Kimopolis

My kind of town.

Posts Tagged ‘Pain’

I got it. I got it. I got it. [thump] I ain’t got it.

Posted by kimlno on June 15, 2009

Illustration by Jason Smith, ©2005

Illustration by Jason Smith, ©2005

You know what you never want to do when you’re in the throes of a really wicked back spasm? You don’t ever want to get cocky. At no time should the phrase, “Oh, yeah. I’ve got this thing licked,” escape your lips. Because it will be at that exact moment that your back spasm will counter with, “Oh, really?” and erase any progress you may have made in the past 36 hours towards becoming a functional member of society once again. How do I know this to be true? I got cocky. Last night I felt so good I managed to leave the confines of my bed and take up residence on the couch, so I could watch the season premiere of “True Blood.” Afterward, I was even walking around without the aid of my “walker” (a metal folding step stool that works surprisingly well) like I freakin’ owned the place.

This morning was a more humbling experience. In fact, I’d say I was in about as much pain this morning as I was on day one (that’s for you, mom). It was as if all the progress I made last night had never even happened. I’d even go so far to say, I’ve regressed.

Another added bonus is that I seemed to also have acquired Tourette’s Syndrome. Completely involuntarily, during a spasm, a veritable cornucopia of cuss words will spew out of my mouth much like Regan after she was possessed by the devil. Apparently, somewhere in my mind, excruciating pain is directly linked to swearing like a sailor. Loudly.

I honestly don’t believe I can take another day of this immobility bullshit. The low-point of my day, today, being when I got stuck on the toilet. Somehow I managed to make it to the bathroom, and by screaming “FUCK!” at the top of my lungs, I sat down. What I hadn’t planned for was how I was going to get up. I employed the Lamaze breathing technique (even though I’ve never been formally trained, I’ve had the good fortune to see it in practice on countless TV shows and movies) but no amount of fancy breathing was going to counteract the muscle fatigue I was experiencing everywhere else in my body. I feel like I’ve run a marathon, bench pressed about 250 pounds, done over 1000 squats, and set the new world record for overhand chin-ups. Not to mention the bruises on my knees and elbows from attempting to crawl across the hardwood floors on Saturday. Simply put, I’m a mess.

I hope the next time I write something, I won’t feel it necessary to mention how much pain I’m in or include the intimate details of my trips to the toilet. I’m sure you would appreciate reading about, really, anything but that ever again. However, all I can promise you right now is that I am working on it. If anybody has any miracle cures, or a direct line to the devil (because if I was ever ready to sign away my soul, it’s now), let me know. Until then, I bid you adieu. To you, and you, and you.

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Posted in Trials and Tribulations | Tagged: , , , | 4 Comments »

Spaz!

Posted by kimlno on June 14, 2009

If you’ve never had a back spasm, you need to get down on your knees right now and thank whatever God you believe in and start praying that you never do. Back spasms SUCK. They come in all shapes and sizes. With some, you’ll only experience a slight decrease in mobility. Others may put you out of commission for a couple of days. All spasms include sharp, shooting pain that unless you’ve ever been shot, stabbed or cut in half, you’ve never experienced pain quite like it. Luckily, as long as you don’t move, you are relatively pain-free. However, any slight movement could activate the spasm and then, to be completely blunt, you’re fucked. Once the pain starts it increases rapidly and exponentially, spreading like wildfire throughout the affected region and beyond. Your spasm is telling you to get into a neutral position stat or else it is possible to pass out from the pain. You think I’m exaggerating, don’t you? Oh, how I wish I was.

BACK SPASM by Jon Allen

BACK SPASM by Jon Allen

So, yesterday I was changing my sheets, as I do every Saturday, and as I unfurled the top sheet, to facilitate easy and even spreading to all four sides of the bed simultaneously (much like one would see in a laundry detergent commercial), that’s when the spasm hit. It wasn’t so bad, at first, just a twinge to alert me that I’d better take it easy whilst finishing up the task at hand. You see, I’ve had back spasms before and my body didn’t have to tell me twice to relax or suffer the consequences. Apparently, I didn’t relax enough. Once I finished making my bed and placing the 27 accent pillows just so, I thought it best to sit down. I delicately trod into the other room and sat down gingerly at my computer. As soon as my ass hit the leather, I knew this was a mistake. In an attempt to ease the sharp, stabbing pain in my lumbar region, my body began to slowly slump down into the chair, with my butt sliding further and further towards the edge of no return. I was in trouble.

As I started to realize that sitting up was no longer an option, I began to turn my body to the side in an effort to (a.) keep my body from sliding right off the chair and onto the floor (which would make getting back to my bed very difficult, if not impossible), and (b.) to somehow use my upper body strength (ha ha ha) to help lift myself off of the chair and into a standing position. The problem with using my upper body to alleviate the strain on my lower body is that the two parts are attached to one another via my lower back. Using one without using all three is virtually impossible. But, somehow, I managed to make it back to my bedroom and onto my bed. I laid there, face first, my body bent at the waist, and my legs dangling over the edge, my toes still touching the floor, for approximately 20-25 minutes before mustering the courage to somehow swing my lower half up onto the bed. Oh, how I wish I had had the foresight to stop by the bathroom before committing to the bed.

