by chance whilst looking for something entertaining to read is low given that you'll have typed the word 'prostate' into your search engine to get here. That means I'm not alone in seeking knowledge and help with a prostate related issue. Phew - swingeing phew! 

... so welcome to my prostate/ pee/ bladder blog. I hope you'll subscribe, explore a little and if the urge takes you contribute where/ when you feel comfortable to do so. 

All thoughtful contributions are welcome and despite (or maybe because of) the seriousness of the subject there's plenty of room for appropriate humour - including toilet humour of course! Having a fucked up prostate is no laughing matter but as the saying goes - if you don't laugh you'll cry .... and this subject is pretty ripe for both!

My aim with this blog is to provide a platform for the sharing of thoughts, knowledge and experiences related to benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) or in layman's terms 'prostate related peeing problems'. I've started it because of my own difficult experiences but the last thing I want is for it to be a monologue on my own journey so please do get involved. There's plenty to be said and discussed. My only request is that you are respectful and considerate in any contribution you make. If you aren't prepared to be then please go elsewhere. 

I should point out at this early stage that this blog IS NOT ABOUT PROSTATE CANCER it's about benign prostatic hyperplasia. I do not have prostate cancer and whilst people with cancer may experience some similar symptoms it is a very different condition that requires different treatment that can't be and isn't going to be dealt with here. You will find a number of other websites and discussion forums for that on the internet.