Showing posts with label covid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label covid. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2024

It was the best of times... it was the worst of times

Since my Janice has been off work since her first knee replacement surgery, things have been so splendid.  I am grateful for all the time we got to spend together throughout her recovery, even if we couldn't do a whole lot.  We were together.

We have a unique relationship in that we literally almost never fight (sadly, not a lot of folks believe us), and we have everything in common, really.  I had a bit of a mental breakdown/anxiety event on March 22 when I shaved my head of the hair I loved and cared for so much.  This means Janice had to deal with the fallout, as she always does.  But the fallout took a curious turn.

In the weeks that succeeded that month, I felt myself oddly begin to level off.  I attribute it to many things, and I'm sure there are many more I don't know of.  But I know people pray and send blessings my way when I express my dismay.  I am thankful for all of it, and I welcome it.

I gave the online life a pretty big hiatus during this time, too.  I was with my wife 24/7, and I wanted to do things together with her, and being online is physically isolating.  And it can be mentally brutal.  I'm living proof.  I've inflicted pain upon myself many times through the years.  That's okay, now.  I look back on this person I used to know... myself, or that version of me... and I imagine myself traveling through time and space to be there as I am today and comfort that guy.  I have sympathy for that person now, that person who was ME.  This outlook took a lifetime to acquire, and I'm still working on it.  But he endured so much in his life.  It's amazing that he got through so many storms.  I'm thankful he did, and does, because that 'he' is 'me'.

I say prayers pretty much at the end of every day, but maybe not the traditional prayers so much.  Sometimes I incorporate those, but I hesitate with each word I say as to mean it.  But I prefer to talk to God in language I'm more familiar with, and with utmost honesty.  There are so many religions and faiths in the world worthy of respect, but I respect no religion that espouses hatred, violence or revenge.  Although those types are usually on its extreme right fringes.  I realize the Catholic Church has blood on it's hands more than most.  But Catholicism at least managed to somewhat change with the times; although I think it's just about time for an overhaul.  Nonetheless, I deem myself Catholic, as an anchor to my belief system.  It doesn't mean I agree with everything in it.  Then it would be a cult.  An organization that does my thinking for me.  If I was told by the church to leave, I would, and go somewhere else that would take me.  But I'm not a rabble rouser, not like I used to be.  The passing years will do that to a person, if they're lucky.

But my moods changed, quite drastically.  I started watching some spiritual guide-types online, and my mind opened up almost like pulling rubber-backed drapes from a sunshiney window.  Maybe not quite as dramatic as that, but, you know.  Nonetheless, I noticed some kind of elevation. 

I subscribe to some science pages on social media, reputable ones without bias or spiritual leanings, because I have my own.  Although bias is really just an ego offshoot.  You prefer something over something else without trying both.  Remove your ego from any equation and the truth emerges.

But that can be a monumental task!  A person's ego is what tests the soul.  Deep in your heart you know what's right, but is your ego trying to negotiate an agreement, or looking to crush whatever comes up against it to sate itself?  Pride and vanity really went under the microscope for me through this ongoing journey, if you want to call it that.  Adjustments needed to be made.  I discovered this after shaving my head in March.  What on earth would drive me to do such self-destructive things?

My anxiety attack in March slapped me upside the head in a big way.  WAKE UP.  Wake up or you'll stop living.  This is unsustainable.  I left the house in a state of sadness and fury when I discovered Janice knew about Alexandra needing help, but no one told me.  My ego forced me to feel excluded.  I wasn't.  It's a minor detail in a minor story, that I apparently decided to virtually blow out of proportion, because my ego told me it was unacceptable.  My being in the dark on that situation was not a big deal.  But I made it one.  I inflicted upon myself the mental anguish of falsely being ostracized from my wife and daughter.  The molehill morphs into a mountain.

I had vanity problems of kind of the reverse sort... I wouldn't accept myself.  How I looked, how I talked, what I knew or didn't know, etc.  I used to look at myself with disgust in the mirror a little too often.  Until these spiritual guides reminded me in my head, "Revisit that person, and those events.  Would you, today, sit idly by without compassion while you watched what you were putting yourself through?  You would hug that person and try to help."  All of it true.  So it's time to make adjustments.

"I am who I am.  And that is enough."

I can't change the way people think.  I can't steer their universe.  (To me, if there are eight billion people on earth, then there are eight billion different human realities.)  All I can do is be the most compassionate and kindest person I can be, and if someone has a problem with any of it, that's just what it is.  Their problem.  Not mine.

As summer moved along, with mainly favorable weather, we did things together.  Somewhat limited, mind you, because Janice got her second knee replacement done only three months after her first one.  Recovery from the second surgery turned out to be significantly more trying than the first one.  I believe there was more extensive damage to the second knee that was done, thus the recovery will be longer and a bit more frustrating.  But she still wound up being further ahead in her recovery than most.  Nonetheless, the damp and humid summer weather began taking a toll on her arthritis on top of the healing knees.  "So what", she says.  She still wants to go for marathon walks and train at the gym.  She wants to get to 100%  ASAP, because just three months after her second surgery, she has to report for work.  There don't appear to be any programs in place to take care of people in situations like this.  Janice was stonewalled everywhere when she attempted to get benefits to cover for more healing time.  She needs six months per knee, but she will not get it.  And she has to endure the ramifications.

To top it off, the staffing situation where she works is shaky, at best.  These big box drug stores have installed self checkouts in their stores, subsequently allowing them to cut hours for their workers.  Staff began to dwindle.  Ultimately, there were two people running Janice's post office kiosk in her absence.  And one of them was Alexandra, who was the de-facto boss until her Mom got back, working.  It proved to be stressful on Alexandra at times.  She suffers from something of her own, some type of digestive disorder that no one can seem to diagnose.  It's hard enough finding someone who'll take it seriously.  She can't seem to get a gastro doctor who's willing to get to the bottom of it.  It's been over twelve years, and she still periodically throws up for up to hours for reasons she doesn't understand.  She has pains in her pelvis, and she's waiting to see a gyno.  It's been years that she's been waiting.  Anyone could understand that we're constantly worried for her.

Anyway, the post office's hours had to be shortened because of staffing issues.  Two people just aren't enough.  There are not enough in that store trained to work in the p.o., putting strain on the existing workers when there's shortages.  Nowhere is this more evident than since Janice was off.  Alexandra did a stellar job running operations despite all of this.  I'm telling you, that woman has untapped intellectuality.  

Knowing we were staring down the barrel at Janice's return to work, we wanted to get as much fun into summer as we could, although truthfully, just being together is fun enough.  We saw family several times at Caissie Cape, in August especially.  The summer air, the steaks and burgers and watermelon, the drinks and pot gummies... it appeared we might be able to handle the transition somewhat well, at least on a physical level.

I remember that Thursday late afternoon when we were in the car on our way to Costco.  I was at the traffic light on McLaughlin and Mortin waiting to turn left.  Something hit me.  Not the car, me.  I turned to Janice, and said:

"Things are going too good.  Too good.  Why are things going so well for us lately?  Ever since March things just steadily improved.  I'm happy, which is weird!"  I don't know what "born again" really means, but I think I've experienced the closest thing I ever have in the last few months.

"Something pretty bad is going to happen," I reasoned.

"I can feel it."

The next day, we planned on heading out to the Cape to see family, who were assembling for some summer vacation time.  The weather was great in August, as it usually is around here.  We met up with lots of folks I'd been waiting awhile to see again since last summer.  What a sweet crowd that night.  Everyone was in great spirits, everyone hugging each other, laughing, just enjoying the presence of each other.  It was especially great seeing my nephews Chris and Shawn and their families and catching up a little bit.  I'm so proud of those guys.  I worry about them, but I'm really happy with the men they turned out to be.  Really that goes for all of them.  

"We'll be back tomorrow and continue this!" we promised.  Janice was getting sore in the legs, no doubt her fibromyalgia acting up, or her knees, or both.  We got in the car and headed home on what transitionally became Saturday morning, the wee hours of September 1, which is my wife's birthday.  We'd made plans for what we were going to do and were looking forward to it.

We came in the house when we arrived, and pretty much headed straight up to the bedroom, our favorite place, where we can hunker down in bed and do anything we want.  We have a fridge, TV, blu ray player, laptops.... we're good.  It's a calming environment that we love to bask in.  MMH stays with us all the time, wherever we are is where he is.

Janice sat up suddenly while we were watching TV.  "You okay?  What's going on?"

"I don't know," she said, her breath beginning to quicken.  "I think something's up.  I'm not sure what's going on."