Once I eventually made it onto the bed, I was a quivering blob of physically exhausted jelly. I did not move for many, many hours. At one point, I somehow managed to call my doctor (because dialing 911 and making those poor firemen try and get me out of bed, only presented me with more potential problems: once I was at the hospital, how would I get home? What could they do for me there that I couldn’t do here? The only treatment I could envision involved long needles being shoved into my spinal column and that was not an option, as far as I was concerned). My doctor wasn’t much help, either. I already knew the drill: Skelaxin (a muscle relaxant, and not the good kind like Sam’s sister took in 16 Candles…I do NOT feel funky!), Ibuprofen (800 mg to bring down the swelling), ice packs (on for 20/off for 20), and bed rest. We can put a man on the moon but we can’t cure a back spasm? And here I thought we lived in the 21st Century.

ANYleechesandblood-lettingwouldbebetterthanthis, here we are, just over 24 hours later and I am decidedly NOT better. The last time I managed to get out of bed was last night about 10 o’clock when the need to pee overtook the need to be comfortable. That little journey, approximately 10 feet, took no less than 15 minutes and was interspersed with yelps of sheer agony and a lot of crying. I am rapidly approaching the point of no return when I will have to make that trek yet again. Good thing I have the bladder of a camel.

Oh, how I would LOVE to just hop out of this bed, brush my teeth and take a long, hot shower. Perhaps make a little something to eat, something that’s actually cooked and isn’t available in a pre-packaged recyclable bag. I’d give my eye teeth just to be able to brush my hair. At least I have my laptop, so I can share all my misery with you. Okay, well…time to face the music, or the toilet, as it were. Wish me luck and if you want to say a little prayer, too, that would be just fine by me.

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Posted in Trials and Tribulations | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Do You Really Want To Hurt Me? Do You Really Want to Make Me Cry?

Posted by kimlno on May 16, 2009

I do not like pain. If there is such a thing as the opposite of a masochist, that would be me. Let me give you an example. As a little girl, I always had short hair. This was not my choice, it was my mother’s. She made it implicitly clear that until I could wash, brush, and style my own hair, it would be trimmed regularly by Colleen at Snippers in Sacks. Colleen[1] was cute and young, and even though she had long, blonde, feathered Farrah Fawcett locks, she never made me feel bad about having short hair. She would do her best to tame my ridiculous cowlick, and would even go so far as to French Braid a small section of my hair, add a bow and some Baby’s Breath, so that I could feel like I had long hair, too.

Unfortunately, other children my age were not fooled by the braid or the flowers and, for the most part, ridiculed me constantly for having short hair. “Only boys have short hair” was a pretty popular point-of-view for little girls in the 1970s. Even with Dorothy Hamill skating her way into the hearts of every American girl and gay boy, it was apparently okay for her to have short hair, but not me. Maybe if I had been an Olympic gold medalist, my hair would’ve been praised and coveted, but in the absence of any world class awards, my short hair was mocked, laughed at and ridiculed.

Not that I minded all that much. I was an active kid, spending approximately 85% of my young life in the pool, and short hair worked well. It was never in my eyes, I never needed any accessories to keep it out of my way, and I had no use for a blow dryer. True, when at my friend Liz’s Birthday Pool Party in Third Grade, I was the only girl not able to flip her wet hair into a silly George Washington curl like all of the other attendees, but I could do a back flip off the diving board which was LEAPS AND BOUNDS[2] cooler, so that was okay.

However, when I finally hit that magical age where I could choose my own hair length, I immediately began growing it out. I was SO OVER having everyone think I was a boy. I was going to have long hair, and no one would ever tease me again. What I did not know at the time was that it really doesn’t matter what length your hair is, children will find your fatal flaw and make your life a misery for as long as you let them. Yes, children are evil. If you disagree with that statement, then you either don’t remember being one, or you don’t have any of your own.

As my mother had warned me, with long hair comes lengthy responsibilities. If neglected, your hair can make your life miserable. I learned this lesson the hard way when I went to visit my dad in Flagstaff, AZ. You may, or may not, be aware that Flagstaff, unlike Phoenix or Tucson, isn’t always hot. It even snows there in the winter. A LOT. And snow is cool for a lot of reasons, but it definitely has its drawbacks. Number one disadvantage being, it is very, very cold. For a girl who grew up at the beach wearing a handkerchief halter tops, OPs and flip flops, I wasn’t adequately prepared for the copious amount of clothing one needs to wear in order not to freeze to death. So, my wardrobe for Flagstaff was made up of turtlenecks, scarves, and big puffy ski jackets. All of which had much more material around the neck area than I was used to. The problem was my new long hair got tangled on day one of the trip. And, because I don’t like pain[3] I neglected to brush it out. Big mistake. About day three I was aware that a giant dreadlock was forming at the base of my neck. However, my hair was long enough to conceal my new Rastafarian appendage and no one would be the wiser. I thought I was pretty clever. I wasn’t. What I thought would eventually happen to my “rat’s nest,” as my mother called it, I’m not sure. All I knew was brushing it out was not an option. That would’ve hurt WAY too much.

