Category: Life

  • A doctor’s kid goes to the medic

    “Never tell them where it hurts. Keep your bullet safe inside.” Richard Buckner, Devotion and Doubt.

    I’m a physician’s daughter. Any shred of hypochondria was ridiculed out of me. My dad treated even minor injuries with disrespect.

    Dad: “You twisted your ankle? Let me see.” (takes ankle and wrenches it)

    Me: (whimpers in pain)

    Dad: “Not broken!”

    I twisted my ankle a lot on the rock-covered beaches along the Georgian Bay shore. I fell for this re-twisted ankle trick way too many times before I learned that if a limb wasn’t half severed, hanging limply, or obviously disfigured, I shouldn’t bother complaining.

    For the most part, I’ve been healthy, so this trained disinterest in my own bumps, bruises, and pain hasn’t been much of a hindrance. When I had a tumor, however, that irritated the nerves in my left hip so much I could no longer walk home a bit over a mile from work, I took way too long to complain loudly enough that the doctors figured out I needed surgery to remove a (completely benign) dermoid tumor the size of a grapefruit. Also, I was really ashamed that my husband needed to pick me up and drive me home when I couldn’t walk. Writing that out sounds pretty ridiculous, but that’s the truth of it. So, I’m working at being a bit kinder to myself.

    On the cruise, after a soak in a hot tub on the first night, I was walking back to my towel and shoes when I stepped on something. I reached down to brush a pebble off my foot and I pulled a little wedge of broken ceramic out of the sole of my foot. I tried to walk away, then I noticed I was leaving rather large bloody footprints on the tile. It wasn’t painful, nor was the cut wide, but it was deep and the foot bleeds.

    I got the attention of the pool attendant to mop up the circle of bloody prints. She asked if I wanted to go to the medical facility. I thought about it. In the room I had no antiseptic and not even a band aid. She gave me some gauze, and I put it on my foot, got my shoe on and walked down 8 flights of stairs to the medical facility. I had blood all over my right hand and wrist, and I curled my hand so as not to frighten anyone. I think I thought that the elevators would be more “public”.

    At the medical facility, the nurses clucked over me, placed my foot into a brown-red soaking liquid and gave me forms to fill out. I gave up my social security number, cabin number, and other numbers. I signed in several places. Yes, I would pay the “after hours” surcharge, yes, I would pay for the doctor visit. A soft spoken doctor arrived, pronounced I didn’t need stitches, taped the wound closed (“do not remove the tape until it falls off, don’t get it wet, shower with a plastic bag over your foot”). He gave me some extra wrapping for my foot, and the next day I got the summary of charges, $173 I could submit to my medical insurance.

    I felt grateful for the cleaned and taped up wound, grateful for not having to worry than it was worse than it was, or that neglect would have made it worse than it started out. I felt slightly guilty for the cost, for needing the help. There’s something about the shame and guilt associated with seeking help that makes me secretly wish against my own health – that makes me wish things were worse than they are to merit seeking help. I am getting better at this, I can reason out that seeking help isn’t a sign of weakness, but my emotions have yet to catch up.

  • Cruising in the Caribbean

    Sunshine on the Caribbean
    Dave’s grandfather John loves cruise vacations. He has been on something like 30 cruises with his wife. They couldn’t cruise at the end, her Alzheimer’s made traveling challenging and unsafe. Since her death, we’ve gone on two cruises with him. The first was especially hard for him, as all the memories of their time together came flooding back. This one was easier, though we had some medical mishaps (I sliced open my foot on the first night, he caught a stomach bug).

    We enjoyed our trip on Royal Caribbean’s Enchantment of the Seas. It was the same cruise line and the same ship as our previous trip, and so we re-encountered some of the folks that helped make our trip special the first time, especially Mihai from Romania who recognized and immediately fussed over John in Romanian (John speaks Romanian).

