Longdistance - well, I'm not going to lie, it was pretty horrendous going through this while I was pregnant.
They wouldn't give me a GA or any type of sedation, so I was lying there wide awake while they pinned me back together. My foot was up in the air in a thing like a vice while they drilled, banged, hammered away. The baby absolutely hated the noise and/or vibration of the drill and wriggled and kicked really hard while they were doing it. The bed was rocking from side to side as they hammered or whatever the bloody hell it was they were doing!! I had my MP3 player, but at times I had to turn the volume up because they were making so much noise!
I don't think they were used to having patients awake because they didn't speak to me or ask if I was ok during the procedure which took 54 minutes.
After the surgery, I was allowed a little bit of morphine and some tramadol, but I know I was not getting as much pain relief as the non pregnant patients. Actually, when I was sent home from A&E, all they gave me was paracetemol. Can you imagine, just paracetemol for a bust ankle.
I had to inject myself with blood thinners for a while after the surgery because I was very immobile, and then after I had ds2, they wanted me to do it again for another 10 days or so. Nasty, I was black and blue from my rubbish injecting technique!!
I was still supposed to be in plaster on my due date, but the very nice, understanding female consultant agreed to let me have a removable moon boot the week before I was due. I was still wearing it when I gave birth to ds2, but tbh it didn't really cause any problems apart from not being able to get out of bed without first wrestling with the Velcro straps!
When it came to getting the metalwork out, I said I didn't want a GA for that either. Having seen the GA patients coming round in the recovery room put me off ever having one, it looked horrendous!! So, they agreed to remove the metalwork under local and I watched in the reflection of the shiny overhead lamps.
Seriouisly, it was like the tools you see in B&Q!! He used a lot of force to make the incision with a scalpel and then used a screwdriver to take the screws out then stapled my leg with a staple gun! He was showing it to students, but unfortunately I couldn't hear all of what he was saying.
Mentally, I was in a far better place when I was having the metalwork out and I felt like I was getting a rest lying in hospital all day LOL 
It is 3+ years on now and although I get the odd bit of pain, I have mostly forgotten that it was ever broken. Hopefully you will get to that too!
And as an interesting aside, ds2 has a couple of teeth which are demineralised. I do wonder if they were developing whilst my body was repairing the fracture and perhaps he went short of calcium.