"You gonna be sick?" I inquired.  "Just lay down and take deep breaths."  I stroked her head and stayed close.  I'm beginning to worry.  Janice doesn't get felled by viruses very easily.  And she often can just fight them off.  But this was different, as we were to find out rather harshly.

She asked for a garbage bag as she sat up in bed again, and began quietly groaning.  I'm really worrying now, because she's going to be sick.  Anyone who knows me at all knows how terribly emetophobic I am - that is, I have a tremendous fear of vomiting.  When I know someone else is dealing with it, I immediately empathize, because it's pure hell to me.  I can't watch it though, or I might get sick myself.  

Janice got sick not long after.  Throwing up into the green garbage bag, incredibly violently, before getting a brief respite.  Then she went to the bathroom and got sick again.  And again.  It continued I would say on average every half hour to 45 minutes.  There were spurts where it looked like it was finally passing, only to crash again.  Gravol would not stay down.  Anything she drank did not stay down.  If it went down, it came up.  And each and every time she got sick, it was terribly, heart breakingly violent.  I cried several times out of sorrow from seeing her suffering, and there wasn't anything I could do to fix it.

"If this keeps up, I'm bringing you to outpatients," I warned her.  We have a disdain for going there, because our healthcare system is in shambles right now, especially post-Covid onset.  We could not have been more unprepared for this.  I'm increasingly worried here.  Then a spell would come where she was improving again.  It would be followed by more retching.

She encountered a spell of a few hours where she seemed to be on the mend, and I had to go do a reading at church that afternoon.  I didn't really want to leave her.  I never saw her get this sick in a long, long time, and what if she took a turn for the worse while I was gone?  She urged me to go, telling me she'll be alright.  It was only for an hour anyway.

After I'd stopped at the store to get a few things, I went home.  Janice informed me she'd been sick nearly the whole time I was gone.  Now a fever was showing up.  It was coming and going.  This is perplexing.... if she has a fever, how can this be a stomach virus?  I mean, I've had them all!  And I've never had a fever between vomiting rounds.  I began to take this even more seriously.

She would drink Gatorade to try to retain some electrolytes in her body after being so severely dehydrated, but that wouldn't stay down either.  The garbage bags of vomit began to multiply.
 
We would lie in bed at one point, facing each other, and I saw tears begin to flow from her eyes.  

"What's the matter?  Are you hurting somewhere?"

"I'm just so happy to have you!"  She said, tears streaming.  "I can't imagine dealing with something like this without you with me.  I'm so grateful God gave you to me!"

That turned out to be one of the sweetest, but heartbreaking, moments ever.  

On my side, my nerves are in tatters.  I can't take my cannabis oil because I don't want my judgment being compromised in a situation like this.  This formed somewhat of a microcosm of stress that was slowly, but unrelentingly, building.  

She got sick again.  

I swiftly got up and headed to the dresser.  "We're going to the hospital," I ordered.  There will be no "no" for an answer.  She resisted up to this point and it became not about choice anymore.  She cleaned up as best she could, grabbed a green garbage bag and we got in the car and went to outpatients.

We both thought, 'wonderful, we're going to outpatients on a Saturday night - it's gonna be Grand Central Station in there."  Well, it wasn't.  Shockingly enough, there were maybe a dozen folks there before us waiting.  On a Saturday night at the Moncton Hospital, you can be virtually assured it will be Grand Central.  But not tonight.

At triage, we asked if Janice could get a shot of Gravol or something to get her relief from vomiting.  They gave her Zofran, a bit of a heavier hitter against nausea and vomiting next to Gravol.  Her knees were really hurting.  Her legs were hurting   It was getting hard to walk.  Her lower legs in particular were beginning to swell.  At triage, her blood pressure was significantly elevated.  Despite all this, she was given a barf bag and told to wait.  We assumed we wouldn't have to wait long.  I mean, Janice is uncontrollably throwing up in a clear barf bag where she has to keep it for analysis, right there in the waiting room.  This continued for almost three hours.  All of the staff in the waiting area just seemed to turn a blind eye to her blatant suffering.  Even if it were a stranger, I would want this person in a bed.

Janice had knee surgery just three months prior - so it's understandable that she would need either Traumacet or Percocet to deal with that pain, both of which she has prescriptions for at home.  Her leg was sawed in half, for all intents and purposes, for knee replacement, after all.  She's to manage that pain for as long as it takes for up to six months.  Now that she can't keep meds in her, she was feeling more and more pain.  

After that three hour wait, we finally got called through the doors.  They took blood from her, but not without making a pincushion out of her, because her veins were virtually non-existent from being so dehydrated.  She continued to be sick. When all was said and done, she'd thrown up for up to 100 times.  That is the definition of hell to me.  It's also hell to watch Janice have to go through with this.  I was beside myself with anguish and fear.  Fear over what this will wind up being diagnosed as.

She was given intravenous saline after they amped up their dartboard game and had a port put in her arm.  They gave her Gravol this way, and it seemed to work.  But we've been strung on this yoyo before.

The first doctor to oversee Janice came to talk to us.  He said he believed it was just norovirus or something similar, because there's always something going around.  He said he'd keep her around for observation awhile to be sure she stabilizes.  We accepted this and waited.  

As the shifts changed, another doctor took over.  It appeared no two doctors in that ER wanted to agree with each other.  The next one that came along pondered that it might be her gall bladder.  Well, that made sense!  She had all the symptoms of gallstones.  We were kind of relieved, because we finally discovered the culprit, and that surgery is laparoscopic, so she'd be in and out of there, and case closed.  We began to breathe a little easier.  Not only that, but Janice doesn't have her tonsils or her appendix, so this would be the Triple Crown.

Janice finally got a room, after waiting in a chair by the nurse's station for hours with her IV hanging over her and a barf bag always in tow.  It was in there we saw the next doctor, number three.


And with a new doctor comes a new diagnosis.  This one had a more hair-raising one.  He said she likely had sepsis, poisoning of the blood from an infection.  Janice's high white cell count kept the doctors wondering why that was so.  We resolved with the idea that we caught it early if that's what it is, and now they can finally go after it.  

I assured Janice, under my rather rigid exterior, that now that they were finally onto this... again.... that finally we can look forward to the end of this.  Knowing full well in my head how serious sepsis can be.  Anyone who knows of it knows it's the last thing they'd want.

It was around two o'clock in the afternoon on that Saturday at that point.  I had to go home and take care of Marbles, as we'd been away for around 15 or so hours.  When I got in the car in the parking lot to go home, tears welled up in my eyes.  To the point it was rather difficult to drive.

I got through the door and saw MMH on the couch, meowing mightily to greet me home.  After a while, he seemed puzzled.  Where was Mom?  

And things unraveled from there.  I started breathing heavy.  Tears relentlessly dripping.  I felt my body shake, my hands rendered almost useless from the nervous descent.  Then with every exhaling breath, I loudly was groaning.  A deep breath in, dreadful groan out.  I lay on the bed and took deep breaths to try at least to gain my composure.  I picked up my rather useless cell phone to try to message Alexandra.  All this while I'm progressing toward hyperventilating with my groaning, shaking too much to use the cell phone.  I pulled out the laptop, and went on facebook, basically sending out a distress signal.  I would say that's somewhat out of character for me; I expressed in my status the frustration and anguish over the doctors' guessing games and the thought that I just might lose my wife to sepsis.  The chances of this were very real and looming over me like the darkest of storm clouds.  The long waiting room wait was looming ever more ominously now.

Pacing, hyperventilating and groaning continued as I looked for some reason or way to stop.  But how do I stop freaking out over potentially losing my angel?  Looking back now, this itself was getting to be bad.

My friend Tim patched in through facebook and asked what was going on, offering to help with whatever I needed.  Just having somebody listen and give their feedback in a calm voice was a big deal for me at that time.  It allowed me to retain my composure enough to look at myself in the mirror, tell myself "you're going good.  She'll be okay.  BE STRONG."  I calmed down enough to just be sobbing gently while I got in the car and headed back to the hospital.  I had no desire whatsoever to eat or drink anything.  How do you do that when you're hyperventilating?

I got to the parking lot of the ER.  My belly somewhat shaking from the sobbing I was doing, I took several deep breaths and went in.  I had to have a mask on because Covid protocol was going on - it was in the air there, because people were being admitted with it.  Covid has been flaring up as we inch closer to the fall.  My eyes must have looked like eggs covered in splattered ketchup from crying for the past near two hours.  I could tell because there was some sympathy as I stumbled through the room.  I was still visibly shaking.  

