Category Archives: Just Life

Picture of Health

Picture of Health

I think it was The Kinks who penned the lyrics

Silly boy ya’ self-destroyer.
Paranoia, the destroyer

Self-destroyer, wreck your health
Destroy friends, destroy yourself
The time device of self-destruction
Light the fuse and start eruption

Last week, I needed to have a complete physical for my job.  I got the confirmation of the appointment the night before, with a full list of tests that would be performed.  EKG.  Stress test.  Extended Drug Screen.  Audio test.  Vision test.  Thyroid test.  Chest X-ray.  Lipid check.  Pulmonary screening.

Quite a comprehensive exam.  My first thought was “Woo Hoo!  It’s time for my annual physical anyway, and now I won’t have to pay for it.”

My “first thought” usually doubles as an alarm clock for my gremlins, and that night was no exception.  The gremlins jumped on this like flies on fecal matter .  With less than 12 hours between notification and the time I had to check in at the clinic, my inner demons were going to have to pull out all the stops to turn this free wellness check into a nightmare-inducing anxiety attack.

Those gremlins.  Such skilled little imps, they are.  It’s no wonder, considering how well fed I’ve kept them over the years.  I’ve nurtured those mental monsters like they were helpless orphans for as long as I can remember.

It started when I had to forego my nightstand drink when I went to bed.  Since it was fasting blood work, I could have nothing to eat or drink after midnight.  What happens when I can’t have liquid?  Like any normal person, I become parched beyond all belief.  Thirst makes me restless, and restlessness is the favorite food of gremlins.

I begin mentally reviewing the procedures that are required.  It seems in line with the requirements for space travel.  I wonder if somehow my job grade has been entered improperly somewhere.

Drug screen.  Pffffffft.  Expected and unconcerned.  I don’t even eat poppy seeds on my bagels.

Blood tests to check lipid levels, sugar levels, electrolytes, kidney function, liver function, blah blah.  Yeah, my lipids and I have a dysfunctional relationship, but I know what makes them go screwy, and haven’t been pushing my luck there, so no worries.

Except….thyroid, eh?  My sisters and I just had a conversation about thyroids.  They both have had issues with theirs, and just a few weeks ago encouraged me to have mine checked.  What’s the worst that can happen with a thyroid?  I make a mental note to look that up.

Audiogram and vision test.  I just had my eyes checked the day before, no surprises there.  Although, the optometrist said, “Well, you don’t have cataracts yet, but you’re on your way.”  Well, thanks.  Like most married people, I occasionally have selective hearing, but I’m pretty sure I can squeak by the test.

Pulmonary exam, stress test, chest X-ray, and EKG.  Wowza.  What are they looking for in a chest X-ray?  Making sure I’m telling the truth on my non-smoking status?  Do I look like a walking heart attack?

What if something is discovered during this battery of tests?  I wonder if I should go online and double my life insurance coverage before I go to sleep, just in case.  What if the EKG shows a blockage?  What if the chest X-ray shows a dreaded spot?  If I wait until I know about it, I have to disclose it on my life insurance questionnaire.    So I should do it before morning.

Downstairs I go to research life insurance policy updates.  It’s 1:00 a.m.  I need to be pulling out of my driveway in 5 1/2 hours.  I’m thirsty.  The reasonable voice in the back of my head  is telling me to stop being ridiculous and just go to sleep, but, alas, I cannot listen to reason.  The gremlins are afoot.

As I’m going through term life rates, weighing a new policy vs. a current policy increase, I begin to wonder what happens if the tests show something bad.   How sucky would it  be to find out I have a dreaded condition at the same time my employer says, “Sorry about your dreaded condition….and the fact that now you don’t have a job.”  I mean, that’s what it comes down to, right?  They aren’t running all these tests for curiosity’s sake.

Insurance project complete.  Steve, the kids, and grandkids will be able to mourn my passing in style, while grieving inconsolably on a tropical beach somewhere.

I need to get some sleep, but the gremlins won’t let me forget that thyroid thing.  Since I’m already online, I may as well check into it.

