Showing posts with label hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hospital. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Girlihood - True Story

During my morning routine, I had a flashback to the time I went to the ER after hemorrhaging out of my yoodle-hoo for a couple of hours. I’m not talking about a heavy monthly here. I was gushing the  regular stuff and thoroughly soaking an extra-absorbant every five or ten minutes.  

Two things about that visit: First, the doctor who came in looked at me and asked me where my mom was. Second, the same doctor had a treat ‘em and street ‘em attitude which led to a dramatic show-down in the middle of the corridor on my way out the door. 

This was about 16-17 years ago, so I can’t recall every tiny detail, but I do remember the high points, and the doctor’s self-important attitude that just pissed me off. 

When he came into the room and asked me where was my mom I shrugged and told him she was dead. The look of shock and concern on his face…my mom probably snorted her Otherside coffee right out of her nose. I really think she would have been proud of my timing. I told him I was old enough to be in the ER without my mom, and he looked at the chart again and asked me to identify myself. He said something like, you don’t look 33.

Typical. That was the typical thing people would say to me back then. He was right. And I said something like, nonetheless, I still am.

It makes people uncomfortable when I do that, even though I say it with a smile.

I think he was probably around 33 himself because that’s how old he looked, but I try not to judge based on looks alone. 

Later, he wrote me a prescription for some hydrocode or oxy-whatever, I can’t recall, and I got upset because he was releasing me without examining me. Somebody had come along and drained an artery, but there hadn't been another word about that. I was there for hemorrhaging out of my she-bang. I knew how much juicy flow I had lost. He never laid a finger on me. Never mentioned an ultrasound Just wrote the script and have a nice day. 

I was so confused when the nurse gave it to me. 

Will this stop my bleeding? 

No, but it’ll take the pain away. 

OHHHH, well, then I’ll still exsanguinate, I just won’t give a shit because I won’t feel it. What the hell?! How will these drugs even affect me? I’ve never taken these before. I need to be clear-headed to do my job and continue paying for the insurance that pays these hospital bills. Why didn’t the doctor examine me? Why hasn’t anybody answered my questions about my red cell counts? 

These are the questions I was asking the nurse. And the nurse didn’t have any answers. The nurse was not a doctor. Least of all was the nurse the one who decided to let me go out the door without an examination.  So the nurse tried to calm me down. I did not want to be calm. 

He went to get the doctor, and the doctor came back all huffy, not understanding why I hadn’t taken my prescriptions and hauled myself out of there. I was taking up space in his hospital when there was a whole bunch of people who needed treatment. 

Yes, I know, I told him. I’m one of them! 

I’ve already treated you, he said.

Prescribing drugs is not treatment. And how can you treat me when you don’t know what’s wrong with me?

At some point I gathered up my things, and started down the hallway, and I guess that bothered him because he was trying to tell me how much more important all his other patients were, and they had been waiting for a long time to be seen, and he was following me down the corridor yelling this stuff at me and I’m crying at this point, and before I went out the exit doors that went into the waiting room I turned and faced him and said something like, YES, they are important, and I hope they get a better doctor than I got! 

And he realized at that point that everybody working in the ER had paused in their work to fixate on our conversation, and he turned beet red, and there I was seeing my moment. He touched my arm in a gentle way, asking me to come back into the room to discuss it, but I was on a roll at that point. 

I came here for help. I didn’t come in here for drugs. I’m hemorrhaging. People die when they hemorrhage. I don’t want to die. I want to find out why I’m hemorrhaging. I didn’t even get examined. All I got was a prescription for drugs I don’t want to take. No offense to all the really important people in the waiting room, but I got here first, and I need help! 

There was a woman who worked there who came up to me and said it’s okay, honey. You don’t want to have this fight here. He’s not worth it. And it didn’t take me even a nanosecond to realize she thought we were having a lover’s spat. And he realized it too. 

At that point, we were both embarrassed. 

He did take me back to the room and answered all my questions and asked more questions. But by that time, our doctor/patient relationship was on rocky ground. 

A couple of months and two transfusions later I got a partial hysterectomy, but I never saw that guy again. 

It was a tumor, by the way, the size of a baked potato. Not malignant, just abnormal, but holy hell, an ultrasound would have found it. 


Friday, October 11, 2013

That's Her.

Whoa! It's been nine days since I posted here!
That seems impossible, since I have been reading and writing like crazy.
I've been saving all my fiction for my creative writing class this semester.  I feel as if I'm depriving my Blogger friends of  the terrifically horrific "October Specials" I've scrawled in my notebooks, but it is for a good cause, I assure you. ("Good Cause" amounts to me getting an 'A' in writing class, and that's all there is to that.)

