After walking the dogs in Clare at lunchtime, I drove back onto the drive to take Edwin's place as he was to be away for a few days. Ann came running out, phone to her ear. "You'll have to park back on the road," she said. "Edwin's coming back."
Today, Edwin should have been in Denmark. He left Cambridge and the train to London. Only after boarding the Heathrow express did we learn he had had a disagreement with the friend he was flying out to stay with. He got off at the first terminal and caught the next train back.
Thursday, 13 September 2018
Monday, 10 September 2018
Someone doesn't like the music of MRI
A call from the hospital to go to MRI came the next day, as
there was a cancellation. Edwin took me in as Ann can't drive with her
plastered arm. Three hours later I was in a theatre gown under the great
magnetic tunnel, ear plugged and headphones on listening to Abba at full
volume, to drown the clicks thumps and strange buzzing of the pulsing power
sweeping my bladder. It took about 35 minutes, but they wouldn’t share the
results.
In the second scanner was a lady who went in with me. I know
she was 84, because she had to give her date of birth. She was in a wheel
chair, and very deaf – her daughter kept shouting the questions and
instructions to her, before helping her from the chair to the MRI bed. She has
scarcely laid down, when she started screaming and refused to continue, so they
had to wheel her out again. Edwin said her daughter was furious because she’d
wasted her time – not to mention the lost MRI time for another needy patient.
They gave me the appointment for a CAT scan while I was
there, so two days later Mary-Anne drove me in again for that. Again, they
refused to show me the pictures or discuss it. And I thought they were trying
to become more transparent and share patient details with we “customers” – I horrid
name for a secretive service.
Thursday, 6 September 2018
A Dismal Day
It was not the best of days. Edwin took me to hospital, Ann
being unable to drive. The unit on the urology ward is new: the Johanna Finn
Diagnostic Unit. The wall plaque tells us it was opened by the one Johanna Finn,
just a week or two ago. Ms Finn must be well thought of – usually these units
are named after former great surgeons. LinkedIn describes her as a CX at West
Suffolk, but don’t explain the term, which seemingly can mean “Customer
Experience” or “Chief Executive”. Perhaps she sat on the name selection
committee, and someone put her name forward to save any arguments.
The waiting room was filled with rows of elderly men, all
looking solemn and concerned and uncomfortable. One, clearly more tense than
the others, rose to speak “in confidence” to the receptionist. “Can I be allowed
to go to pee?” he pleaded. “I’m bursting and I can’t wait.”
“No,” she replied. “You have to have a full bladder. You’ll
have to cross your legs”.
I said, “I think that’s good advice for all of us,” and
certainly there was a lot of wriggling and a number of looks of grim
determination. But she did agree to go through and see where he was on the
list, and managed to get him in next. He came out grinning like a school boy,
and went behind the counter to touch her shoulder and thank her. I thought he
had come alone as he walked to the door, but then an even older man, stooping
over a stick, got up and went out with him.
“He’s a funny escort,” I mused, “he doesn’t look fit to care
for anyone.”
“They’re a gay couple,” Edwin explained. “It’s sweet.”
Gradually men were called in, and left, generally looking
relieved and smiling. Then my turn came. The radiologist was white-coated, brisk
and efficient. “Lie on your right side,” she commanded as the cold jelly slid
across, looking for one kidney, then the other. She turned me to the screen. “Those
are the kidneys,” she pointed out. They both have cortical cysts, but that’s
normal at your age. No masses.” Then she lay me on my back and scanned the
bladder. Her silence was an ominous portend. “Right that’s all done,” she said.
“You can go back to the waiting room.”
The surgeon was a turbaned Sikh, and clearly both knowledgeable
and confident. “Do you know what’s involved?” he asked.
“Well, I did six months' house surgery on a GU ward,” I said
guardedly, “so I did a lot of catheterisations, but I always hoped I would
never have to go through one.”
He did the necessary, but I can’t pretend it wasn’t painful –
like having a knitting needle pushed up, with sharp pains all the way. Then
when it was over, he turned me to face the screen, “There’s a growth,” he
explained. “You will need to come in to have it removed. Do you have a relative
here you would like present?”
I said, “Yes, my son, Edwin. You’ll spot him. He’s the only
young one, with a beard.” The nurse went out to call him.
Edwin later told me he knew it was bad news when she put her
head round the door and called his name. “I thought, ‘I’m not on their list!’”,
and looked round hoping there was another Edwin. But there wasn’t one. When we came
out, I was the only one told to sat down, and given a pad to fill out all my details.
Everyone in the room looked sympathetic, but relieved that it wasn’t them.
We went for a meal in the evening, to the Red Lion at
Horseheath. There was nothing on the menu for Ann or Edwin that was both
gluten-free and vegetarian, so we retired to the bar to finish our drinks
before moving on to the local Indian. Then the waitress came through with a
hand-written list the chef had drawn up, of dishes he could put together for
them, so we all trooped back in.
The food was wonderful, and we decided to
split a bottle of wine. The waitress said the wine would be complementary, as
an apology for not having a suitable menu, so the dismal day finally ended on a
good and positive note, and I returned home to a good dose of my favorite medicine:
Bruichladdich Islay Barley, at 50% proof and unwatered – as sweet as honey dew,
and the very best amnesiac.
Wednesday, 5 September 2018
The cystoscope awaits.
Death
is the price we pay for life. It is non-negotiable and paid in full equally,
whatever the living brought. I await my
scan and cystoscopy dreading the discomfort and unknown results equally,
aware that fear or hope changes nothing. The outcome is dictated by fate's
throw, but gives me pause in a hectic schedule to gather morbid thoughts like
these.
