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« September 2008 | Main | December 2009 »

ER Haikus

January 31, 2009

Random hospital inspired haiku...

Trip to the ER,
An IV bag of fluids.
Twelve hours later...

Blue hopital gown,
I think it ties in the back,
I feel a cold draft.

Appendicitis.
It's hard to fit in Haiku.
Take that sucker out.


Early morning update: I was going to write this entire update in haiku but I'm tired. It's 1:16 am here and we've been home about an hour. Everyone's in bed and the house is quiet (save for my laptop, which is playing a mix of Third Day and OneRepublic) and I'm trying to get some work done. I took Cassie to the ER because of stomach problems and dehydration. They did the dreaded IV bag O' fluids, an ultrasound and a ct scan. They told us that no problems showed up on the ultrasound/ct, but that there could be organs in there just waiting to explode so if Cassie felt the same tomorrow (which is now today) we should come back.

I KID YOU NOT. We should come back to the ER. At that point I was going to say we would just camp out because the odds of not coming back after a set-up like that were nil, but we left.

Bag o' fluids sir?
The nurse asked, needle in hand.
No thanks, I'm driving.

Major East Coat Snow Storm?

January 29, 2009

AccuWeather's forecast floor is buzzing, it seems like we could finally get a big ticket item. I'm personally expecting a little sleet, then some rain. AccuWeather article here.

Dear Carl

January 28, 2009

Today's the start of an exciting new Blog Hero feature which I call... Dear Carl. (I named it after how people address the email questions they send to me.)

What I'll do is I'll choose one of the many questions I get via email and answer is publicly here. This will accomplish several things: it will take up a blog post (checks that off list) it will answer the question of the original emailer (assuming they're reading here, check) and it will also help untold thousands who probably were wondering the same exact thing but didn't have the courage to ask (or didn't have my email address - see email address at left.)

Today's installment:


Dear Carl,

Normally I ignore every single application request I get on Facebook. I find this to be good policy (note from Carl: this is an excellent policy.) However, today I was faced with a quandary: a friend sent me an application invitation called "Request for Good Karma." What was I to do? Surely refusing a Good Karma Application Request - while in keeping with my overall policy - would doom me. After several seconds of staring at the request I finally caved and clicked the add application button.

I then waited for a few minutes, only to receive a message that the Good Karma Application failed to load properly.

My question is - should I wait for the inevitable doom of being unable to add a Good Karma Application, or should I just shoot myself in the head with a bazooka now? It seems either way I'm done for.

Sincerely,
Bad Karma in Topeka


Dear Bad Karma in Topeka,

Thank you for your note! (Throws pinch of salt over left shoulder.) I'd really, really like to help you (knocks on wood three times) but at this point I hope you'll understand if (kisses horseshoe before throwing it at black cat walking under ladder made out of mirrored glass) I have to pass on this either way. On the one hand I can't condone violence of any sort, particularly with a bazooka. On the other hand, it's pretty clear (hits self in forehead with open palm facing outward twice, yells "OOGA BLOOGA!!" at top lungs) that you're doomed. I would suggest you sit out in the middle of a grassy field, away from any cattle, and hope for the best.

Sincerely,
Carl

(OOGA BLOOGA!!)

Dreaming Out Loud

January 28, 2009

OneRepublic | Wikipedia | iTunes | Amazon

Domain Working Again

January 28, 2009

The domain name (bloghero.com) is working again, and should redirect properly. There are still some design issues to fix but it's getting late, the snow has turned to sleet and the Vicodin is wearing off. (I'm in that gray, uncertain time period - do you take more pain medication so that you can sleep - with the odds beings that you won't get much use out of it - or do you just "tough it out" and save the extra pills?)

If anyone out there reading this uses an RSS client, please let me know if the feed is working for you. I tried NewsFire for the Mac and it all seems to be there.

And thank you to the people who have contacted me via email and Facebook or who have left comments on the blog: I appreciate all of the kind words. :)

Who Took All of the Snow?

January 28, 2009

Midnight here and another snow storm looks to be turning into flurries, sleet and ice. I don't know who took our winter, but I'd like it back...

Don't go to the Hospital with a Virus

January 24, 2009

I suppose that's not entirely fair (nor is tagging this entry "Disaster") but sometimes it's "caveat emptor" with the health care industry. I know some of you who were paying attention to my Facebook page or maybe my Twitter feed are aware that I had a bad time at the hospital in December. Actually, if you were watching my Twitter feed you probably thought I died because my entries there weren't terribly optimistic - or complete, and I think the last update was something like "Kidneys...failing...tired...going black...aaaaauuuugggghhhh."

kidneyshirt.jpgThe story is that I was experiencing some severe back pain and had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad headache (with apologies to Alexander) back in December. I also had other symptoms, some of which fell under the medical definition "gross." In all they spelled category: disaster, or at least a trip to the ER, which I made grudgingly mostly because I'm a male and well we take a oath not to seek medical attention unless forced to, usually by an Alert Rational Thinking Spouse.

