Thursday, April 3, 2014

Bottoms Up!!






I have recently completed, and survived, the test that strikes fear in the hearts of most men and women…...the colonoscopy.
 
Like everything else in my life, I made the appointment and gave very little thought to it until the day was almost upon me.  I have to say I’ve had this test several times before and knew what to expect.  Monday evening I read through the materials to make sure I was doing what I was supposed to be doing.  I realized I was supposed to have stopped taking aspirin five days ago….scratch that.  I read through the “day-before-lift-off” dietary instructions.  Clear liquid,check…jello,check…coffee with no cream…groan.  Okay…it’s basically one full day of aggravation, but I had a lot of writing to do so I would be able to keep my mind off food, and drink, and comfort.

Opening the bag from the pharmacy I realized the medical “Drain-O”  they give prescribed looked different this time.  I read the directions on the huge white bottle, which did not match the directions on the sheet given to me by my physician.   A call to the druggist (“That’s what they called in…so it’s definitely not our fault”) confirmed that I had the wrong concoction.   Now I knew I’d have to follow the diet sheet tomorrow and get the other stuff called in, picked up and ready to go before six p.m.   That’s actually the “witching hour” when you start to swill the awful stuff that causes your intestines to go into full battle mode.

Tuesday morning I called the doctor’s office to explain my dilemma.  After talking with the nurse (“That’s not what I called in…so it’s definitely not my fault”) she agreed to call in the proper stuff, which I would pick up after work.

After listening to the druggist explain (a.) what was called in,  (b.) how it was interpreted, (c.) what I was given, and (d.) why it’s not the fault of said druggist, said druggist’s staff, anyone who has ever worked in that particular drug chain or any of their relatives, I paid for the nasty stuff and went home.

Now we’re on track.   I have the big white bottle marked off into four parts, one part to be drunk every fifteen minutes until it’s all gone or you pass out.  After you finish that 32 oz assault you need to drink 8 oz. of plain water, and mentally prepare yourself for the next 32 oz sip-fest.
 
At this point the good news is your hunger is completely gone….maybe for the rest of your life.  Drinking the murky, room temperature, slightly thickened liquid took all of my will power.  The taste wass less repugnant than some of the stuff I’d had in the past…but even the “new improved” version of this was like drinking thick swamp water, with a twist of lemon.  The only way I can get through it is to carefully park my mind someplace else, then open my throat and pour it down.

There is a one hour wait between the first bottle of this stuff and the second.  Before I knew it I was mixing the two packets of powder in the big canister, adding room temperature water to the fill line, and shivering as I anticipate drinking 32 more ounces of this stuff.

As I drank the first 8 ounces of the second bottle a deep rumble began.   Somewhere in the center of my body a hot, clawing creature seemed to be looking for an escape route.  Since I knew perfectly well what that route would be, I decided it was time to set up shop in the bathroom.  That’s pretty much where the rest of the evening was spent.  The only thing that made it even remotely bearable was Wi-Fi. 

After what seemed like an endless night, morning arrived. The gut wrenching siege seemed to be over just in time to head to the hospital for the procedure.  I felt like a dried corn husk, but coffee, water, even chewing gum was forbidden.

As I’m wheeled into a procedure suite I spy my trusty physician, whom I’d seen just two days ago at a strings recital.   We chatted about children, grandchildren and husbands before getting down to business. 
As we made small talk, which I was desperate to keep going,  I was acutely aware of the nurses in the room as they prepared some dreadful looking equipment for my procedure.  One nurse wrestled impossibly long tubes, another had hoses slung over her shoulder and other things that might have come straight from the garden shed.   Isn’t that the new and improved pocket hose?  Did you get the second one free by just paying the shipping and handling?
 
Finally I could keep the doctor’s attention on other things no longer.  Right on schedule an IV dripped some cloudy looking stuff into the veins of my right arm.  A quiet, but friendly, nurse repositioned me just as the light switch in my brain clicked off.

A short time later I emerged from my black velvet cocoon to the sound of a chirpy young nurse telling me how wonderfully I’d done.  Not being able to remember any of it (thankfully) I had to take her word for the fact that I may just be an outstanding colonoscopy patient.  She chatted on as the fog began to clear from my head and I said the first thing that popped into my mind, “Can I get a cup of coffee now?”

If I knew where research was being done to simplify and/or improve this necessary test I would support the effort.  Show me where they’re working to come up with a better tasting drink, or a device being that can be contained in a capsule and
downed with coffee, and I will write a check to support the work.   As it is, I likely won’t have to submit to this undignified test again for several years.  I want to go on record as saying I am grateful for the tests that help us stay healthy…no matter how unpleasant they are.   Let’s make a toast to the doctors who perform these on a daily basis.
                             
 This one’s for you, doctor….bottoms up!!! 

                                                          Life is Good   

      



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