Ann sought to distract me by putting the TV on. It opened with an advert for the MacMillan Nursing Fund - "support someone you love through cancer". Oh oh! Then the news item came on about the wonderful life of Radio 4 presenter Rachael Bland, who has just died at the age of 40 from breast cancer. Double oh oh! With Ann's arm in plaster, and her swollen bruised eyes, she cannot drive, so Edwin will take me to the OP for the scan and cystoscopy.
Sunday, 2 September 2018
A Tsunami of Trouble
Yesterday became surreal. We took the two grandchildren to
London for the day, to sample an Escape Room and a special tea on Park Lane. We
arrived at St Pancras platform when Edwin got a call: “This is the Escape Room.
There has been an incident. A woman has been stabbed outside the building on
the Caledonian Road, and the road is cordoned off.” Sure enough, the police tape
would not let us enter the scene of crime, so after a long detour we entered
Caledonian Road from the other end. The police finally escorted us through the
cordon to the Escape Room door with minutes to spare from our time slot. But "Revenge of the Sheep" was one of the best Escape Rooms we have done, although one of the
padlocks had jammed and the controller had to come in with a massive set of
bolt cutters to clip it off! and we completed it (with a little help) thanks to
two very observant young girls.
Then, walking back up the Caledonian Road to the tube, Ann
caught her foot and fell splayed out on the pavement. I saw her strike her
head, and her glasses were scratched and very bent. But as she tried to sit, we
could see her right hand swollen and distorted with the finger twisted out at
an unnatural angle. I told Edwin to call us a taxi at once, and asked him to
complete the day with the girls, they being instructed not to let him out of
their sight, then asked the taxi driver to take us to the best A&E. He took
us to UCH on Gower Street, and despite the crowd on a Saturday afternoon, they
could not have given better of more prompt treatment. The Senior Nurse did the
reduction and straightening under local, then plastered the whole thing with
“an Edinburgh Gutter Slab”, possibly named for a technique developed to treat
all the Scottish drunks who fell in gutters and fractured fingers! The repeat
X-ray showed good position, and we were sent home with a referral letter for
WSH. The virtual X-ray images would be sent automatically – one benefit of
modern technology.
Finally, at home again, with the girls about ready for bed,
Edwin came in and said my cousin Ed Marston of Paonia, Colorado, had died
suddenly from complications of West Nile fever. He and his wife Betsy were wonderful
people, always a joy to be with, and so full of life and vigour. Troubles
certainly do come as great tsunamis, to attack and overwhelm on all fronts simultaneously.
Saturday, 1 September 2018
The Cry of Prostatic Anguish
Sex is a powerful hypnotic. Pre-coitus is tension, desire, shaking,
like the symptoms of any craving. Then with achievement, the whole body relaxes,
and the smile of peace and pleasure descends as of a great accomplishment, and
one slips away in sleep as deep as after a day of fruitful toil. The smile would remain throughout the following day, my step a
little lighter, my head a little higher. It was the narcotic to which I was
addicted, and yearned to return for my next fix.
Today, all is still. Nothing stirs but the frustration of
unfulfilled desire, for impotence has struck. It is the great pain of age,
adding mocking anguish to the already ailing body. It is not a happy prospect, unhelped
by unbidden frustration for my wife also, who bears the brunt of my pain.
Next week I go to hospital for cystoscopy and a scan, so this
now is the triple blow, adding to the first of prostatism and haematuria, and
to the second of having knowledge of all that may be involved. For as a post-grad medical
student, I spent six months on a GU ward in my surgical house job, inserting
catheters and peering through the telescope attachments of cystoscopy tubes, assisting
the surgeon as he cut or fried the tissue.
Now the only morning rise is to the toilet for a 4 a.m. pee, and watch as it dribble in the pan, and hope all is voided before I pull up the pyjama pants. The frustrations of age are endless, and seem to grow with the lengthening shadows, assuaged only by writing this in the pre-dawn of another restless night.
Sunday, 10 December 2017
Brexit – the view from Hundon
In Hundon, Brexit just might
not be happening. For us, travel to Europe is travel to foreign parts, whether
or no we’re in the EU. France will remain across the channel; Germany the home
of Steins and Frankfurters; Spain a land of package tours; and Italy will still
be celebrated for creating pasta and pizza. For us, politicians are seen in the
news, not in the village hall, and no debates were aired in our village. We see
no immigrants, and export-import is a cover for James Bond. Prices go up or
down on the whim of distant Sheiks, while cars are mostly what the local garage
has available when the old one fails its test.
So what will happen
after 2019? Passports will still be required to cross the English Sea; the
queue at Schiphol will not shorten; the security checks not lessen; the wait
for luggage as long as before. Perhaps the duty-free outlets will reopen at
Callais and boats will sail full of day trippers flooding the on-board shop. All
will be settled in the distant rules of London and Brussels. We shall have a
new Prime Minister and cabinet, but in Hundon all will continue unchanged with
the same dogs being walked and the same faces in the pub and the shop. The
garden will need tending, the hedge cutting, the dustbins emptying and the cars
cleaning, and in Hundon, Brexit will seem irrelevant.
Then why remain I so
angry with the process? So wound up that I gnash my teeth at the childlike
attempt at negotiation our government demonstrates? Perhaps because a better
job could be done by any one of the Apprentice contestants, including those
that leave in the first programmes. It is demeaning to see the total concession
to every demand the EU makes. The rules should have been argued at the commencement:
parallel talks, or no talks. Not all this rubbish about agreeing to everyone of
their demands before they will move to Phase II. What negotiation is this? Ahhh
– I feel my blood pressure rising again. I’d better sign off and sit down before
I boil.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)