Google “thyroid disorders” and you get this:

About 9,840,000 results  (0.34 seconds)

Well, THIS will be fun!  First task is finding a list of symptoms, which is pretty simple.  Here are the Top Five Symptoms Of Thyroid Malfunction:

1.  Fatigue – well, duh.  I mean, is there a human alive who isn’t tired?

2.  Weight changes – hourly.  Maybe not hourly, but I can fluctuate 20 lbs. in a 2 week period.

3.  Depression / Anxiety – of course.  Again, is there a human alive who doesn’t get anxiety?

4.  Cholesterol issues – yes.  My levels, like my weight, fluctuate wildly.

5.  Family History – yes.  I didn’t know I had a family history until a couple of weeks ago.

Apparently I’ve been walking around with a thyroid disorder for 25 years.  I’ll probably have a goiter by morning.  Oh, wait….it IS morning.  2:18 a.m., to be exact.  I have to go to bed.

I think I napped, but at 4:32 a.m. I am fully awake.  I’ve mentally walked through how the insurance money should be disbursed after my untimely death.   I’ve revised my bucket list to accommodate only the most important things I want to accomplish, careful to consider that I’ll be doing them in a state of exhaustion, and with a goiter on my neck.

 

sundownbucket

 

I set a reminder on my phone to look into a Do Not Resuscitate order so my family won’t have to make those awful decisions.  I’ve evaluated the most obvious candidates for my husband’s next wife, and I have to say that each one of them will be a sorry replacement.  One of them, specifically, is an insufferable bitch, and I swear a solemn oath under my breath to haunt them mercilessly if he lowers himself to her level.

Groggy, headache-y, and thirsty like a camel, I make my way to the hospital.  I’m ready to hear the news, and am almost disinterested in which body part will be responsible for my demise:  thyroid cancer…..90% blockage in a main artery……harmless looking tumor on the lung that has metastasized to all of my major organs?  In the end, does it really matter?

I was so accepting of my fate that my blood pressure was lower than normal, “perfect” according to the nice Medical Assistant that checked it.  My hearing was fine, and my vision was exactly as it had been a few days before.  So far, so good.

 

bloodtest

 

Time for the EKG.  “Looks perfect, ” the nice Medical Assistant chirped.  Alrighty, then.  That means that I need to brace for the chest X-ray.

The happy M.A. takes me back to Radiology and introduces me to an equally happy woman who explains she’s going to get some pictures.  I get lined up and take a deep breath and hold it as instructed.  The gremlins are giddy with anticipation.  This is the moment that will change my life forever.

“I’d like to take another one.  I need a better look.”

AHA!  I knew it!  Here it comes.

“OK, we’re done.  I’m going to take you back to the Dr.’s office, and he’ll be in shortly.”

The wait in the Doctor’s office seemed to last a long time.  I checked my watch, and was surprised that I’d been at the hospital for 4 hours already.  I am still weighing burial vs. cremation when the Dr. comes in and introduces himself.

I’m a little taken aback at his casual demeanor.  I mean, this is my LIFE we’re talking about here!  I’m watching him intently while he flips through the papers on the clipboard, trying to identify when he hits the information that will make him scrunch his eyebrows, purse his lips, and let out an exasperated sigh.  I imagine that it’s still tough for him, after all these years, to give people the news that they dread hearing.

He’s got a great poker face, this guy.  He’s not giving off any clues at all.

I’m trying to decide how I’ll break the news to Steve when Dr. Death says, “Well.”

“Well”?  What the hell does that mean?

“It will be a few days before we get all the blood work back.  Hopefully by Monday.”

Monday.  So Monday we’ll decide what the options are, get some referrals to experts in ….. wait, in what?  What are we dealing with here, Doc?

“So far, everything looks great.  Your UA was negative, but I’m sure that’s no surprise to you.  The EKG was perfect, and so was your pulmonary test.  Your chest X-ray is clean.  Stress test is fine.  Based on all this, I don’t expect we’ll be getting any surprises from your bloodwork.  You’re a picture of health, young lady.”

At first it doesn’t register.  He’s saying I’m FINE?  No tumor?  No goiter?  No hypertension?  I don’t need to have my Last Will & Testament reviewed?

I’m not dying?

“Do you have any questions?”

I think back to The Kinks…

Doctor, Doctor help me please, I know you’ll understand
There’s a time device inside of me, I’m a self-destructin’ man
There’s a red, under my bed
And there’s a little green man in my head

I smile and shake my head.  “Nope, I’m great.  Thanks, Doc!”

