Post
by Sleeping Tiger » Tue Aug 08, 2017 1:59 pm
Great post, and a little hard because there were so many great tips. I'd been reading the board for years before ever registering and sent many of my new cpap using friends to it. I consider this board my school, providing far better information than I received from my Dr. I'd get on here and just read regularly and search the archives for specific issues. Ironically, almost every time I considered registering and asking a question, someone else would ask it, or the answer appeared up in a search. I'm not joking when I said I treat this like a school, when I first started I was reading at least 5-6 times a week for hours after work. The information is here, you just have to do the work to learn it. Whenever I changed machines I would pop over and read here.
1. Getting a true data machine that I could access the data. My first machines provided to me did not provided this. Once I had this information, I truly was able to take charge of my treatment, and improved my treatment more than I could ever imagine. Even with my first brick, I was receiving medically treated "under 5", with a miraculous few times at 2-3, now with my data accessible machine, the rare times I'm at 1.5 or over I consider horrible. I returned to reading the forum after several years break when I got such a machine and began educating myself again on how to use it. Yes, back to many hours of after work reading during the week. Yes, completely worth it.
2. Confidence I could change my machine settings and not cause harm to myself. I could achieve this by going slowly and only working on one problem at at time, and changing one thing at a time. At first it was scary to make even one small change. Then with sucess, following the advice not to make a lot of changes and start wingdialing it.
3. How to access software and manuals. Sleepyhead has been great.
4. Don't over tighten the mask. So counterintuitive yet so true. Many of RestedGal's post were so helpful with mask comfort. You can use things like mask liners which may help.
5. Don't be afraid to ditch a mask when it's not right for you. At a certain point, no amount of fiddling will fix it for YOUR face. Either use return insurance, or swap with friends.
6. After time, the night and morning routine is easy to do and I don't even think about it. Just make it a habit. If I'm going to sleep, even a nap, bottom line is I'm using my machine. A determined and positive mental attitude is essential.
I could list a lot more, but I don't want to turn this into a Russian novel. However, I'm going to highlight a few more things that I think could help new users.
7. Different people have very different needs. For example, some may need a humidifier, liners, wraps, hose management, some not. I've had a few friends read this board before getting machines and decide they must have all these different things to make it work. Just start out, and add what you need as you go.
8. If it's overwhelming just concentrate on one or two things to learn and add the rest as you go along. Yes, it's a lot to learn but the reclaiming of your life is worth it.
9. Do not be afraid of if the forum seems harsh. Yes, there are some people who that is their personality, it's the internet so you will get all types. Yes, there are troll, egomaniacs, and or fools. Ignore them. However, this board provides such valuable information, not easily accessed elsewhere. There is power in numbers. I believe some on this board are harsh because they know this is the difference between success and failure, and that means how you get to live the rest of your life.
10. Learn how to filter the information. There is a lot of good, there is some garbage, and many posters have their own biases which may or may not be helpful for you. As you read this board regularly you will see these patterns and learn what information is likely good for you. If a lot of respected, established users agree, well, it is probably correct information.
11 Over the years, I've seen a lot of new users show up on the board, make a big splash, eat up attention and then flame out. Some are in denial, some are angry and want to fight, some are fake sleep apnea patients, and some are just attention mongers in my opinion. They seem to set lots of people on edge and take away from helping others, an that is sad, cause the power of this board is the help it provides. After time, they drop out. And nobody is sad to see them go, just sad that the true cpap users they couldn't overcome their personal issues to learn how to use this wonderful technology. If you happen to read this and you are one of these demanding users, and you really have sleep apnea, and are not a troll, this is my advice to you: just stop posting for a while, and listen to others and read. Nobody is impressed by this attitude, they think such a person is acting the fool. This burns bridges for such a user and takes away from others helping people in need. Not everyone is every right all the time, so it's a big red flag when somebody claims they are. My friends have discussed this and really all this comes off as is insecurity and a blowhard that just wants attention with no desire to help others. If such type of users really want to be respected, they will educate themselves, have a respectful discourse, and recognize they do not know everything, and there is nothing wrong with not being right all the time. If they just continue the way they are, most people will consider them a pest, attention monger, with no outside life, and an arrogant fool, rather than the expert they claim to be. After a while, people will just ignore them, starving them of the attention they seek, and they will drift off to other forums. This has happened a lot over the years, and some new troll will take their place. Just check the archives, cause many of these types have come and gone. Luckily, most of the time this forum is on point and extremely helpful.
Resmed S9 AutoSet with H5i Humidifier
Resmed Swift LT for Her Nasal Pillow