Janice was being tended to by one of the young nurses when I arrived, about to take more blood from her.  We're all wearing masks at this point.  I wanted to raise the concern about Janice not having her pain meds despite having knee replacement surgery three months ago.  I wondered whether she could be reacting to the pain via vomiting, as that happens in extreme cases.  She was rather short with me.  While she was polite and cordial with Janice, I think she saw me as critiquing what she was doing, when I was really just looking for relief for my wife somehow.  So there was some harsh pushback from her toward me, and my anxiety bumped up as a result.  I excused myself, saying I needed a drink from the pop machine in the waiting area.  Janice lightly shook her head while I walked away.

I went to the pop machine, and I hoped this was one of those that took debit or credit cards.  I played around with it for a couple of minutes trying to make it work, to no avail.  I returned to Janice's room.

"Well, so much for a drink!" I announced.  "I guess technology and me just have to butt heads from time to time."

"Aww, I'm sorry!  I'll go out there and get something for you!"  That was the same nurse.  Suddenly she was talking to me like I'd known her.  I'd also taken a couple of pot gummies that were starting to kick in, and I loosened up some.  It probably reduced my stress level from a 10 to a manageable 5.  We even joked a bit.  I tend to say funny things when I've got THC in me, much to Janice's delight, especially during times like this.  As it turned out, Janice spoke to the nurse when I skipped out, telling her that I have severe anxiety issues that forced me out of work at 54 (I'm 58 now), and that this predicament was tearing me up inside.  Janice knew what was going on with me without me even telling her.  I like to think that she focuses on my mental health, and I focus on her physical health, hence her being in the hospital.  This overhauled the nurse's take on me.  Suddenly the empathy and sympathy came pouring out for Janice AND me. Looking back now, I felt like Atlas holding the world on his shoulders. But pale in comparison to what Janice was up against.

Time for another doctor and another diagnosis.  This time, this one told her they're going to give her antibiotics to knock out any infection that may be in her.  He disagreed, I think, on the sepsis diagnosis, and he thought now that she was calming down, they could give her intravenous Zofran with her antibiotics and she'll shortly be on her way.  In the meantime, Janice is still without pain meds, her blood pressure is through the roof, she's still swelling up, and no two doctors could seem to agree on anything.

At one point, the doctor comes around with her chart, and asks Janice.... "do you have cancer?" 

"Aren't you the one that should be answering that?" Janice replied, half-harshly.

"Well, it's just that your white blood cell count is so high!"

Let me interject here that the last fucking thing a patient wants to hear is someone ask if they have cancer in a time of distress like this.  He should know from her medical records she doesn't have cancer.  This really was starting to feel like the ER from hell.

This doctor took her into an exam room where she was poked and prodded, like they do for examinations like this.  Janice's abdomen was super tender,  It was swollen, as were her legs, and she was in excruciating pain as the doctor pressed down on her abdomen and wouldn't release, while Janice was yelling out in pain.  Honestly I fantasized Ally McBeal-style that I clocked the guy.  He was doing it while he was looking at her, making me suspicious of his intentions.  She was brought back to her room in the ER.  

The doc said that he thinks it'll all pass.  I wasn't there when this interaction happened, but Janice grabbed his arm at that moment and cried, looking into his eyes and told him, "I can't go through this anymore, I can't go home with this!"  He put his hand on her and sad, resolvingly, "we will keep you here and figure this out.  Don't you worry."  I wanted another doctor on this, stat.  

Complicating matters was the revelation (?) that she had a UTI.  "A UTI?  How could I have had that, I didn't feel anything or have any other symptoms?"  

"Well, you do.  Sometimes people get them and they don't even know they have it.  And the infection spread to your kidneys."  Shortly after this, her urine turned brown.  This is a terrible sign, beyond the ramifications of a UTI.

Wow.  Recanting this is a wild ride, even.  Just how many personalities did that doctor have, anyway?

And no, we are not done with the diagnoses.

The next doctor shows up... this one thinks she has COPD... or Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.  They'd taken x-rays and CT scans and saw something going on in her lungs.  So naturally, let's throw another disease down the Plinko board and see where it lands.  Jesus.  Then we started second guessing everything she did!  Her cartridge pens that she inhales her prescribed THC cannabis now went on the radar for being a culprit.  We wondered if 'Popcorn Lung' was part of the picture.  Some kind of lung infection?  What, really?  A tumor??  It's like they have a list of diseases they can throw in a hat and draw to "reveal" the diagnosis.  At this point it was getting hard to take anyone seriously, and it was pissing us off. 

But finally, the lead doctor in the place - the one guy overseeing God knows how many other doctors (again, our health care system); and he gave us the last word on what's going on.  For now.  For now.

He said she did not have sepsis.  She did not have 'the flu' or norovirus or anything like that.  She had E-Coli.  After pondering what could have given her that, ultimately it came down to a funky watermelon we got at Costco.  I tried just a small sliver of it, but Janice had a few chunks.  The next day, I had gastro issues.  I didn't feel good at all, but I recovered. They were going to put her on their strongest antibiotics and keep her for a couple of days.  That should do the trick, he said.  

At least we had a solid diagnosis.  He was in charge of all the tests and bloodwork and finally figured out that E-Coli was wreaking havoc on her.  That, too, can be deadly very quickly, it's no less worrying than sepsis.  But she had the meds for it, and her vomiting seemed to have subsided.  Maybe this was the ticket.

Janice was finally sent from her room where her bed was a gurney for two days in the ER to a room in the hospital.  There were three others in the room, all with various maladies.  Janice just had to stay in bed while the antibiotics worked, and they also finally got on top of her pain with Dilaudid, or something like that.  It was effective and knocked the pain out pretty good.  Finally things were looking promising.

I would bring Janice food while she was there, sandwiches or a treat or something.  Memories of hospital food are ghastly ones.  To the point where I'm not necessarily afraid of staying in the hospital, but having to eat the food!  But as it turned out, there are big improvements on the culinary side.  The things they were bringing Janice actually looked good.  I worried a whole lot less about that.

I believe now we're on Wednesday.  Our friend Natalie showed up at the hospital to see Janice, and she was the first to have to don the Covid gear.  This was a selfless act on Nat's part to do this, especially when it's not expected. Janice entered the hospital at midnight on Saturday, her birthday, and had been there since.  This was a far longer ordeal than we could have ever expected.  And I wasn't handling it all that well, either.  But I did keep it together for the most part, thanks in large part to my THC gummies.  Then our friends Tim and Marley showed up.  I'm into the whole 'vibes' thing these days, and those two brought a wave of great ones with them.  Tim gave me a ton of U.S. junk food that he graciously likes to shop for to bring home for us sometimes.  This guy's done a lot for me/us, and it keeps piling on rather lopsidedly while I can't really reciprocate, so I have to mind my guilty feelings and focus more on the gratitude, which we have immensely for him and his wife.  The world is just a far better place with them in it.  They stayed a long time, and offered their support and reassurance that we'll all get together when this thing is past us.  Things like this are good to lift the spirits of the ailing.

But wait.... there's more.

The regular bloodwork revealed that Janice had picked up Covid in the ER.  She was in the midst of giving E-Coli the boot and it left a crack in the door for Covid to take over.  Now anyone who wanted to see Janice had to dress in the mask, gown and protective shield if they wanted to be near her.  Every time you left her room, you had to take the gear off, and put fresh new gear back on when you went back in.  The room she was sharing with the others all complained of being in the same room as someone with Covid.  It sounds harsh, but if Janice just got out of knee surgery, we would also voice concerns about a Covid patient in the room.  She has immune issues because of the meds she takes for psoriatic arthritis, fibromyalgia and other forms of arthritis, and she has to take a biologics intravenous med every week called Enbrel, which was sadly and cheaply replaced by the far inferior Brenzys by our Great West Life health plan.  And it's next to impossible to see a rheumatologist, because hers is only part time now.  The last time she'd talked to her, she said she would be looking at Janice to replace the Brenzys with a next-gen treatment called Symphony.  But in the time since, Janice hasn't been able to get a hold of that doctor, who's now part-time, apparently.  The option of Symphony was tossed and replaced with Brenzys again, for reasons we can't figure out because she can't see her rheumatologist.

Janice was once again being relocated, this time to another floor where there was a gentleman there who was just getting through the far end of Covid himself.  He said he'd been in isolation for seven days, and now he's off to Halifax for surgery on his eye.  He couldn't do that until he'd gotten through the seven day mandatory Covid quarantine.  This was an ominous warning for what was to come.