You may or may not know that October is the month of my mom. Today is her birthday, and twenty short days from now will be her "deathday." Most of the shorts I've written lately have centered around motherhood, but none of them have been about my mother. I wrote a little bit of a shocking impromptu story in class the other night, and now my entire class probably thinks my mom was some horrible bitch who didn't love me, but that's not true. (She loved me.)

You want to know a little secret about our family? We like purple spiders. They mean love.

When my mom was alive, she would watch that TV show "Crossing Over, with John Edwards." In the intro, he explained that his dead mother would communicate her love for him with white birds. My mom decided our talisman would be purple spiders. (This decision had something to do with her sister and thrift store shopping, but that is another story.) So now, every time I see a purple spider, I think of my mom. (Did she know ahead of time that she would die on Halloween--a time of the year when purple spiders seem to be everywhere?)

I remember when she was in the hospital. Toward the end I was spending all my spare time camped out in her room. She tried to stay awake, but she slept most of the time. For some reason, I felt like I needed to be there for every waking moment. I guess I was trying to hold on to her as much as possible. I knew I'd have to let her go eventually, but I was going to soak up every tidbit of time I could get with her. She was dying, there was no denying that, but I'd be damned if I was going to sit back and wait for a phone call from some disembodied voice of some indifferent doctor. I needed to be there with her.

One day, I went down to the gift shop for a little while to stretch my legs and take in some different scenery. They had a string of the large, scary-looking purple spiders on the clearance rack. I snatched them and took them up to her room. Carefully, while she was sleeping, I arranged them so it seemed the spiders were crawling across her feet.

The nurse accused me of wanting to kill her with a heart attack, but my mom smiled when she opened her eyes and saw them.

"So you like spiders?" the nurse asked, dryly.

"I like purple ones," my mom said with a smile and then slipped back into sleep.

In the months after her passing, we would actively search for the purple spiders. We'd see them, and one of us would shout it out, as if we'd come across some rare artifact never seen before by human eyes. The fact is, there are more of them around than I realized. They're on greeting cards and in cartoons and on posters. For a while, it seemed we couldn't get away from them. Even our friends started bringing them to us in the form of jewelry and hair clips and decorative knick-knacks and what-nots. There was a huge, fuzzy, bendable spider perched in the back dash of my car for about a year. (His name was Hector, and I have no idea where he went. I only know that he's gone.)

Nowadays, we're not so quick to scoop up the spiders when we see them. We just smile to ourselves and move on with life, knowing that my mom is out there, somewhere, still loving us. I like to think it's the completely unexpected sightings that are truly messages from her. The ones that throw me off a little, you know? Like that purple car I saw on Georgia Street, the one called a Spyder.

That's my mom. That's love.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Hip Stir

This was the plan:

I was going to grasp my new found (if only temporary) freedom, jump in the car and go see the fam bam up in Dumas. After a day of surprising folks who might not necessarily want to shift their Sunday plans just for me, I was going to head over to New Mexico and check out some of the scenery there. I've got a couple of friends over there who might've sat with me for a drink or two, and then I was going to go from there in no specific direction-just blow with the breeze, you know?

My school work is all caught up, and I don't have to go back to work for another week. I haven't had two minutes to breathe for a solid year, so I intended to enjoy this particular vacation as if it were the only one I'll ever have.

But of course, as Robbie Grey's always reminding me, if you'd like to make your deity laugh, just make plans.

This is what happened:

I got the call yesterday afternoon. Grandma (the one in Dumas, the one I was planning to visit today) broke her damn hip.
So the hospital there decided to send her here to Amarillo for hip replacement surgery.
So that's what we're doing now.
Waiting for the surgery.

I just live a couple of blocks from here, so I hopped in the car and came right over. Aunt Brenda's here, taking care of things as usual, because she's the one in that immediate family who does those things. She's a real trooper, but she's starting her Pre-K summer school class tomorrow, so somebody else is going to have to step in for the morning shift.

That would be me, because I'm so handy living here, and I'm the one in my immediate family who does those kinds of things. I don't really mind. It's not like I had any plans or anything.

I imagine my Great Aunt Sherry will make it over here some time tomorrow, and my cousin Christy will also make an appearance. She's cool like that. I saw my uncles yesterday in the ER for a few minutes, and my cousin James is the one who let me know which hospital to invade.

I guess I'm getting the family visits after all.

I just wish I had a margarita too.