Women often say that
if men wanted to experience real pain they should give birth to a child. After my experience with lung surgery last
Thursday I think I might have preferred taking a shot at childbirth. However, with lung surgery pain you have an
advantage, it’s called morphine. I
remember absolutely nothing of the surgery, very little of the recovery room
and just became coherent enough in my overnight room to learn that the thing in
my hand with the button and little green light would become my best
friend. When the little green light came
on I pushed the button, opening the floodgates of morphine, drowning the pain
and allowing a dreamy darkness to descend.
I became like Pavlov’s dog: Feel
pain, open eyes, see green light, push button, painless darkness. Repeat. The clock was on the wall directly in
front of me and every time I opened my eyes it was the first thing I saw. I kept thinking what the hell is wrong with
this clock? It keeps jumping ahead ten
minutes at a time! I spent the entire night
sleeping in ten minute intervals. But at
least they left me alone with my morphine toy.
By the next night I had been switched to oxycodone tablets which are not
nearly so much fun as a morphine pump and the nurses kept waking me up
throughout the night to take “vital signs,” give me pills and stick needles in
my stomach. When I finally got into some
kind of deep sleep about 4:00 a.m., the door bangs open, the lights go on and
the portable X-ray machine comes rolling in followed by the blood sample nurse.
After another night of the same I was finally released. Sunday night as I drifted off to sleep in my
own bed imagining that all I had gone through was just a frightening nightmare,
I began mumbling, “There’s no place like
home…there’s no place like home… there’s no place….”
1 comment:
...and the sun will shine as you celebrate Independence Day with renewed vigor. Glad you are back.
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