At the ER they gave me morphine, for which I am extremely grateful and really it doesn't matter how much the bill is afterwards, the morphine is always worth it. They also did a spinal tap, as in sticking something in my spine, which even on a great day and completely free (and with a t-shirt that says "I got a spinal tap and this free t-shirt") is NEVER worth it. But it apparently helped diagnose me as having viral meningitis. Other diagnoses which fall under the medical procedure list of "Look at Patient" determined I had shingles. (Shingles sounds like a first-time home owner issue but is actually a reoccurrence of the chicken pox virus. VIRUS. This is important for our tale.)

The ER decided that I should be admitted to the hospital, without any kind of free t-shirt, and given an anti-viral drug. This is a drug that is supposed to scare viruses off, sort of like the equivalent of showing them The View over and over again. (With apologies to any View watchers in the audience, particularly those that resemble Elisabeth Hasselbeck.) (You know who you are.)

The problem with some anti-viral drugs, and The View for that matter, is that they can cause crystals to form in your kidneys. These are not attractive, gemstone quality crystals that might appear on QVC during the Tanzanite White Gold Earring Special Hour. These are crystals that clog up your kidneys. Think of your house's air filter which you haven't checked on in four months because really who thinks about the air filter? I don't and man when you pull that thing out boy are you embarrassed. I mean, you know, other people are embarrassed.

Well, now I was in the hospital with shingles, viral meningitis and no kidneys. The medical staff was very gentle with me. ("Your kidneys have shut down. Sorry about that.") I, meanwhile, was feeling the effects of having no kidneys, which is to say that I was seated in front of the toilet for 36 hours. It takes 36 hours to convince the medical staff at the hospital that you're really, seriously nauseated and that they should give you something for that via an IV because there's no point in trying to swallow anything.

The course of action the hospital took, which coincidentally is listed in medical books under the chapter "We Stopped Up His Kidneys Now What," was to give me IV fluids (they call them "fluids" in the hospital, but I think it's just a bag of water) until these crystals were flushed out of my kidneys. That took about a week. All told I was in the hospital for ten days. The bill the hospital submitted to the insurance company was something like five thousand dollars. Thousand with a T. I only point out the cost because of the irony: if I had not been admitted, I would have likely (eventually) gotten over what I had and there would have been no problems and no thousands (with a T.)*

In any event, both shingles and viral meningitis can cause pain even after they've left the body/gotten killed off/become bored with you. This pain, according to medical dictionaries, only lasts "zero to 36 months." I'm in the second month now and still having back pain, which is to say pain in my back, which feels like someone sticking a dull, red-hot poker in my back. Or, doing a spinal tap. With a dull, red-hot poker.

I do have some pain medication. Vicodin, which is latin for "Uhhhhhhhh, yeeaahhhh" which is about all I can say or do while taking it. I also have lidocaine patches, which are self-adhesive, although sticking a self-adhesive pain patch on your own back is challenging, especially if you're trying hard not to miss Whoopi and Elisabeth go at it. I also have another drug, Gabapentin, which is a rare form of "generic drug" that still costs a billion dollars (with a B.) Why this is, I'm not sure. This specific drug is designed to help with neuropathic pain. Before you think that means "pain in your head" (instead of the back) neuropathic pain is pain caused by damaged nerves, which is what shingles can do.

Fortunately gabapentin only has a few side effects including (and no I am not making this up) drowsiness, dizziness, unsteadiness, fatigue, vision changes, weight gain, nausea, dry mouth, constipation, tremor or shaking, swelling of extremities, loss of coordination, mental/mood changes, persistent sore throat/fever/cough, unusual bleeding/bruising, pain/redness of arms or legs, chest pain, trouble breathing, fast/slow/irregular heartbeat, hearing loss, and stomach/abdominal pain.

I'd write more, but I think you're up to date now, and my large, swollen, painful, red limbs are making typing difficult. And I need a drink of water. And...what? Did you say something?


*I think there was a possibility that I could have gone from meningitis to encephalitis. Meningitis, which I'm really starting to get tired of typing, is an inflammation of the protective membrane of the brain. Encephalitis, which if spelled correctly is miraculous, is an inflammation of the brain itself. The brain hates to be inflamed, which is exactly what happens during The View marathons. So the hospital, in their defense, was possibly maybe if-you-want-to-cut-them-some-slack thinking they were helping out. Sort of. Barbara Walters was unavailable for comment at the time of this writing, but her Facebook status read: Yes this is the real Barbara Walters stop asking.

Yaaawwwwnnnnnn!

January 23, 2009

Hap-py Birth-day!
-Frosty