Janice was then reassigned to yet another room, in the isolation ward on the top floor.  She was given a private room, with the same dress protocols, and she wasn't allowed to leave for seven days.  The room had a pretty nice view of the sunset every night, but other than that, it wasn't the Taj Mahal or anything.  An alarming thing to us is their putting an oxygen line on Janice.  They told us it was "precautionary".

The deal by this time is that Janice was having kidney issues related to E-Coli, and not some damned UTI.  They'd been overworked and were on the verge of shutting down, as is evidenced by the brown urine.  This is all exacerbated from her newer battle with Covid.  Janice takes immune-suppressing drugs to cope with her chronic illnesses.  So this, along with acquiring E-Coli and then Covid, on top of the fact she's still trying to recover from knee replacement surgeries, and she takes immuno-suppressant drugs, makes for an exceedingly uphill battle for my wife.  I know of few who are as tough.  

The doctors began questioning her medication.  They cut her blood pressure meds in half because of the strain on her kidneys, but they wouldn't tell us why at the time.  In fact, they were hardly transparent about the meds they were giving her at all when they gave them to her.  They would hook bags up to her IV unit and she wouldn't have any idea what they were.  

But her kidneys failing were showing up via inflammation throughout her body.  Her legs were swelling, retaining water because of it.  It was getting harder and harder for her to do something as simple as going to the bathroom.  

She was given Paxlovid intravenously, a Covid medication, but I think by the time they did it was too late.  It's supposed to lessen or shorten the life of the virus, but only if it's early enough in the diagnosis.  It didn't make any significant difference.  The water retention factor was increasing, so something had to be done to push it back.  Enter Remdesivir... the big guns in the Covid fight.  This served as kind of a relief, because we know that stuff will take care of it ultimately.  But something had to be done to bring down the inflammation.  

Enter some anti-inflammatory drug that's a diuretic to try to get that excess water out of her, called Dexomethozone.  We did not know what they were giving her, as they just wouldn't inform either of us.  All I really knew is that Janice was on a course of Remdesivir. When it started, none of us knows, because we weren't told.

Janice became a little bit flaky, and we assumed that it was just effects of the Remdesivir.  They were giving her meds nightly to help her drift off and stay asleep, since her body had been going through such terrible stress for a week now.  What a way to start the month.  This was Friday night, and as I kissed my wife goodnight, I went home blindly confident that she'd be accompanying me soon.  I would tell Marbles, "I think Mommy's coming home soon!"  Marbles would wail a lot when I came home, like he was asking where his Mom was.  It was evident he knew something was wrong.  He would stay with me in bed when I came home to sleep most nights.  Other nights he would howl rather sadly sounding.

I took THC and tried to sleep.  I did, relatively okay, since I felt like my wife was coming home soon.  I was excited!  I'd never been apart from Janice more than two days since we've been together over 32 years.  And that was only I think two times.  These were the saddest nights I've endured with us. 

The next morning, I awakened and opened the laptop to see if there was any communication from Janice, or someone else.  This was when things took a mysterious turn for the worse.  

She was telling me on messenger that my brother Roy and Lexy were arguing outside her room.  She told me she was completely sure they were there arguing.  I found this suspicious because Roy's not the hospital type, not to mention there were Covid protocols to abide by.  And Alexandra doesn't just randomly turn up.  She'll ask if she can bring something, or signal that she's coming.  

Then she proceeded to tell me to come in.  I told her I'm home laying in bed, I'd just woken up.  She swore that I was there, to just come in.  She would say she's pretty sure she has cancer.

She has 'cancer'.  

This sent a shockwave through me.  She said she just has to deal with it, and I tried to assure her she didn't have it.  But I was wondering myself.  There was no one telling me otherwise.

Then I resorted to going on facebook and creating a group where I could talk to my family, knowing that we have nurses among us.  Everyone who chipped in talking were incredibly gracious and reassuring, namely my niece Erin who had contacts that could help clear up any misconceptions - well, there's more than a few of those.  Erin assured me that it's medication related, as I think she found out what it is they gave her.  My heart swells with gratitude for that information.

I called Alexandra and asked her if she wanted to come with me to shop for a bit and pick up some things for her Mom.  Like every day Janice wasn't with me, I would scrounge up supplies or clothes or whatever she wanted or needed and bring it to her.  

When Lex and I got to the hospital, we dressed in our Covid attire and entered Janice's dark, quiet room, to find my precious wife curled up in a ball at the foot of the bed crying and shaking uncontrollably.  She was paralyzed and couldn't move.  This was the scariest sight I've seen in almost 30 years.  I was taken aback and not sure how to deal with it.  We summoned nurses, and Alexandra and a sweet male nurse helped Janice off of the floor onto the edge of the bed, and got her to lay down and comfort her.  My sweet wife, crying inconsolably. 

While Lexy helped her Mom try to normalize, I'm veering farther away from normal myself.  But I snapped out of it - Janice needed me.  And Lex can't bear all this weight.  I've been protecting her for too long, and now she's a woman (Erin had to point this out to me... Alexandra has always been 'my little girl') who's a super ally.  Eventually, I mostly got my bearings.  We had Covid gear on, so we couldn't see each other's expressions.  But I could see worry in Alexandra's eyes.  

Once Janice calmed down enough to talk, she came up with all kinds of wild things.  The big one being that she had cancer.  She's hallucinating this because of that doctor that asked her if she had it.  Now she's on a highly psychoactive drug she was never warned about (or us either!) and spitting all kinds of crazy talk with a straight face, believing everything she's saying.  She thought my nephew Ryan was tapping her phone - yeah, no.  She could've swore she heard her mother and relatives outside her door.  Everytime there was a beep somewhere from out in the hall, she thought she was having a heart attack, and that if she concentrated hard enough it would stop.  We tried in vain to convince her all of this wasn't true, when we still had no idea.  No nurses could explain what was going on. She had a full-blown drug induced panic attack, and they had to give her something to calm her down.

I did make an attempt, having been told that the Remdesivir was hooked up (or was it, I don't know, because this was all opaque) to research this.  I looked into potential side effects of it, and discovered there can be hallucinogenic effects in something like 16 percent of patients, or something like that.  I tried convincing myself that that's what was going on here.  Alexandra found some comfort in this.  

Lexy finally left after a few hours.  The support, love and help she offered was invaluable.  And she's going to need to continue to be strong.  We all hugged and she was on her way, unsure, as was I, about why her Mom seemed to be losing it.  

When a nurse came by on her rounds, I stopped and asked her why my wife was acting so wacky.  She told me that there may be a psychiatric issue and we may have to have it looked into.  Really.  Chalk up another could-be diagnosis.

But in the fragile state I was in, I couldn't process this properly.  Could this be true?  I thought all these things are a big possibility.  There was no one trying to calm me down, not that it's their job. (Admittedly, I feel like this is my ego at work)  At one point, I was in the hallway taking a break from Janice because I was in tears, after she told me she was dying with two weeks to live, and that she's accepted it.  I paced slowly in the hallway end, attempting to regain my composure.  I guess it didn't look odd.  No one stopped to speak to me.  (Again... ego.)

I re-dressed and went back into Janice's room.  I tried to figure out how she could have music playing with her steadily, and we had a devil of a time making that happen.  There would always be one issue or another.  The biggest culprit being our crappy Samsung phones.

As the night morphed into Sunday morning, I stayed until my angel was asleep.  She would jar at times from whatever nightmares she was having, and I'd put my hands on her or stroke her head, whatever I could do to calm her.  This woman has been through way, way, way too much this year.  Today we both joke about it - she says "this is my 2015", remembering the year that I had multiple surgeries and kidney stone attacks.  And a knee surgery.  Plus a throat surgery.  Throw in a dollop of skin cancer, too, which I caught in its extremely early stages.  But, it ain't about how hard you can hit.... right?

I left Janice's room after tucking her in and telling her I love her.  What a wild week this has been.  Every day has a different curve ball.

On my way to the elevator, I stopped by the nurses' station.  The guy who was Janice's nurse when we got in there was stellar in his care and empathy, but he was gone, and I wanted to tell the nurses to be extra watchful of Janice.

"Hey, look... I came in here with my daughter around 6-ish, and found my wife curled up in a ball crying and she couldn't move.  I'm not really sure what's going on with her, but can you please look in on her and make sure she's okay?  This is hard for her.  We've been together 32 years and this is hard."

"Yes," one said looking back at me.  "It's hard on both of you.  It's hard on you, too."  My eyes started to well up. I realized I had to open up a little.

