If there is no nausea or vomiting after the local anesthesia surgery, you can eat normally; you can eat 6 hours after the surgery. Before the anal hemostatic gauze is removed, do not consume flatulent foods such as milk and beans, and avoid tobacco, alcohol, spicy foods, etc. in the future. The first time you get out of bed after surgery, you should wait for the sensation of your lower limbs to return, then sit on the edge of the bed for 10-15 minutes to rest, and only when you are dizzy and uncomfortable should you move around accompanied by your family or nursing staff to avoid inadvertent falls that may cause injury. This is because of the hemostatic gauze inserted at the anal opening. The next day after surgery, the physician or nurse practitioner will remove the dressing for you, but if you have abdominal distension or the urge to have a bowel movement, the senior nursing staff can remove it in advance that night. If you feel the urge to have a bowel movement, you can go to the toilet. You can use a little force to relieve the bowel movement without affecting the wound, but do not force it. If you cannot tolerate the pain, please tell the nurse to give you oral painkillers. The morning after the surgery, the physician or the nurse specialist will remove the gauze outside the anus and then you can start to take a sitz bath. A small number of patients may not be able to urinate after surgery. Please don’t be anxious and apply cold or hot compresses to the pubic bone to assist in urination. If you still haven’t urinated within eight hours after surgery or if your bladder is distended, please inform the nursing staff to catheterize you.