ouch

April 8, 2003


We miss the exit for the ER and go around again. Ned says "This will make a great journal entry." All I can say is "owwwww!" every time we hit a pothole and "ouch" when we round a curve. Yeah, this'll make a great journal entry all right, assuming I can write it. I feel like my life is suddenly being managed by the Red Sox bullpen.

My 52nd birthday did not start out to be a disaster. Oh sure, the plumber was late this morning because of the snow and because there is another street with the same name as mine on the other side of town. I thought there was some law or fire code against that. Anyway, the plumber called from his truck on the other version of my street and I talked him turn by turn to my house. What I thought was a small leak turned out to be a broken pipe under the sink, the one connected to the faucet. Replace pipe, install new faucet: $400+. Ouch. Just what I always wanted for my birthday.

I had cleaned the snow off my car in anticipation of having to move it for the plow, but I really didn't think they needed to do the "move all the cars and clear the parking lot" thing. I stopped watching for the plow and sat down with a cup of tea and Sea Room, a book by a guy who owns a couple of islands in the Hebrides, which Nancy gave me for my birthday (the book, not the islands). Sometime later a guy from the plowing company bangs on my door and requests that I move the car. It seems odd as the snow is melting already, at least on the pavement. I obediently abandon tea and book. I drive around for awhile, do errands, drive around some more until more than enough time has elapsed to plow. They haven't plowed.

Then I made the big mistake of the day. Tired from getting up early, I stretched out on the bed to listen to the radio for awhile. I started to drift off to sleep. I was in that weird semi-sleep state when the phone rang. I leaped off the bed and ran for the phone, somehow thinking it was the condo management company calling to yell at me to move the car or risk the wrath of my neighbors for being the one to prevent them all from being plowed.

This snow plowing thing is the single most anxiety-provoking thing about living here. You sometimes have less than three minutes to get your car out no matter how much snow there is and how much they've plowed you in. You can be sick, dead, or in Antarctica and still be expected to move the car instantly. No matter that they'd had hours to do this earlier and they probably didn't even need to do it for this storm. The phone ringing with the snowplow rule anxiety still roiling around inside my head with me half asleep is way more than enough to overrule common sense, zen training, serenity and whatever all else.

The next thing I knew I was on the floor in the hallway with my left arm twisted underneath me in a most unnatural position. It hurt. Movement in any direction caused so much pain I felt like I would faint and throw up at the same time. Then I noticed my nose was bleeding. Dripping on the carpet in fact. Wilbur ran around me in circles meowing like crazy. I crawled to the phone and pressed *69 just in case it was about the parking lot. It wasn't. It was Leslie from the cat shelter. It wasn't anything urgent. I tell her what happened. I think I dislocated my shoulder. She suggests a trip to the ER.

Can I afford an ambulance? Does the town have an ambulance? Ambulances can never find units in this complex. The condo association has worked on the signage a zillion different times to no avail because the front doors don't face the street. And what about that other street with the same name? They'll never find me. I called Ned instead and talked him through it like with the plumber.

So there we are missing the Marston Street exit and looking for the emergency entrance discussing the Red Sox bullpen, 19th century nature writing, and exclaiming "owwww!" a lot. This is exactly how I wanted to spend my 52nd birthday.

Except for not being able to show them my insurance card because my wallet is in my left pocket, getting checked in and stumbling to X-ray goes really smoothly. The x-ray tech takes a set of pictures, looks at them, announces they are too light, takes more pictures, also too light. Ned keeps asking the x-ray tech if I can get something for the pain. He goes off to Tripoli bakery and comes back with cannoli to celebrate my birthday. A nurse comes by and looks at the x-ray then hurries away with a disgusted look on his face. The tech takes more x-rays. I feel like I can't stand up anymore and I do not want to eat cannoli. I try to give the cannolis to the x-ray tech but she doesn't want them.

Ned was reading The Wild Sports and Natural History of the Highlands by Charles St. John when I called him and had the presence of mind to bring it with him. He read to me while I waited for Nurse Steve and then Dr. G to look at my x-rays. They decide I have indeed dislocated my shoulder really badly, but they can put it back in. They hook me up to some monitors and start an IV with two drugs, one of which is supposed to relieve the pain and the other one to make me forget what they are about to do. Nurse Steve asks if it's OK to cut my shirt off because attempting to take it off over my head will hurt a way wicked lot. So terrified am I of anymore pain and not particularly attached to the shirt, I give the OK.

Ned reads St. John to me the whole time I wait for the drugs to take effect. He tells me the chapter headings and asks if I have a preference. I pick something about short-eared owls. A nurse wheels a woman into the cubbyhole next to mine. She's on some heavy pain meds. The owl chapter segues into a detailed description of the life histories of every species of field mouse and rat that these owls eat. I am entranced, murmuring "this is fabulous" periodically. The woman in the next cubbyhole groans something that could be either approval or disapproval at some passages. When Ned asks if we're bothering her, she says "Keep reading". At some particularly 19th century sentence she says "You can tell that was written over a hundred years ago. No one writes that way now."

Dr. G asks me if I remember having my shoulder put back in. No. I remember something about grouse in the Highlands. Ned keeps reading while I wait for the drugs to wear off enough so I can stand up for the "after" x-rays. Dr. G gets interested in St. John. "Who is this writer? Where did you get this book?" He and Ned discuss the particulars.

The "after" x-rays require several tries again. Gee, I always thought I was fairly photogenic. The tech still won't accept the cannolis. She suggests Ned and I celebrate my birthday with a good stiff drink. He explains we're both on the wagon so we'll have to have cannoli instead.

It's 36 degrees out and I am wearing only my bra and this complicated immobilizer sling that keeps my left arm strapped to my body in what they call "handbag carrying position". I didn't bring a jacket. This isn't going to work. Nurse Steve disappears to some other part of the hospital and returns with a shirt that will kind of almost button over this immobilizer contraption so I won't freeze. I yell ouch way fewer times on the way back home.

While Ned goes to the drugstore to fill the prescription for the giant ibuprofen pills, I dig out my baggiest flannel shirt and button it easily over the immobilizer. Armed with the cannolis and the St. John, as well as the giant ibuprofen pills, I settle in to celebrate my birthday.

Ouch.

Today's Reading
Sea Room by Adam Nicolson, The Wild Sports and Natural History of the Highlands by Charles St. John

This Year's Reading
2003 Book List

Today's Starting Pitcher
Derek Lowe


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Copyright © 2003, Janet I. Egan