Thank heavens they didn’t give me a paranoid idiot test.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now I Know Why Peter Pan Didn’t Want To Grow Up

Now I Know Why Peter Pan Didn’t Want To Grow Up
Now I Know Why Peter Pan Didn’t Want To Grow Up

Disclaimer:  this is not an amusing post.  If you’re looking for chuckles, you might want to move along.

I’ve thought long and hard about writing this blog post, because even though I pretty much call ‘em like I see ‘em all the time, I really don’t like hurting people. 

Well, most people.   Certainly not the people that are nearest and dearest to me, and those are probably the people this post is going to hurt most of all.  After going back and forth in my head (which, by the way, tends to make me dizzy), I decided that it had to be written anyway.

As most everyone knows, Steve and I spend lots of time with our grandchildren.  This past weekend, we planned dinner and a movie with Lexi and Ethan to celebrate Ethan’s birthday.  The 2 oldest of our grandchildren, they are wonderful cousins to one another, just thick as thieves.

ethanbdaycollage

Watching these monkeys grow up is a double edged sword.  We have a front row seat as they develop from infants into tweens and teens right before our eyes, but the constant awareness of how swiftly their childhoods are passing is bittersweet.  Conversations used to revolve around coloring books, how high they could count, and the story line of Shrek.  Now it’s more likely about soccer strategy, current music, the delicate balance of friendships at school, potential careers, and even current crushes. 

Together from the beginning

Together from the beginning

Certainly, they also tell fart jokes… regale us with genuinely hilarious imitations of their parents…and transition from bona fide dance moves to exaggerated disco foolishness within the 4 minute duration of Party Rock Anthem.

These are our two oldest grands.  Lexi turned 12 a few months ago, and this particular evening was to celebrate Ethan turning 9.  Last year of single digits for this dear boy; how did that happen?  As grandparents, we’re cutting our teeth on these two poor kids.  We quickly realized that all the mine fields that were navigated during parenthood don’t help much when it comes to the challenges of grand-parenthood.  We struggle through supporting their parents’ rules and standards… keeping confidences that we wish we could share with their parents… listening when they just need a sounding board without injecting advice… sharing our own personal belief system without inflicting it onto them. 

It’s a tightrope.

I digress, but this is the background to the conversation that was had in our car last Saturday.

After 15 minutes or so of “let’s make jokes about Grandma being old”, I threw out a deflection by asking them what age they considered “old”. 

Lexi:  “Like, 60.”

Ethan:  “Yeah, like 60.”

Hmmmmm.  So I decided to test their opinion.

“Do you think Aunt Denise is old?” – “No, not Aunt Denise.”

“Do you think Ken & Celine are old?” – “No!  They’re too fun.”

More inquiries on actual people who were over the age of 60, and more “No, not (fill in the blank).”

Me:   “Do you think Grandma Pam is old?”

Ethan:  “Who is that?”

Lexi:  “My other Grandma.  She’s not OLD old, but she’s old because she’s sick.”  Her tone changed, and not in a good way.

Me:  “Because she has to have the oxygen tank?”

Ethan:   “Oh, THAT Grandma.  Lexi, she’s old.  She’s REALLY old.”

Lexi:  “She isn’t really that old, but she’s can’t do stuff anymore.  Did you know her lungs aren’t going to get any better?”

Me:  “Yes, I know that.  I’m sure that’s pretty hard.”

Ethan:  “It’s because she smokes, huh?”

Lexi:  “Yeah.  She got lung disease.  It’s really sad.”

Ethan:  “I hate smoking.  My Mom is going to quit.  She’s trying really hard.  I hope she does it soon, because I don’t want her to get sick.  I’m never going to smoke.”

Me:  “Good choice, buddy.  I know your Momma is trying.  She’s using that e-cig now.”

Ethan:  “Sometimes.”  His tone had begun to match Lexi’s.  Not a good sign.  This is the opposite of Happy Birthday conversation.

Lexi:  “I think my Mom could quit, but I don’t think she will.  It’s too hard for her to quit when Josh smokes, and Josh doesn’t want to quit.  I hope I never smoke.”

Me:  “You don’t have to hope, honey.  Just don’t do it.”

