~ Written by me in May, 2012. I was younger* when I wrote this. I began in the middle of the story. I'll catch up with you at the end . . .
And so I went to get the verdict. On the ailing shoulder. I didn't want to go. This reluctance made no sense to me, because I really did like the doctor.
And so I went to get the verdict. On the ailing shoulder. I didn't want to go. This reluctance made no sense to me, because I really did like the doctor.
I got
lost twice on the way then entered the wrong building, whose hallways smelled
like an overdose of disinfectant. A counselor in one of its offices told me
that the doctor had probably moved to the next building over, but now
I felt like staying right where I was . . . the counselor was so nice, so
forgiving -- we can never have too much forgiveness . . . . .
I wanted
to go home, but I didn't go. I tried the next building. It didn't smell, but
the elevator squealed and heaved and the stairwell was dark and desolate, with
ominous splotches on the cement. With the elevator out of the question and the
stairwell looking menacing, that was it. What if the entry and exit doors
locked me in? I was going home.
I
started to go.
Nearly
to the front door, I pondered the shame of it all. A 49-year-old woman afraid
of a stairwell. I imagined myself hunched over, some 10 years later, with an
immobilized shoulder; a gnarled, useless hand; back bent, neck twisted from all
the compensating contortions I would have had to assume, having chosen to avoid
the stairwell that could have led to my deliverance.
I turned
back, acted purposeful (there was now a lady in the hallway), and jammed myself
into the stairwell, racing up the stairs with my eyes nearly shut. The doors
did not lock me in at top or bottom. This was fortunate. Having reached my
destination, I met the lady from the downstairs hallway now exiting the
elevator. It apparently had not trapped her or sucked all the air out of her
lungs. Things were looking up.
Colognes
wafted through the waiting room . . . but even this was better than the dank,
stained stairwell, so I sat and inhaled. Ushered finally into the doctor's
office, a sense of relief came over me. Now I felt like crying. In my mind's
eye, I pictured my tears drenching the room, dripping off the examining table,
pouring over the countertops, causing the chair to float. Salt water pooled in
my eyes. I wiped it away. What on earth. This was an
orthopedist.
The
shoulder was fine, fine -- just rotator-cuff tendonitis, solved easily with a buffalo-sized dose of anti-inflammatories twice per day for two
weeks. I already knew this wasn't going to happen -- I can't take most
prescription medications -- but I stayed agreeable because, as doctors go, this
one was a patient's dream. Prompt, calm, cheerful, uncomplicated. (He told me
I could keep the paper gown -- said it looked good on me. This brought forth a
giggle.)
Now I
just have to hunt down the natural ("alternative") equivalent of 16 (yes,
sixteen!) 200-mg ibuprofen tablets per day. This shouldn't be hard . . . .
.
Upon
exiting the building, the source of my mad apprehension was realized in full.
The surrounding air and lawn, which had previously smelled like air and lawn,
were now overtaken by something I would have to call at least the equivalent of
dry-cleaning fluid. It was just everywhere. To myself, I called it,
"Perflourocholoromanganate," because that's exactly what it smelled like.
To my
horror, small children were outside next door playing under the watch of their
day-care teachers -- with the air smelling as though the little town had just
been the victim of chemical warfare.
The
headache is coming now, and I'm getting ready to meet
it.
(Slight verbal errors corrected, June 16, 2014.)
*Alluding to the obvious date of May, 2012 -- as in "'younger' than I am now, in 2014" -- cited immediately prior to this statement -- poking fun at myself.
My shoulder had felt a bit strange as I'd reached forward to put my items on the checkout line at the supermarket; my arm later became immobilized, with sharp pain. My kind neighbor, Nancy (thank you, Nancy, again!), saved the day for me by bringing over the magnesium oil spray she'd carefully researched. Upon spraying it on the shoulder, I began gradually to regain movement there. Although I had the shoulder checked out by the M.D. (above) to verify that there was no injury to the joint, I never needed the anti-inflammatory medication he prescribed. The magnesium oil pulled me through.
Cheers!
~ Carolyn
***********************************
(Slight verbal errors corrected, June 16, 2014.)
*Alluding to the obvious date of May, 2012 -- as in "'younger' than I am now, in 2014" -- cited immediately prior to this statement -- poking fun at myself.
My shoulder had felt a bit strange as I'd reached forward to put my items on the checkout line at the supermarket; my arm later became immobilized, with sharp pain. My kind neighbor, Nancy (thank you, Nancy, again!), saved the day for me by bringing over the magnesium oil spray she'd carefully researched. Upon spraying it on the shoulder, I began gradually to regain movement there. Although I had the shoulder checked out by the M.D. (above) to verify that there was no injury to the joint, I never needed the anti-inflammatory medication he prescribed. The magnesium oil pulled me through.
Cheers!
~ Carolyn
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