"Could you do me a favor, and get her doctor to call me when she can?  I really need to speak to her or someone."  She obliged; "of course".

"Okay, thank you so much.  Thank you."  I made sure to be ultra-respectful to those who were caring for Janice, regardless of whatever circumstances were occurring.

And I grabbed the bags I had of ice packs keeping Janice's Diet Canada Dry cold and her laundry.  I remember getting in the elevator around 2 am and slumping into the corner.  This whole situation just keeps getting crazier and more complicated.  It was so late, the parking was free, because the parking attendant goes home at midnight.  Earlier in the week, I'd parked in the parking garage and I was the last one there after midnight, and had to chase down a security guy to get my car and go home. The whole thing just seems so surreal.  It did in the moment, and now maybe even more so looking back.

One thing I did resolve to do, was to get Janice a TV for her room.  I should have done it from the get-go, but we didn't think she'd be staying so long, let alone get moved around so much.  But in my view, a TV would provide some comfort, entertainment and she wouldn't feel too alone in this isolation room.  I also sent out feelers to my nephew Ryan, who owns Case Depot, about seeing about a phone, where Janice has a rather beat-up Samsung and mine is even worse.  But I figured if a doctor needed to get hold of me, which seems more common as we get older, I'm gonna need a phone.

The next day, my brother Rick comes to our house after messaging me on facebook.  He gives me a bag with something in it.  It was an iPhone XR, with a case.  My eyeballs felt like they were vibrating.  Rick and his partner May, along with May's daughter Brittany, along with Ryan and his brother Steven, all chipped in on getting us this.  I was flabbergasted.  With extra flabber, even.  What a supremely fine family Rick's surrounded by. Ultimately, I felt guilty for throwing up the proverbial Bat-signal.  I wasn't looking for a handout, and it takes dropping some pride a bit.  But that's outweighed by our gratitude.  The plan for us with this, is for me to take Janice's phone, and she take the iPhone. so we both had one.

The house phone rang around noon.  It was the doctor overseeing Janice.  She offered an update on how Janice was, and clarified a few things.  I just had to know a few things in particular, namely, is my wife actually dying?  Does she have a heart condition?  Is she psychotically compromised?  No, no, and no.  Three hard no's; but, she took a reaction to the anti-inflammatory drug they gave her, effects which have been known to be common, apparently. We discussed a few more things, like her pain meds, her having had knee surgeries, being immuno-compromised and then this.  A perfect storm of illnesses.  I actually began to weep towards the end of the call and sensed the empathy from the doctor.  This call provided a wealth of calm to my soul, and I thanked her for it.

Later, I went back to Janice with more Diet Canada Dry and some flavored water.  The salesman that goes around selling cable TV came around right on target time, and I purchased a week's worth.  I didn't care anymore about stupid money, I wanted my wife to be comfortable.  Flowers arrived from Rick and May, which brightened Janice's day a lot.  Janice's friend from work Faith came in and geared up to be with Janice for awhile.  She brought Janice a cute little Ty Beanie Dumbo and a couple of drinks - just visiting would have been fine.  The three of us conversed for awhile, and then Alexandra and her partner came to visit also.  It got to be a little too much commotion for me, with my compromised mental health and lack of sleep, and no THC cubes, so I remained pretty much quiet.  At one point I even fell asleep; something that was scarce for me through these times.  I went over three days without sleeping starting from the time we went to the hospital.  Didn't eat, either.

When our sweet daughter and the rest of the crew left, it was Janice and me, with my wife finally gaining some semblance of being right minded.  She didn't remember a lot of it.  That's okay, I just wanted my 'real' wife back.  I was so filled with relief.  All the intravenous drugs were pretty much done now, and she was just getting her oral meds.  Things were looking up, at last.  We actually joked around a fair bit, as I took my THC and left the car home.  I consider it a gift that I can make my wife laugh pretty much anytime, but it gets a bit powered up when I'm on the gummies.

I pledged to Janice to be with her at the hospital Tuesday night to watch the Harris/Trump debate, which was sure to be a spectacle.  We talked and talked some more, laughed some, and finally after she got her nighttime round of meds, I kissed her goodnight and went home.  I felt better about this whole thing by now at this point, but this going to bed alone every night is just not for me.  

Tuesday I get up, do some housework and laundry or whatever, and get ready to go back to Janice.  As the afternoon was turning into evening, I showed up with some drinks and we set up the chairs in her room and positioned the TV toward us, and later the debate came on. Well that provided more than enough entertainment for the evening!  But the real news at that time was that Janice was finally coming home the next day.  There was the seven day Covid quarantine she had to get through, but the remnants of E Coli had to be checked off first.  Finally now, though, it was time to gather up Janice's belongings and bring home the bulk of them when I left at the end of this night.  And as it came to a close, I kissed my wife goodnight, away from me, for the last time in this place.

I got up Wednesday morning giddy with excitement!  "Marbles!  Mommy's coming home today, for real!  Mommy's coming home!"  He actually gave me a look of "yeah, right" because I've told him basically the same thing everyday.  I got the call that she was about to be discharged.  I got in the car immediately and went to the hospital, parking by the main entrance doors, and waited.  For about a minute.  Then I got out and waited in the atrium.  Out rolls Janice from the elevator in a wheelchair pushed by a nurse, and with what must have been one of the biggest smiles I've ever had, went to my wife and pretty much rushed her to the car to get her home.  What a great day this was!  We actually went for a little drive, since it was a nice day, and I wanted her to see the sun for real.  The feeling of being in the car with my wife again was like a homecoming itself.  When we finally got home, we came upstairs to our little slice of paradise, and continued on the path from there of my wife getting healthy again.  She has beaten E Coli.  She has beaten Covid.  While recovering from two knee replacements.  All at the same time.  This was a handicap match; but these things were facing Andre the Giant in Janice.

All is not finished, though.  As I type this two weeks into October, Janice is still getting her swelling down, but it is almost gone.  Her blood pressure has finally dropped to just about when she was doing her athletic stuff.  She did something to her heel, though, and has a limp, but I think it's unrelated to anything else, as it's improving.  She's working on getting her wind back, as she used to really go at the gym.  She has to draw blood every week and get an update from the doctor as to how the tests are improving, and they are, every week.  She's close to normal on all fronts, minus some long-Covid issues that can be kind of a nuisance, especially when it comes to work or exercise.

I can't spell out enough how fantastic Alexandra was through all of this.  When I wasn't eating, she took it upon herself to make a pot of her homemade beef stew and bring it to her Mom, and a big bowl for me, too.  She insisted I eat it.  It came with some homemade bread and a sausage roll, plus two almond cookies from Nick the Dutch Baker. I promised my daughter I would have it.  Best friggin' soup I think I ever had.  Janice was offered the same, and gobbled it up.  It was the end of my 'hunger strike', which I have to admit was a form of self-harm.  I felt that if Janice couldn't eat, I shouldn't either.  I thought I could have done better, getting her to the hospital sooner.   My daughter is very cognizant of my mental illness.  Lexy did everything she could to take care of both of us.

And we have come through the other side of the storm.  I don't want to rag on the workers at the hospital, as much as I want to ask why they're given such lousy conditions to work with in the way of staffing.  Clearly, the ER is overworked, and I think it's playing on some of their own minds that shows every once in a while.  No one who works there wants to not be performing their best.

There are also things to be learned for us here.  Janice learned she needs to be super careful about getting any kind of infection from here on out, but basically, she just got lousy luck.  What I learned is to appreciate my wife even more than I did.  She was taken from me for 11 days, and I don't want to go through anything like that again.  But she's like one of those air filled things you punch and it just bobs back up.  That would be my wife.

We are mid October now, long past a September to remember.  But it's the victory we will remember the most.

Janice's close friend for more than the first week of September.
This was when she just had E-coli and had it beat. Covid says 'hold my beer'.
Aaaand, enter Covid.  Here we go.
I brought a shirt of mine from home for her to sleep with.  We share each others shirts when we sleep at night.
Alexandra and Nicole gearing up to see her Mom.
Janice gets an oxygen line.  She got it sooner than this, though.
And the view from the room.
The lack of sleep getting to me.

Finally ready to go home!