Lexi:  “Yeah, I know, but you know how kids say they don’t want to do things their parents do but they end up doing them?  I don’t think I’ll smoke, because I’m around you guys a lot, but I think Matthew and Hunter and probably Allison will.  Because they want to be like everybody else, and they all smoke.  Josh, Grandma Tina, PaPa Jeff, Laura, Aunt Jenny.  All of them. “

Ethan:  “Yeah!  I think that too.  I don’t want to smoke, but my Mom and Dad do, and Uncle Alex.  And my Dad drinks beer all the time, and I don’t want to drink beer ever, because everybody fights when they drink beer.  But I think I might end up doing those things too.  When they were kids, they probably didn’t say ‘Oh, I want to grow up and smoke’ or ‘I want to grow up and drink beer’, but they did.”

I am thinking desperately of what to say.  I look at Steve and see that his mind is working just as fast as mine.  These children already understand, on a very basic level, the pitfalls that cause people to repeat cycles of destructive behavior.

Me:  “I used to smoke.  Then I quit.  So your parents will be able to quit.  They’re trying.”

Ethan & Lexi:  “YOU used to smoke?  PaPa, did you too?”

Steve:  “No.  Never.  I never smoked, I never drank, I never used drugs.  I just didn’t.”  That’s the absolute truth, but I still give him an exasperated look.  Trying to paint a picture of transformation here, Sweetie!

Lexi:  “Did you smoke while you were pregnant, Grandma?  My Mom did with Hunter and Matthew, and I think that’s why they’re little.  And we’re always around smoke, even when the boys were babies.  I think that’s bad, but I can’t say anything.”

Ethan:  “When did you stop, Grandma?  Does my Mom know you used to smoke? Can I tell her? ”

Me:  “No, I never smoked when I was pregnant, Lex.  I actually didn’t smoke when my kids were little.  I smoked as a teenager because I thought it was cool, then stopped the day I found out I was pregnant with your Mom.  I can’t tell you why I started again, but to be honest, I think it was because I started being around other people who smoked.  Then one day, in 1998, I stopped for good.  Just like you guys, I always said I wouldn’t smoke, and I had disappointed myself.  So I just stopped.  Ethan, your Momma knows I smoked, it isn’t a secret.”

Ethan:  “When you were a kid, did you say you were never going to smoke?”

Deep breath.  I have to be honest, and I vividly remember hating the smell of cigarettes, and the hacking cough that my Mother had, and the way cigarette smoke in a closed car gave me motion sickness.

Me:  “Yep.  I sure did.”

Lexi:  “Your Mom died from smoking, huh, Grandma?”

Me:  “Yes, she did.  So did my Dad.”

Lexi:  “Were they old?”

Ethan:  “Does my Mom know that?  That your Mom and Dad died from smoking?  Will you tell her?  Tell her that she needs to quit.”

Me:  “They weren’t old.   My Dad was younger than I am right now.  My Mom was only a little older than I am right now.  Ethan, your Mom knows.”

Ethan is speaking very quietly now, looking down at his hands:  “Then why does she smoke?  Why does Uncle Alex?  It’s so bad, and even I know that and I try to tell her.  Once I even threw her cigarettes away and she got mad at me and I told her I didn’t care that I didn’t want her to have them.”

Lexi:  “That’s what I mean.  When our parents were kids, they didn’t say ‘Oh, I’m going to grow up and smoke cigarettes and do this and do that.’  Then they just do.  That’s why I’m scared for Matthew and Hunter and Allison.  I don’t think I’ll do stupid things because Grandma and PaPa will confront me on it and not let me.  But Matthew and Hunter and Allison, I’m scared for them.  They’re not going to listen.  They don’t have anyone to follow, except maybe me, but they’re going to follow Josh and Grandma Tina and all them.”

Oddly enough, I have to bite my tongue so I don’t correct her for saying “and them”.  This is not the time.

Ethan:  “Lexi, we won’t let each other do those things, ok?  Promise?  And you and me, we won’t let Aban and Kyra do anything bad either.  We can’t.”

Lexi:  “I won’t let you.  I hope the boys won’t do stupid stuff.  Or Allison.  And I don’t think Uncle Alex will let Aban or Kyra do anything bad.  I just wish my Mom……I don’t know, things are so hard for her.  She has to work all the time, and take care of the kids…..I think it’s too hard for her to quit smoking right now.”

Ethan:  “My Mom’s going to quit, I know she will.   She’s trying really hard.  I don’t think my Dad will, but I know my Mom will.  I’ll help her.  I just don’t want anything to happen to her.”

They’re speaking almost in whispers now, and more to themselves than to anyone else.  Ethan’s voice cracks on the last sentence.  Steve and I are silent.

