Mon Nov 8, 2004

More than you wanted to know, or see, of my hospital stay

Hello all. Thank you again for your prayers, good vibes, and well wishes on my behalf yesterday. I’m sure they helped. As it turned out, my three days of anxiety ended up being much worse than the actual procedure. It was much more pleasant than having my gallbladder removed, that’s for sure. Here I am before the happy drugs…

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(knitting away on Marianna’s poncho in an attempt to relax. I wanted Nate to stand up and get a head on picture which would most likely be more flattering, and so you could see my nifty new basket that is stepping in for my regular one, which currently reeks of smoke damage. For whatever reason, it didn’t end up happening.)

And after…

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I have no pride. Does anyone look good in the hospital? Blah. And you all get to see it.

And finally, the comment that shocked my doctor.

The hospital had plenty of advance notice that they were getting a needle-phobe yesterday. My referring specialist sent it with my files. I let the woman in admitting know that I wanted oxygen and why. I happened to see a note attached to my chart in all caps and red ink alerting anyone who might come near me that I have issues. (I’m so happy when people listen). So it was up in the air whether or not to give me an IV for sedation, or to have me suck it up and take the injection unaltered. (I don’t understand this in the least, but someone thought it was a sound option). In my pre-procedure consultation, the doctor performing the injection discussed with me the possibility of proceeding without sedation, and thereby avoiding the dreaded IV. It seemed as though we were moving in that direction when I asked my final question.

“How long,” I ask, “am I going to have to sit still and keep my wits while you’re puncturing me?”

“About five minutes”, he replies, looking rather strange. I sit and ponder for a brief second.

“I will pass out,” I declare. Within seconds, I was on my back, I had oxygen on my face, and they were administering an IV. I guess that made it easy. Next, I was given happy drugs, and all was well with the world.

I have little memory of the procedure itself. Nate was in the room, so he helped to remind me of some of the conversation that was had. Apparently, I was hungry, and started listing restaurants I’d want to eat at when we were finished. What I remember is yelling, “THANK YOU!” to the staff as I was being wheeled out of the operating room and back to recovery despite assurances from the nurse that the doctor would visit me shortly, and I could tell him then. He did, and I did, and then he said that once I asked about being PUNCTURED, he knew I needed sedation. Ya think? Nate said later that he was desperately hoping I would be sedated because I was swinging my legs, drumming my fingers, and looked nothing shy of terrified. UPDATE- Just so it’s clear, I LOVED my doctor. I’d go to him again, he was great. The staff was just trying to give me options because they knew I hated IV’s. I’m glad they took the time to discuss it with me, to be honest. I wasn’t being muscled into anything.

So there you have it.

And now, about knitting. For reasons I don’t feel like getting into, but related to the issue affecting my basket, mom’s sleeve that needs to be fixed is wet and drying right now. It needed to be washed, and I figured I’d rather do it before frogging so I could reknit with nice, clean smelling yarn. So that project is on hold. Mari’s poncho is also on hold until I have opportunity to try it on her and determine if I correctly adjusted the pattern. That will happen later this week. I am at an impasse with my WIP’s. I guess I’ll work on Nate’s clogs today, and I’ll post a picture of the groovy basket tomorrow.

Thank you again for your support. You all rock.

8 Responses to “More than you wanted to know, or see, of my hospital stay”

  1. Niter (Anita) Says:

    I am glad everything went well! I did not get a chance to stop by yesterday to see your post and to wish you warm thoughts! I hope you feel better soon!

  2. Denise Says:

    PUNCTURED! I laughed out loud, I can just imagine the doctor’s face. I’m glad everything went OK for you.

  3. Maddie Says:

    I am SO glad to hear that all went well. You are so brave. Needle. Spine. That ain’t no little thing.

    Take Care!

  4. Suzy Says:

    Whew! Glad it went well, and you have that over with 🙂

    Suzy

  5. Jenny Says:

    I dunno….the second photo looks like a smirk to me! Guess the stuff worked it’s magic on you!! You’re lucky your husband could be with you,…..my husband is more like you, and physically would have found it hard to be in the AREA! Really Laura, since I have been reading your blog, it’s more like LUCKY Miss Finch, than POOR Miss Finch!!
    Glad you came through fine!

  6. FYRKRKR Says:

    It amazes me that some people in our health care industry passed HIGH school much less MED school!

    Does this mean you don’t want to try acuPUNCTURE anytime soon? I’m glad you are feeling better!

  7. LisaPrit Says:

    Your hospital story cracked me up. I love your use of the word puncture!
    I have a question about the hat. How do you keep the different yarns tight at the beginning of each color change. Mine is looking very sloppy.
    Good luck and get plenty of rest.
    Oh yea, were did all the smoke damage come from? I must have missed that post.

  8. Elizabeth Says:

    As it happens I came across your blog sort of serendipitously and read about your having had a gall bladder operation. I am having one of those in a couple of weeks. I hope you are very much better. I have hopes that I can knit in the hospital, but it has to be nervous knitting (the kind that doesn’t require much concentration)

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