SURGERY IN SOUTH KOREA

SURGERY IN SOUTH KOREA

This past week, I did the scariest thing in my life; I decided to have necessary surgery in Korea. I like to think of myself as a pretty healthy person. I had never had surgery and I could count on one hand the amount of times I had been to an American hospital. Since moving to Korea I have suffered from migraine headaches and the newest development were cramps. After going to several doctors I found out I had a five-centimeter cyst growing on my ovary. If I left it in I would continue to deal with pain and also run the risk of having the cyst attach to other organs. So on Wednesday of last week, I went to the doctor and she booked me for surgery the following Monday. I have never been more scared in my life. I was so afraid of the anesthesia and being under and not waking up. I couldn’t eat or sleep the days leading up to the surgery. At 30 years old I was not ashamed of saying, I just wanted my mom. Through out this whole process I kept saying I am so scared, I am doing this all alone; but I realized that was the furthest thing from the truth. I saw on many levels human compassion.
Although I didn’t have anyone familiar here, I failed to realize the people I did have here. My friend Amanda who I met 8 months ago, and has gone on every hospital visit with me. This past week she showed the type of person she is. She stayed as long as she could with me the night of the surgery, kept my family up to date during the surgery, and came every night on a 2 hour train ride to visit me at the hospital for four hours. Since the surgery she has also helped with things I can’t do such as grocery shopping, cleaning, and washing my hair. My co-teacher Su Yeon, gathered transportation back and forth to the hospital, she also stayed the night of the surgery and the day of surgery. She held my hand after surgery to comfort me. She came with the Vice Principal of my school to help with my discharge and take me home. Then there was my Korean friend Catherine who I have only known for 7 months but, drove 2 hours on her day off, just to bring me lunch and hang out. The most compassion for me came from the total strangers who I met in the hospital. I was in a room with 6 other Korean women and their families. I want to thank those people, who helped me call nurses at night, helped me pick things up when they fell, helped me refill water bottles and carried my food trays when they were too heavy for me to lift. I want to thank the old Korean lady I met on the first day who came over and held my hand the day after surgery and covered my feet when I was cold. To the Husbands who not only took care of their own wives but also helped me. I wonder if I had this surgery in America would I have seen that kind of compassion from friends and stranger? Koreans are very compassionate to strangers even if they refer to us as wagooks (foreigners). When it counts they show what it means to be human. This experience was definitely the scariest thing I have every done, but it was also the most humanizing.

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