Saturday, January 6, 2024

Personal Blog: January '24, Round 1

The New Year's off to a good start.  Nobody's sick anyway, we wound up ending '23 in a rather opposite way there.  Man, Janice and me got knocked around pretty bad.  Christmas was nice, but extremely quiet.  It took me weeks to recover from noro, but we just kind of rearranged the holiday schedule a bit, in that we shifted Christmas dinner to New Year's Eve.  And that was pretty great, really.  Alexandra and Cole came over, and I made honey glazed ham, seasoned panfried potatoes, corn, and turnips mashed with carrots.  I love ham, but I'm not crazy about eating pork, because it's probably the dirtiest meat there is.  Still, we do it once a year, and give the piggies the rest of the year off.  We had our traditional bacon and eggs breakfast around Christmas Day very late, and that bacon I'd bought last Christmas; I'd gotten two packs of it at Costco and froze one of them.  Now we've got all this leftover ham, but the great thing about that is we can freeze it, and we make mac & cheese and cut up ham in chunks and mix it up with that.  It's quite great, really.  Unfortunately though, when we had our Christmas/NYE dinner, I had to retire almost immediately because of the repercussions of my illness before.  Thus, we wound up sleeping through New Year's Eve.  Hopefully next year will turn out a little better.  It's okay, though, we're safe, sound and healthy today.
So, it's January 6 as I type this, Friday night/Saturday morning, and all is pretty much calm.  I'm just about at 100%.  Maybe more than the virus I had, getting knocked out twice in that day might've had more of an effect in my get up and go than I realized.  The busted rib I have from that day is still making itself known, no question there.  That's not aiding in my sleep, that's for sure.  We started back to the gym after a monthlong layoff because of being sick and the whole holiday buzz.  To my surprise, even walking hurts.  I knew it would, but more than I expected.  Still, we went twice this week for an hour each day and put in around four and a half miles each.  No weights, because my busted rib will just not let me.  You don't realize how important supporting muscle groups are until you deal with that.  Sleep is still an issue.  I just can't seem to sleep at night, and it's quite frustrating.  Janice is beside me in bed while I watch whatever on TV or surf the net or read.  Most times I only get to sleep maybe around eight in the morning, or later even.  Good 'ol Marvelous Marbles Hagler is always right there with me though.  I don't know what I'd do without that little guy.
Up to now in this first week of the year, the weather is very mild and stable, with no real precip.  In fact, we haven't had a real snowfall yet this season, just dust-ups.  We've had a lot more rain than snow so far.  I guess El Nino is to blame for that, and climate change of course.
We've binge-watched the two existing seasons of 'Yellowjackets' on Showtime on Crave - pretty good show, but not for everyone.  It's somewhat comparable to 'Euphoria' in its edginess and is female driven; kind of like Lord of the Flies if it was all girls stuck in the snowy Canadian wilderness.  It's pretty gross at times, where it involves cannibalism, so take it from there.  Like I said, not for everyone.  I think Janice liked it more than I did.  It stars a rather unrecognizable Christina Ricci and Juliette Lewis, and Lauren Ambrose (Clair from 'Six Feet Under') shows up halfway through season 2, playing a very different kind of role.  We'll give 'True Detective' a shot next, that show has five independent seasons so far, with the newest one getting a lot of attention starring Jodie Foster.
Janice's surgically repaired knee is acting up again, and she's once more forced to use a cane to get around.  She was told she was on the waiting list for knee replacement surgery, but when she called the other day, she found out she wasn't on that list at all, so now she has to push for it again.  She'd already signed the papers for the surgery, and then apparently just got forgotten about.  It's hard seeing her in pain all the time around this.  She's quite adamant about going to the gym though.  She does such a good job at work and built up the business for her post office kiosk, that she doesn't really like to be away too long, though Alexandra, who's her right-hand lady, does exceptional as her second in charge.  Alexandra, herself, has stubborn health issues that doctors can't seem to get a handle on.  It almost feels like they've given up on her.  But this is common across the country right now, with our healthcare in ruins, more or less, especially with Covid/flu/RSV wreaking havoc everywhere.  And noro, of course.  Janice and me got our shots for the flu and Covid, as we do every year.  It's at the point for me that I'm actually afraid to go to the hospital now.  Not because I'm afraid of treatment or anything, but that I'd have to wait 12-24 hours or more to just be seen, and be among all the flu and Covid infected people that cram the ERs.  I remember the days when you waited maybe an hour tops, but that's twenty years ago or more now.  Covid, in particular, has changed everything.  For the worse.
We decided that we should be pro-active in getting a new TV, because the one we've got is a 15 year old plasma Panasonic Viera that's likely on its last legs.  We got a brand new 65 inch 4K 'Smart' Samsung that was a Boxing Day sale item at Costco, now we just have to mount it, so I had to get a wall mount bracket on Amazon, which is in transit.  We love our TV, especially in the wintertime, because we both hate snow and the cold.
Other than that, we're both pretty much okay.  I got the doc to check on my cracked rib when it happened and had bloodwork done, and everything is top notch all around, sleeping issues aside.  One thing I want to do about my health regimen is find some kind of vitamin mix that'll take care of all the stuff I take now.  Which is, an Omega 3 capsule, a multivitamin, vitamin D, a prostate supplement, a zinc caplet and a probiotic supplement.  It's tricky, because I have to take my Sertraline meds away from them to retain effectiveness.  If I take them together, I wind up with nausea.  With my multivitamin bottle starting to get shallow, I'm going to have to look up what's best.  It'd be nice to just take a drink and be done with it earlier in the day.  I've been doing this vitamin regimen for decades, and my bloodwork always comes out great in checkups.
I'm thinking this is going to be a wild year, generally.  The U.S. election happens in November, and democracy and freedom are actually hanging in the balance down there.  Which is important to Canada, because as I've always said, what happens down there all too often winds up happening up here.  I worry about the Ukraine war and conservatives down there that are refusing to help.  Then there's the middle east war with Israel and Gaza.  I worry that more countries are going to get involved.  I feel like it's almost a certainty.  And I fear this year will be the year China invades Taiwan, which could be a world war catalyst.  
Something I'm looking forward to, though, is Bob Lazar's documentary 'Project Gravitaur', which centers around Lazar - having worked as a scientist at area 51 in reverse engineering flying saucers that are in government possession, which is now a known fact.  But what might be revealed in this doc is quite tantalizing to say the least.
Up to this point, for friends and family, I've only seen Natalie, who's coming over tomorrow to see us as I make my seasoned wings.  I gotta get out more.  Just going to the store and the gym doesn't really cut it.  I may have to make an effort to leave my comfort zone more often.  My cannabis oil helps my anxiety greatly, but I can't drive while I have it.  But boy, what a Godsend that stuff is.  I actually alternate between the oil and these gummies that we get, which I only need half of one to take the edge off and often help me sleep.  And I keep hearing about the benefits of cannabis.  The THC type is even shown to fight dementia.  And I ain't getting any younger.  I encourage anyone who drinks to give cannabis a try - and you don't have to smoke it.  I can't!  I tried and wound up nearly coughing up a lung, for frig's sake.  Plus, the oil and gummies I use have a much more sustained effect.  An alcohol buzz and a cannabis buzz are two different things altogether.  For one, you won't get a hangover.  For another, cannabis is a relaxant while alcohol is a depressant.  You won't find anyone picking fights who's on THC.  Alcohol, on the other hand......
Keeping my nose out of Facebook business has proven to be beneficial to me, too.  I was just going to stay off it until the holidays are over, but I'm reluctant to go back on, because things are so peaceful when you get away from it.  There are those who don't want to know my comments on politics or social issues, and there are those who do... but the more I thought about it, before Facebook, no one obsessed over that stuff like they do since social media hit.  I've found my view of people has altered for the positive since I've abstained.  That goes for all social media, really.  Anyway, as I've pointed out before, I do check my Facebook messenger, but I'm not terribly active there either.  I'll answer anyone who talks to me there, though.  Aside from spam-type stuff.
That's all I got for now.  I appreciate any interest folks take checking in on my humble Ragnar Station here.  God bless all of you.





Sunday, March 7, 2021

Nobody nodes the trouble I've seen...

 March 7... already.  Funny how time seems to be flying, until you think about this whole Covid thing, then it seems like time is crawling.  I guess it's because we feel like we're being cheated of the time spent battling this thing.  It seems like it'll never end.

When I last left off in my blog here, things were looking up.  I seemed to have a handle on my whole depression/anxiety/PTSD issues.  But then, reality hit.  And I took a sharp left turn at the beginning of the year, and I'm struggling to get on the right track again.  I'm still not there.  It's very hard.

