If you are sick, you will definitely experience anxiety and depression.
On the surface, it's okay, but internal injuries are generally more severe; On the surface, there may be something wrong, but the internal injury is not minor.
No one can do the same as a sage, not to be happy with evil or sad with oneself. People who don't have low back pain when standing and speaking are generally not comforted enough: it's okay, it will be okay, it will always get through, and crying will make it okay.
The monologue in the heart of those who have heard it is usually: "Your grandson, you can try replacing me!
People who have not experienced it cannot truly experience the various injuries caused by illness, such as the anxiety when going to see a doctor, the unease when waiting for a test, the sadness when the condition is repeated, the inferiority complex towards oneself, and all emotions. Only in the midst of illness can one truly truly experience them.
Since comfort from others is not sufficient, then we must have the courage to stand up. Since we don't die immediately, every minute and second of the moment is earned.
Although I may still be anxious, I tell myself that these emotions are necessary experiences, and I am not that bad when I am alive.
Sad emotions can occur. In addition to allowing oneself to feel sad, there is also a need to change one's mind and pull oneself out of the quagmire. Many times, the situation is not as serious as one might think, but one's fear makes it look scary.
Those with normal kidney function and abnormal urine tests, through standardized treatment, most will not lead to renal failure. If the renal function creatinine has already increased and the treatment effect is good, it can also be greatly delayed. Perhaps everyone else has gameover, and you are still fine. Once discovered, high creatinine or inevitable dialysis is necessary for the development of the condition. Even those who have been well exposed for 20 to 30 years can have a kidney transplant. Kidney transplantation is the most mature of all organ transplants, let alone the rapid development of artificial kidneys. It is possible that they will completely replace dialysis and transplantation one day.
In short, to live for a day is to experience it for a day. I really don't like a sentence: wait for decline!
What is the decline of waiting? Isn't that person still waiting to die? So because there is death, the days of living are not good anymore? If it's a waiting posture and you don't want to live well, it's no different from dying.
Many of those great people died young and did not live long. Many died in their 20s, 30s, and 40s. However, a brilliant life really doesn't have much to do with how long one lives! Moreover, if you have kidney disease, as long as you want to, but don't do it, living to a long life is not a big problem.