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- Newsgroups: alt.peeves
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.encore.com!csar!foxtail!sdd.hp.com!decwrl!decwrl!netcomsv!netcom.com!rickg
- From: rickg@netcom.com (Rick Gordon)
- Subject: Peevetown General Hospital: Take 2
- Message-ID: <1992Nov5.233033.5996@netcom.com>
- Followup-To: alt.peeves
- Organization: Netcom - SF Bay, Cal Northifornia
- Date: Thu, 5 Nov 1992 23:30:33 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
-
- The Emergency Room around midnight of a Saturday in midsummer is one
- of the most relentlessly educational places you can find, with new
- insight into the rendability of human flesh available at every tick
- of the clock. A Sunday evening in November, the time chosen for me,
- is statistically much more likely to be boring. And so it was.
-
- We arrived around 8PM and walked right up to the main desk to register
- my complaint. Nobody in line ahead of me, no other non-staff humans
- in the whole place, as far as I could see. Mrs. Gordon addressed the
- woman behind the desk and pared the reason for our visit to its
- essence: "I brought my husband in here because he can't breathe," she
- said. I looked at the woman with a self-deprecating shyness which I
- hoped would imply at least the possibility of some hyperbole in my
- wife's diagnosis ("I am breathing, after all, as you can see," is
- what I intended to convey). "We called," summarised Mrs. Gordon.
-
- After signing some small number of forms (which would no doubt leave
- the hospital legally innocent in the event one of its employees
- blundered spectacularly into the headlines to my detriment), I was
- shown to an examination room and given a flimsy nightshirt to put on.
- The ER attending physician came in soon after, clipboard in hand, to
- begin the investigation. After I had recounted the facts in the case
- he decided a little inhalation therapy was in the cards for me that
- night. "Just to be safe," he said, "we're going to keep you busy
- here for a little while." At that moment a distant thunderclap could
- be heard, echoing away to gloomy portent only.
-
- Next I was visited by the tech who takes blood samples. He had a little
- cart with all manner of paraphernalia inside. On top of the cart was a
- translucent plastic box about the size of a loaf of bread, within which
- rested his Instruments of sanguinary extraction. A piece of masking
- tape at the front of the box had the legend "JESUS" marked in blue ink.
- I looked at his nametag: a match.
-
- "So, do you want to give me some blood for the lab?" I would have thought
- in unnecessary to include the ultimate destination of my contribution, but
- a look into that expressionless face convinced me that his supervisor had
- stressed to him the importance of separating any personal interest of his
- own from the task at hand. "Sure," I said amiably, and offered him my
- forearm. He wrapped the upper part with a tight rubber tube, thumped on
- candidate veins with his fingers while taking aim with his tiny lance.
- I gave my blood to Jesus that night and never looked back.
-
- The inhalation therapist arrived with a satchel of hoses, mouthpieces,
- and drugs. He connected one hose to an oxygen line, snaked it through
- some plumbing in his bag, and attached the other end to my mouth.
- "Breathe deeply and evenly, this'll help relax your throat," he said.
- Mixed with the oxygen, he explained, was some chemical which encouraged
- blood flow, which could be monitored by the springloaded cap he then
- placed over my right index finger. As I inhaled this medicinal air
- he asked some of the same questions the ER doc had asked, although he
- did phrase most of his inquiries so that they could be answered without
- excessive verbiage. It's hard to be eloquent with a plastic hose
- fitting in your mouth, after all.
-
- After a few minutes of this, he asked, "Could you give me a good strong
- cough now?" Being the Subject of this investigation I complied as best
- I could, offering up a phlegmish obbligato with enthusiasm.
-
- "Oh, Christ, not again," I thought but could not say, as my throat closed
- off the only passage to my lungs in a seamless grip. I made pointing
- gestures at my mouth while shaking my head from side to side. The
- inhalation therapist understood, of course, and began rummaging in his
- bag for something. He called out the door for something, advised me to
- relax. I did my best, but I couldn't help feeling instantly disheartened
- as the seconds ran away.
-
- Next: Spending the night in the House of Pain.
-
- --
- Rick Gordon | "She Broke My Heart So I Busted Her Jaw"
- rickg@netcom.com | --- One of those country songs you never hear anymore
-