I mused that the holidays are hard on me every year last post, and that's a fact that remains, but I think most of us noticed a difference around us this past holiday season.  December in general is a hard month to get through.  For one thing, where I work, Christmas season takes a toll on you.  But it was even worse this time out because people's tolerance is already being tested with the current restrictions around everything.  Still, it did make me stop and think for the first time why I get so anxious at that time of year.  I wondered if I actually do have PTSD.  There's a friend of mine who was a cop and retired, and told me some stories of why she acquired PTSD herself, and that, I truly believe, is what she has.  She experienced serious trauma on the job and her healing is ongoing, but thankfully, paid for because of what her line of work was.

That made me think... she thought actually that I have PTSD.  This was a while ago, and I entertained the idea that I might have it, but ultimately dismissed it.  Until I started thinking about this last December.  And it all makes sense when I realized that, man, a lot of crap happened during the month of December in my past.  

When I was a little boy, amongst a family of 6 siblings and my parents, every Christmas almost, I got sick.  Like, really sick.  The worst being when I was five or six, when all I did through the holidays was barf.  I threw up so much that I couldn't get to the bathroom on my own.  In the holiday seasons following, I got sick at Christmas some more, until I got into my teens, finally.  Dad died when I was 12, so that jumbled up any kind of normalcy life might have for the teen years.  But when I turned 14, in the same days when John Lennon died (maybe the exact day, I'm not sure), I spent two weeks in the hospital after being hit by a car and went into a coma for a night.  Scary times, for sure, but my God, what Mom must've went through.  They did take this particular concussion seriously, because it was quite serious, as you might imagine.  I seemed to deal with it okay, until time went on and revealed other issues.  But it was a very tough time for me, too.  Nightmarish. 

So with all of this in mind, it makes sense that the holiday season heightens PTSD symptoms.  It's why I withdraw more, get anxious with people, and generally just feel more agitated than I might if it was summer or something.  Take, for example, what happened with me a couple of years ago, when during Christmas season at work I took it on the chin from a lot of rude and irate customers.  Actually took it on the heel a couple of times, when seniors would ram into me to attempt to make me move.  I told Janice about it and I think she half believed me, until she actually saw it for herself one day when one old man did just that.  But retail can be a very, very challenging place during the holidays.  If you're mentally compromised like me, that just adds more ingredients to the toxic soup.  I wound up self-harming myself to an alarming degree, in that it was visible to everyone.  I pleaded with my boss at the time to let me have weekends off, since that tended to be when most of my incidents happened.  That was rejected, as I expected, and when the new year hit, I made the call to take myself out of work for a week or so.  Upon seeing my doctors, they decided to take me off for three months.  When I went back eventually, I was finally offered weekends off.  That was a bit of a game changer.  I stabilized substantially, and kind of reset myself when I went back to work.  Still, the point of all this is, a lot of the trouble originated during December.  

I don't know why I didn't think of it before.  So much trouble happened for me during that month over my lifetime.  I even wound up with a bleeding ulcer in December of 84 when I was in my later teens.  I was white as a ghost and dangerously anemic, and almost didn't seek help for it until my mother heard me nearly pass out in the bathroom after I'd filled the toilet with blood.  I was close to developing a perforated ulcer, which would've been even more serious and potentially more life threatening.  Thankfully, the wonder drug at the time, Tagamet, healed my ulcer up and I was good to go in January.  I missed school for most of December because clearly, I wasn't able to attend.  Anyway, my point being, December has such a stressful history for me, that I stop to ponder that if I really do have PTSD, it flares up the most in that month.  I would tell my psychiatrist this info if I actually had one.  

Recent revelations have forced me to ponder what to do with myself regarding my health in general.  I went to see my ENT over voice issues I was having that were getting progressively worse.  As it tuns out, I had 2 polyps on my vocal cords that needed to come out.  The doc told me they were 'singer's nodules', which I find amusing, since I'm not much of a singer at all.  Anyway, I had to take a Covid test before surgery, which was less than fun.  It almost felt like they were trying to impregnate my brain with a cotton swab.  They just have to find a better way to test for coronavirus than this, as I know it makes a lot of people hesitate because it's quite well known how difficult it can be.  But, it came back negative, so the surgery was a go.  It was just day surgery, thank God, and I was in and out of the hospital within two or three hours.  But the rest of that day was very rough to get through.  I took a bad reaction to what I think was a combination of meds; but I was okay the next day.  I was off work for two weeks to let my voice recover.  But here's the thing.....

.... It didn't.  My voice even seemed to have gotten worse.  When I went for my follow-up appointment with the ENT, she sent a camera down my throat and found yet another polyp that developed since the surgery.  That started a discussion.  She wondered why it just popped up like that so quickly, so she told me she was sending me to a gastro doctor to find out if I have excessive stomach acid issues.  I told her that stress is likely playing a role and that I have anxiety issues, without going too far into detail.  She told me to seek out a psychiatrist she specifically named - which is one of two in the city, the other one being the one who stopped seeing me.  So, I got a burst of optimism about that particular issue.  But the revelation that I also have a polyp in my stomach now, along with the mystery polyp in my throat, put my worry into overdrive.  I'm still waiting on an appointment with the gastro doctor, which my ENT noted to be as 'semi-urgent'.  That's not terribly comforting either.  She told me I'll be seeing her in six weeks to figure out when the newest nodule in my throat will come out via surgery, but she wants to get to the bottom of why it's there in the first place, hence the gastro doctor.  I'm not extremely worried, now that some time has passed, but I am anxious to get it behind me.  

The new manager that I work for isn't turning out to be the source of stress I expected, but changes are happening, and that leaves me agitated sometimes.  Still, change doesn't always come smoothly, so I accept that.  As it is right now, I don't feel there's any threat to my job security.  My new boss tells me quite frequently that I'm doing a good job, so that much is good.  I've found that some staff are kind of banding together in support of each other, including me, as we adjust to new things.  Still, stress is still a factor at work, which is detrimentally affecting me via digestive issues.  The whole Covid mess just compounds everything.  I'd be lying if I said I didn't feel a sense of hopelessness as we try to get through this thing.  My wife thinks we'll be wearing masks all the time from here on out.  It sure feels that way sometimes.  

Plus the beginning of the year left a mark on me that I can't seem to shrug off.  Suffice to say that my self-image has taken a nose dive that resulted in changes to my behavior that some might see as making me seem more withdrawn, even boring.  I recovered somewhat, but my self-image issues are worsening, and I don't know how to pull out of it.  As it turns out, the new psychiatrist I was supposed to see won't take any more patients, so I have no one professionally to turn to now, leaving me to self-treat as best I can.  I've even been told I'm unapproachable.  So I guess I'll get help from..... NO ONE.  Despite what Bell's Let's Talk campaign might brag to you about, treatment for mental health is getting worse and worse every year, and I don't see it getting better, despite public outcry.  

I'm not writing this stuff to get sympathy or something, either.  I'm writing it for the record and for a point of reference.  If I ever get to see a professional again, I can point to this blog to help explain things as pertaining to my own state of mental health.  Not to mention, to reach out to anyone who might be reading this that they're not alone if they're dealing with similar issues.  The fact is, though, I have no fucking idea what to do now.  I even wondered if I'm headed for permanent disability over all this.  That's not something I want.

I guess I'll have to sit tight and see what my near future appointments serve up as they relate to all these issues.  I'll try to be cautiously optimistic.

In the meantime, I give thanks to my family and friends for any support they've shown, and especially to my wife for enduring ... well, ME.  I realize all of this doesn't exactly make me look terribly attractive.  Not that I ever was.

As a side note, please get your Covid vaccination when your turn comes up so we can all get out of this awful mess we're in.  Don't buy into alarmists trying to tell you Bill Gates is trying to plant microchips in you or that you'll turn into Frankenstein or something.  Trust science.  It's fact based.

Thanks as always for reading.  I value every person who cares to check this blog out.  

God bless, and stay safe, and don't give in to hate.


Friday, January 1, 2021

GET UP, and get that COVID outta here

 2021 is here!  Finally.  But let's not kid ourselves.  We ain't out of the woods yet.  We're still in the thick of it.  

Covid pretty much sucked the life out of the year, didn't it.  That was rhetorical.  But every holiday, every birthday, every day off, was tempered by this historic illness.  We weren't allowed to be around a lot of people.  Folks died alone in their hospital rooms because no one was allowed around them because of how contagious this damned thing is.  And there are/were deniers and skeptics that this is actually happening, which just floors me.  Since '16 when Trump was elected, trust in media has eroded very quickly in favor of bullshit false 'facts', when in reality, only the fringe news sites and stations that support the authoritarian-wannabe were truly guilty of mass falsehood spreading.  The weak-minded bought into it, but even more scary, people you would expect to come out against this kind of scary fascism actually wound up supporting it.  It got scarier every year since then, and now it's coming to an explosive end later this month.  Make no mistake... the U.S. is the country seen as the leaders of the free world, but even countries around the world watching them feel sorry for them and are frightened at what they're becoming.  Being in Canada, we're direct next-door neighbors, so what happens there has the biggest effect on us first.  No one in the media outside of Canada's own seems to recognize that fact.  