Well, when I arrived home two weeks later, the shit hit the fan. My mom completely lost it when she saw that just underneath the top layer of finely groomed hair was a tangle so massive that it could not be brushed out. Try as she may, all the No More Tears Detangler in the universe would’ve helped my knotty predicament. Of course, the fact that I shrieked in pain every time she attempted to put a comb through it didn’t help either. Once we had exhausted all other options, there was only one other course of action left. The very next day we paid a visit to Colleen and she proceeded to cut off my giant dread, and all of the other long hair I had managed to grow out as well with it. It was a sad day in Snippers, but it had to be done.

Well, my tender head was not the only part of my anatomy that was super sensitive to pain. I found out early on that visits to Dr. Nierenberg, my pediatrician, could be painfully unpredictable. Sometimes he’d just listen to my heart, make me jump around, and then give me a lollipop. Other times, visits would include a round of inoculations that involved stabbing me with giant pointy needles which varied anywhere from, “Gee, I didn’t even feel that” to “Ow, you’re really hurting me, please stop” sobs of suffering. These shots were mostly administered in the examination room, so when a nurse came in with a needle my usual response was to burst into tears.

However, as much as I disliked shots, I absolutely HATED having my blood drawn. Some sadistic nurse, who always looked very pretty and nice, would take me from the examination room down the hall to the “Lab.” In my mind, the “Lab” was nurse code for medieval torture chamber. Nothing pleasant ever occurred in the “Lab.” Once inside the room, I was instructed to sit on a stool close to the counter which was covered with glass vials, glass slides, and other pokey stuff, because if you were led into the “Lab” you WOULD be poked.

The poking was almost exclusively used to draw blood, an ancient torture technique used to make prisoners of war divulge government secrets that I learned later was called the “Fingerprick Blood Test.” Doesn’t sound so bad, does it? Well, I can tell you, it was EXCRUCIATING.[4] In an effort to lull unassuming children[5] into a sense of false security, the nurses, who by the way, were always smiling; all wore the exact same nurse’s outfit, including the hat, as Nurse Dixie on Emergency! Nurse Dixie would never hurt anyone who came into her hospital. However, there was one thing the real nurses at Dr. Nierenberg’s office had that Nurse Dixie didn’t; every single one of them had long, fake, red nails. I don’t know if this was office policy or just some sick inside joke amongst the evil blood-letters, but it is something I will forever associate with pain, that’s for sure.

So, 70s Porno Nurse would ask for your finger, and she’d let you choose[6] the finger you would be wearing a Band-Aid on for the remainder of the day.[7] Next, she’d clean the area with a sterile swab and proceed to squeeze the tip of your finger so hard it turned white. Then, from out of nowhere she’d poke you with a needle[8] that she must’ve been concealing somewhere because I’d never see it until it was in my finger. Perhaps the nursing school also included a course in sleight-of-hand, I don’t know for sure. Once the pin was removed an enormous bead of bright red blood emerged from my fingertip which the nurse would smear onto a glass slide or two. Sometimes they even needed to prick more than one finger to get all the blood they needed. Evil vampire nurses. As tears rolled down my cherubic cheeks, the nurse would inflict her final crushing blow by wiping my bleeding fingertip with an alcohol-soaked gauze pad, causing the already throbbing digit sting like a motherfucker.[9] Then came the obligatory Band-Aid and lollipop consolation prize which IN NO WAY could ever make up for the fact that BITCH purposefully inflicted pain on me AND managed to make me cry. It’s no wonder I never became a nurse. I could never be that nefarious.

Thankfully, now that I am all grown up, I have absolutely no problem having my blood taken. True, they don’t do the Fingerprick Blood Test on me anymore; they just siphon it out of a nice juicy vein as God intended. Perhaps it’s because I’ve had FAR WORSE pain inflicted upon me by all sorts of different medical professionals as I’ve gotten older. Or maybe I’m not as sensitive to pain as much as I was when I was little. But either way, the memory of the wicked, dragon-clawed nurses of Dr. Nierenberg office will always be with me…haunting my worst nightmares.


[1] Colleen’s favorite band was Quarterflash and she had a small picture of Rindy Ross on the bottom right hand side of her mirror. Not surprisingly, “Harden My Heart” was one of my early favorites.
[2] Literally.
[3] AHA! I bet you thought I forgot about my initial topic. Didn’t you?
[4] You may think I am exaggerating, but I’m not.
[5] Like me.
[6] How very gracious of her.
[7] If you were very careful and didn’t lose it in the bathtub that evening, it was possible to wear the Band-Aid to school the next day. So you could share your trauma with your classmates.
[8] That looked exactly like a push pin, and I am still not convinced it wasn’t swiped off the bulletin board that displayed all the happy children Dr. Nierenberg treated. Without a doubt, these photos were taken BEFORE any blood test or inoculation.
[9] While you’re at it, why not give me a nice paper cut and pour lemon juice on it?

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