    Things I liked:

    • enforced indolence. On a day at sea, after an hour or so at the gym, there really is nothing to do except relax, read, talk, eat, etc. Even the stopovers were relaxed (see photo below from our day on CocoCay in the Bahamas).
    • the international staff. Fun to meet folks from Goa, from Romania, from the Phillipines….
    • the amazing cheery helpfulness. They must have some fascinating hiring criteria. We met nothing but patient, sunny folks who sincerely seemed to enjoy taking great care of us.

    Dave and Nate enjoy CocoCay

  • Take This Quiz: Are You an Under-buyer or an Over-buyer? | Zen Habits

    my unread book stockpileTake This Quiz: Are You an Under-buyer or an Over-buyer? | Zen Habits

    This took me about 30 seconds. I’m definitely an under-buyer.

    I revel in open, uncluttered space, get annoyed at piles o’stuff, don’t stockpile, and, consequently, I short myself on staples now and then (no milk or no cereal for a few days in a row, having to scrounge unconventional “breakfast items” in our cupboard).

    I do depart from my general tendency in a few specific situations. I stockpile books, magazines, lined journals (filled and new blank ones), plus cosmetics (from Lush and from dermadoctor) that I can’t purchase locally. I think the cosmetic stockpiles come from trying to minimize the cost and annoyance of shipping. As for books, I can’t help myself. Oh, and if Floyd tolerated other kitties, I’d probably stockpile cats too.

    Are you an under or an over-buyer? and where do you depart from your general tendency?

  • Catalog Choice – Eliminate unwanted catalogs you receive in the mail

    catalogsTis the season to purchase gifts. It’s also the season for carrying a pound of catalogs to the recycling bin each day. Those catalog folks do have my number – they know I purchase clothing, and shoes, they know I like wine, like outdoorsy stuff, yoga, and workout gear. I get pounds of catalogs at my house.

    I feel guilty about the catalogs that do have me pegged, like I somehow asked to be papered in catalogs offering hiking boots, backpacks, and yoga gear. The ones that never fit me, though, simply annoy me. And, for those stores I like, I’d rather let them store “my” catalog on their Internet rather than store a printed copy at my home.

    So, I was grateful to read I can rid myself of unwanted catalogs by stopping them at the source, instead of recycling them at the end, after someone has printed, mailed, and then walked them to my door. I signed up for Catalog Choice and entered in this week’s batch of unwanted catalogs. I’ll keep declining catalogs as they come, and then wait for the day I don’t have to toss them (apparently about 10 weeks away).

    Catalog Choice – Eliminate unwanted catalogs you receive in the mail

  • Practice makes permanent

    So, I have been straying from my path, not going to satsang at my local meditation center, wondering what the point of the chants and the gatherings are, feeling disconnected. I have let that question “why should I go?” rattle around in my head for a little while, and I just rediscovered the answer.

    Tonight, when I sat down for meditation, I noticed a few extra soundtracks playing in my head: the music I had been listening to in the car when I went to get groceries, the football game my husband watched as I plinked around on the computer next to him, the grandiose or pessimistic fantasy du jour, and my usual planning channel, full of to-dos and shoulds and schedules and stress. When I closed my eyes and that’s all I heard, I had to reconsider how I was filling my time, filling my mind. That’s the gift of meditation – the chance to notice my patterns and to choose to maintain them or to let them go.

    (more…)

  • Gone modular again

    Flor in the studyMy obsession with modular floorcovering continues. After some delay and vacillation, I replaced the 12 year old Pier 1 clearance-special dhurrie rug in our study with Flor Copper Solid Ground. I was tired of kicking out the puckers in the old rug when I was trying to use the room for yoga. I also never liked the “southwestern” color scheme and pattern. This stuff feels great underfoot, cleans like a dream, and can be hand-cut to fit any size or shape. My favorite part about it is how it stair-steps around the file cabinet (lower right) and it also stair-steps under the desk (not shown).

    I might replace this photo with one taken in daylight – the ones with flash looked weirdly flat and this one is blurry because I was breathing during the exposure.