Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Medical excuses for not writing

By Pat Remick

I can come with a host of legitimate excuses to explain why I’m not writing as much as I’d like. But I never thought my annual physical would be one of them.

Nothing major is wrong with me, thank goodness. But all the minor things I recently discussed with my doctor have developed into cure strategies that are now eating up big chunks of my limited writing opportunities. I can’t imagine how time-consuming it is to be really sick.

My primary care physician sent me home from my checkup with directions to take Vitamin D twice a day, instructions to increase my thyroid medicine that requires carefully cutting half of my pills in quarters until my new mail-order prescription arrives, a sheet of daily exercises designed to relieve foot pain, and a recommendation for a skin cream to be applied twice daily. She also handed me referrals to two specialists.

The ear, nose and throat doctor said there was nothing seriously wrong that a nose spray and a saline solution kit, both to be used twice a day, couldn’t fix. The orthopedic guy ordered me to put ice on my impinged shoulder for 20 minutes, three times a day; take a pain reliever twice daily; and to try his list of exercises until the start of my physical therapy appointments, which will take one hour each, two times a week (and lead to more time-consuming exercises, no doubt).

I'm sorry to bore you with my maladies, but don’t you agree this list of minor cures is mind-boggling? It makes me sick just to think about it. All these courses of treatment have gotten so complicated that I need a daily calendar just to keep up.

A doctor friend tells me the compliance rate for physicians’ orders is generally low. I understand why. If you add up all these medical directives, I’d spend the equivalent of one day a week dealing just with them – and there’s hardly anything wrong with me.

But then I thought: maybe it’s about time management. What if I could find a way to put the ice on my shoulder at the same time I take all the pills, use the nose stuff, apply the cream and then twist myself around to do the foot exercises, too? That might get me down to one hour of medical mania a day.

On the other hand, there’s the risk of something going wrong or developing a new injury from trying to do too much at once. Then I’d be sucked further into the medical black hole. So I've decided to pace myself and hope all these cures don’t kill my writing career.

Nonetheless, the next time someone asks me how the novel is going, I’m just going to say, “Ask my doctor.”

6 comments:

Joyce Tremel said...

I guess your doctor can't prescribe two weeks at a resort where a hunk named Raoul ices up your shoulder and exercises your foot while you sit writing on your laptop.

Insurance probably wouldn't pay for that anyway. Oh well.

Anonymous said...

OOOH, Joyce, I hadn't thought of that. Thanks sooo much for that suggestion!

Annette said...

Joyce, you always have the BEST ideas!

Pat, I sooo understand where you're coming from. The other option (although Joyce's sounds way better) is to cut into your sleeping time. Of course, now they're saying that sleeping less than seven hours a night is hazardous to your health, too.

Good luck with your remedies. And I'm glad there isn't anything seriously wrong with you!

Anonymous said...

Don't give up on Joyce's suggestion too quickly, Pat, at least not until you check out that physical therapy. I once had a Morton's neuroma (feels like you have a stone in your shoe but it's in your foot) and the physical therapy consisted primarily of a few exercises followed by a nice young man rubbing, warming and icing my foot! I was only sorry that the appointments were limited to 3 a week.

Patg said...

PatR,
Good gravy--oops, sorry gravy isn't good for you--what a hoot and how very, very true.
That's why I think the young, while their so busy typing on their computers and texting and blogging, should also keep health calendars so they can give those doctors good arguments when they get older. Frankly, I think all this stuff doctors order is based too much on generalities. But that's me. And my doctor is always prepared for an argument.
PatG

Anonymous said...

The whole thing has been mind=boggling. I think I'm going to have to get one of those little pillboxes so I remember everything. The PT guy is adding about about 1.5 hours of exercises, icing and heating -- I may have to take vacation time to keep up! Maybe I need one of those Morton's neuromas....