Where’s your wisdom now, Grandma Know-It-All?

Me:  “Hey, you guys, it’ll be ok.  Ethan, nothing’s going to happen to your Mom.”

Lexi:  “Nobody thinks anything is ever going to happen to them, Grandma.  Until it does.”  How many times have I said those exact words?  About so many situations.

Silence.  I look back, and my heart breaks.  Instantly, I yearn for the days when the biggest worry was a broken toy or skinned knee.  I want to fix this.  I want to go back to the time when I could make everything better with a cookie or a Zerbert.  I want to be able to give them the best day of their life just by flying a kite or making popcorn on the stove in a big pot with a glass lid.  I’m not ready for these kids to have problems I can’t magically fix. 

I don’t want life’s harsh realities to show their face to these kids.  Not yet.

We went on to dinner….a Hibachi restaurant that Ethan had only been to once before and loved.  It was a great surprise for him.  Both kids loved watching the chef perform amazing feats on his grill, oohing and aaahing over onion volcanoes and juggling eggs.  The staff sang Happy Birthday in Japanese, and brought him cheesecake.  He’d never tried cheesecake before because he doesn’t like cheese….except on pizza.  No amount of explanation could convince him that cheesecake was NOT going to taste like cheese.  He was so enamored with everything else, though, that he took a big forkful of cheesecake.  He was amazed that he liked it, and couldn’t wait to tell his Mom that he “discovered” cheesecake.  Lexi tried to get him to try sushi, and he made a series of disgusted / terrified faces that cracked her up.

Cheesecake!

Cheesecake!

I have no tidy ending to this.  No witty wrap up.  I didn’t come up with some amazing wisdom to pass on through generations.  The fears they expressed?  Those are my fears, too….and Zerberts don’t magically make those fears go away.

Just a Warm & Fuzzy Hillbilly Story

Just a Warm & Fuzzy Hillbilly Story

A friend of mine lost her purse twice in the last 2 weeks.  The first time, she got a call that it had been found on a highway before she’d even noticed it missing.  The second time, she left a store and realized she’d left it in the cart, and went back immediately.  While waiting at the Customer Service Desk to report it, someone turned it in.

Both times, all the money was missing.  Frustrating, for sure, but sadly not unexpected.

It reminds me of something that happened when I first moved to this area.  It was a small action, but I’ve remembered it for over a dozen years, so that tells you how impactful it was.

We lived in a little tiny place in a scarcely populated area.  I drove 70 miles to work each way, every day.   The nearest gas station/convenience store was 7 miles from our house.  The next closest one was an additional 18 miles away, so the Y’all Stop was a pretty regular stop for us.  It was owned by a married couple, Toni & Ray, who considered it a “retirement job”.  They lived in a little house adjacent to the store.

New people in the area, especially those from big cities (like we were) or those with no blood relatives (aka ‘kin’) in the area (like us) were often viewed with suspicion.  People weren’t unfriendly, but you definitely weren’t one of them.  You didn’t “belong” right off the bat.  So it was for Steve & me and the kids.

We moved in at the end of February, and I started my new job the first week of March.  Sometime in those first couple of weeks, my middle child and I had stopped at the Y’all Stop for something or other.  It was uneventful.

Several days later, I stopped in for gas.  There was no “Pay At The Pump” option, so I went in to settle up after filling my tank.  Toni was getting used to seeing us, and recognized our vehicles.  As I approached with my wallet, she said “I have something for you.”  From underneath the counter, she pulled out a wrinkled $1 bill, with a note paper-clipped to it.  The note read “The brown haired girl who moved down by Moore Bend.  Her Mom works at the newspaper.”

My daughter, when digging into her pocket to check the balance of her allowance those days before had dropped a dollar on the floor.  Someone found it, and made sure to turn it in so it would find its way back to her.

Still in my big city mindset, I was left almost speechless.  I thanked Toni profusely, and asked her to pass on my thanks to the gentlemen who found the dollar bill and turned it in.  She waved it off, and started asking about how we were settling in.  She bought my coffee that day, the first of many days that she would offer me a cup while we chatted.

We moved to a different home 7 years ago, with different nearby gas stations. Toni & Ray sold the store, and moved away to be closer to their children and grandchildren, to finally and officially retire.  The new owners made a go of it, but I understand that it’s no longer in business.

That is still the most meaningful dollar anyone has ever handed me.

yarnells