The following, to the
best of my recollection, which, when you’re unwell is not that reliable, is my
report on my “Adventures in the Land of Afflicted Legionnaires.”
And me.
It would have been helpful
at the time if there had been two “me’s” – the “me” going through it, and
the me chronicling what was happening, as the “me” going through it was unable
to chronicle what was happening because I was otherwise engaged, going through
it.
WARNING: The following posts may not be interesting to
you.
But when has that ever
stopped me before?
Okay.
Here we go.
Dr. M had come down with the flu. Recognizable symptoms. She felt sluggish, thickheaded, and,
generally, not herself.
A typical “Summer Flu.”
It comes and it goes.
Three days later, I come down with the same symptoms. It’s the perfect marriage. We magnanimously share everything.
Except this time, she got better, and I got worse.
In my generosity and kindness, I thought less about her
blessed recovery than the unfairness of my contrasting deterioration. (More on the specifics shortly. And by “More on the specifics”, I am talking
about the specifics of my symptoms, not
of being a terrible person. Cut me some
slack here, okay? I was entering
unchartered territory.)
Having recently changed primary care doctors, I had
fortuitously caught a break. My new primary
care doctor allowed me to e-mail him directly when I needed to connect with him,
promising to e-mail me back the same day.
I had to pay extra for that – “that” being the immediate access I had
grown up believing was an integral element of the doctor-patient relationship –
but at least I had access. (I think I am
still under the weather; I can feel myself writing grumpy. Okay, grumpi-er.)
I e-mailed my new doctor, entering “I’m sick” on the
“Subject” line. Without this cyber-conduit
to my medical resource person, my previous history portends that I would
probably not have contacted my doctor at all, thinking, “Let’s see how I’m feeling
tomorrow.” (A rationalization for, “If
it’s bad news, it can wait.” Which is
the opposite of what mentally healthy people think, which is, “If it’s bad
news, I need to get treatment as soon as possible. I do not understand those people. Don’t they know they are opening an
unimaginable can of worms?)
My doctor e-mailed me back – Look at that! It works
if you pay extra – telling me to make an immediate appointment. Which I did.
The next day, he examined me, and ordered a blood test. (While in his office, I availed myself of the
opportunity to have massive deposits of earwax – sorry – removed from my
auditory canals. The parking in that
doctor’s building is, like, twelve dollars a minute. I figured I might as well get my money’s
worth.)
The following afternoon, as I lay close to immobilely in my bed,
I heard the phone ring and heard Dr. M answer it. It was my doctor, having received the results
of my recent blood test.
Shortly thereafter, she came into the room and said, “I am
taking you to the hospital.”
When I complied without resistance, I immediately understood
the implication:
I needed to go to the hospital.
People dread hospital Emergency Rooms because of how long
you have to wait to get seen.
They saw me almost immediately. And shortly thereafter, I was admitted to the
hospital, and was wheel-chaired to my room.
Mentally healthy people think, “That was great. I avoided the agonies of spending hours in
the Waiting Room.
What did I think?
If they moved me along that quickly,
I must be really in trouble.
---------------------------------------------------
Today is my mother's birthday. She would have been ninety-nine years old. Happy birthday, Gertie. Wherever you are.
Oh good, I've been endlessly curious about the whole thing, but of course it's too rude to ask about it. Glad you're filling us in.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry I was rude enough to ask about this a week or so ago. I should have checked with Rebecca first :-) My wife usually saves me before I ask those kinds of questions but I just blurted out a comment without checking with anyone.
ReplyDeleteLike Rebecca, I am glad you are writing about this. In a perverse way, it makes me feel better. And, if any of us ever get Legionnaire's Disease, we'll know what to expect.