On a personal level, things haven't been too bad since I last posted here on Ragnar.  This in spite of a crazier than usual holiday season.  You might have heard that some companies actually thrived during the pandemic, while others simply shut down.  I work for one of the thriving companies, where business actually went bionic.  My wife had it the same.  Her postal outlet that she runs is experiencing record business, thanks in no small part to how she operates the place with our daughter and one other who handles a shift or two a week.  Myself, I've worked overtime pretty much every week, and my job's quite physical, so I go home every day wiped right out.  We quit the gym because of too many restrictions due to Covid, and we'll go back when it's back to normal.  Whenever that is.  

Regarding myself and my head's state, I've actually kept things together through the season.  Only one panic attack... and I don't even remember it, because I guess I had it in my sleep.  Janice witnessed it, so I can't really say what I did, except that I appeared to be 'convulsing' before I actually got up and whatever happened.  All I remember is taking THC oil that Janice administered to me.  I think during that day, signs of an attack were there, but I just didn't really pick up on it.  I was fidgety, annoyed and as Janice would say, had the 'jimmy legs' where I was twitching all the time.  I remember coming around and feeling exhausted, though, because those attacks are exhausting.  I'm quite wary of what can happen when I experience one of these phases.  I often dream about them -- dream of going through them.  But this was the first time I know of that I acted one out in my sleep.  

But I don't know what exactly to do about that.  I have no psychologist, because it's not free and quite pricey.  I have no psychiatrist because he bailed on me.  And my own doctor only really believes me if Janice vouches for me.  In other words, I'm on my own.  I don't believe in pseudo self-help books or videos or news clippings or anything, because each and every one of us experiences something different.  I can be watching a video, for example, of somebody telling me something related to a person with depression and anxiety, but it does not address me because my circumstances are so different.  As I've exhaustively stated before, I've had multiple concussions throughout my life, along with a number of traumatic experiences.  YES, people have been through worse.  But no one experiences the same as another every time.  I'm quite lucky to be alive.  Thanks in large part to my wife and my daughter.

Anyway... apart from that 'phantom' anxiety bout, I've maintained the course quite well.  There are other health things to be addressed.  My ENT sent me for a barium x-ray of my digestive tract, suspicious that the nodes on my vocal cords, which I'm having removed via surgery January 18, might be the result of acid reflux.  I don't believe that to be the case, but getting a closer look at my stomach isn't something I object to, in order to rule out everything.  She thinks I might have a hernia in my tract.  If that's true, that could be yet another surgery, though only laproscopic and nothing too major.  Getting my nodes taken out isn't terribly major either.  It'll leave me voiceless for a couple of weeks, which takes me out of work for that time.  It seems the beginning of the year is where I have to watch it.  Last year in February, I broke my wrist.  A year before that, I was taken off for stress leave for three months.  Before that, I had one year that started with sinus surgery, followed by knee surgery, plus multiple bouts with kidney stones that required multiple surgeries.  So the beginning of every year these days gives me the heebie-jeebies a little.  

I guess I can take solace in the fact that every time I was confronted with something, after it knocked me down I always got back up.  When I did see a psychologist before my coverage ran out, she told me I was resilient and should tell myself that.  If I was told that story about someone else, I would tell them they were resilient.  Why wouldn't I say that about myself?  But I can't.  Most of the time, I feel like I deserve what I get.  I have quite a guilt complex, I guess.  If I have bad "karma", I'd like to know how much more I have to pay.  And with what.  But, alas, I don't believe in karma.  Too many really bad folks get away with everything, and too many good folks never get a break.  It's nonsense.

One challenge facing me in the new year is my manager at work.  The guy I've had for ten years is leaving, and a new one is coming in.  Nothing at all against the new guy, I don't even know him.  But the boss I know, knew me.   He knows my medical history and all the quirks related to it, and was very supportive.  I think I've been quite lucky that way.  When I leave for surgery in a couple of weeks, the old boss will be going and the new one stepping in.  I guess I'm kind of nervous because I've dealt with many asshole bosses since I left driving for BJ's Subs and Catering in '07.  Two of those bosses made me seek supplemental help for my anxiety and mental issues.  I guess I'll remain hopeful and be cautiously optimistic.

Anyway, the road ahead...  I'm looking forward to getting this vaccine, and hoping to God everyone who's against it comes around and gets it too.  There sure are a lot of conspiracy theories out there against it.  One thing I've found about conspiracy theories (ever notice the very word contains the words 'cons' and 'piracy'?) is that they're always bullshit.  I used to love that stuff.  It was great entertainment.  But not a lot more than that.  For too many, they've taken the place of facts and useful information and science.  It really pisses me off with so many of these church goers saying they're above the law and that God will protect them when they go to mass.  Never mind that you're not supposed to put God to the test.  You can be faithful and still go by the rules that society presents when things like Covid go awry.  

How well the world prospers in the year to come depends solely on how many people take the vaccine against this crushing illness.  I'll lean toward the positive side, and hope that this coming summer brings us back to some semblance of normality.  I refuse to accept the term 'new normal'.  This is NOT normal, and I do not accept it as such for any length of time.  We've had to make adjustments to deal with this abnormal situation.  To say it's the 'new normal' is to relinquish hope.  We will get back to normal, but this is not normal, what we're dealing with right now.  But... we won't get back to normal if we're going to constantly remain divided.  Division is borne from far right politics.  And by far right, I don't necessarily mean conservatives.  Far left is just as dangerous... but there is no far left.  You might argue that with me, but we've never been in any danger of going that way.  We ARE in danger of slipping into totalitarianism and authoritarianism.  The Progressive Conservatives in Canada, for instance, gave way to just Conservatives.  Removing 'Progressive' from the title is everything.  The PC's, at least, were very aware of environmental issues; even if I didn't agree with much of their financial credo.  When the PC's became C's, Harper came in and annihilated scientific records related to preserving the environment and deregulated many of the laws and rules people had to follow to protect them.  Trump is doing even worse to his country.  I still feel a stir of anger in me when I think about when Harper made a clandestine meeting with Trump at the White House at the beginning of his presidency.  No one knows what they discussed.  I suspect no one ever will know.  But Stephen Harper scared me the way Trump does.  He's basically Trump with a brain.  I have hope with the Conservative's new leader Erin O'Toole, though, he at least doesn't seem as mean spirited and confrontational as his predecessor.  The only way I'd want to see the Conservatives take over right now is with a minority government; although really, that's how I like all my governments.  The people  in power need to stay accountable that way.  It's why I'm glad Trudeau's Liberals are a minority.  Too many in his cabinet don't know their asses from their elbows.  Bill Morneau, his now former finance minister, buried Canada in debt long before Covid did.  If they didn't have a path to getting out of our $20 billion deficit before Covid hit, how are they supposed to get us out of this $400 billion tsunami?  The Conservatives would bring in austerity measures, which are highly unethical when Harper pulled it.  That's why I say. sure, give the Cons a shot... with a MINORITY.  I can just imagine where we'd be if the Liberals pulled off a majority last election.  All this being said... I'm still Green all the way.  They're the only realistic party out there; though the NDP impresses me more and more these days too.

When Lent comes along in February, I'm going to be making a few 'sacrifices'.  I'll be cutting down drastically on meat consumption, like we do every year, but also, I'll put social media completely on hold.  Facebook has become Hatebook.  I never took to Twitter because that's the most toxic place of all of them.  I'll have to be more active with my e-mail.  But there are far too many lies and hatred spewing from my computer screen these days.  It's downright sad.  If I have any friend on social media that shows crazy negativity without any facts to back it up, they're gone.  I hate doing that, too.

Anyway, the new year is here, we're scheduled to see KISS in Bangor in August, which was postponed from last September, and it'll just be nice if we can get to a place where we don't need to wear a mask or count the people who are around us.  This is not how we're supposed to live... but it's how we have to live until this virus is defeated once and for all.

Thanks for tuning in to read this.  I wish you all a happy and prosperous New Year.  Better times are on the horizon.

Till then, fire up the colortinis and watch the pictures as they fly through the air.

Good night.