I'm in that grey area of needing to be listed: Hospitalizations 3-5x/year, FEV1 25-30%, very limited in activities some weeks/months, do okay others. Oxygen with exercise and sleep. I continually adapt and get used to most of the limitations but I sometimes feel I'm in denial about how I've progressed and wonder if I'll ever feel ready as "it could always be worse." Of course I've had 1,000 conversations with my CF and transplant docs about this and they usually come back to it's a personal choice of what I can handle, given my numbers alone <i>could</i> qualify me...<div><br></div><div>Wondering what your daily life was like when you got listed. Specifically what you could and couldn't handle (grocery shopping, showers, exercise, etc.). Was it hard to muster up the energy to eat high calories? How much did you nap? Were your symptoms mostly lung related (more mucous, cough up blood, shortness of breath, etc.) or were they overall body symptoms (body aches, fatigue, exhaustion). What you felt like at on a good week and on bad weeks...</div><div><br></div><div>How did all that change over the months <i>while</i> you were listed?</div><div><br></div><div>They keep telling me it's different for everyone so I'm trying to get a sense of the spectrum outside my doctors' limited perspective.</div><div><br></div><div>Thanks so much,</div><div>-Jason</div><div><br></div><div>Edit: I go, and have gone, to quarterly pre-transplant appointments since 2002, when I dropped down to an FEV1 of 25% for the first time. So the questions for me are no longer if I want a transplant or should I get evaluated, rather when to get on the active list.</div>