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[personal profile] mrissa
Well. I have had my inner ear messed with, non-surgically, and I am still a bit unsteady from the experience. In fact, if I was left to my own devices with no instructions, I would want to go have a lie-down right about now. I suspect that I will end up sleeping in [livejournal.com profile] markgritter's or [livejournal.com profile] timprov's recliner tonight, to minimize the temptation of rolling off the pillows to sleep flat.

Anyway, it was not too bad, could have been worse. They didn't do the thing that sounds and feels like a family of woodpeckers has taken up residence in my skull. That was worse. I have a new standard for medical appointments: any medical appointment where you don't need anaesthetic, and where they don't do the woodpecker thing, and where no competent doctor says, "Uhhh...that's weird," or, "Uh-oh!", is a good medical appointment. It used to be "any medical appointment where nothing metal enters your body is a good medical appointment," but in the last year I have discovered unpleasant things they can do to you without bits of metal inside your body.

Now I go about the rest of my day upright. I'm not sure how this will go. I have the feeling I will feel thwarted, if not at every turn, certainly at many turns. Still, it's over, and it's much easier to deal with the known limits on what I can do than the unknowns about what will need doing.

Date: 2006-10-24 09:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] callunav.livejournal.com
Ye gods, how annoying (the limitations, I mean).

Also annoying - although your phrasing made me laugh - are medical people who run away when asked to explain things. It is not cute behavior.

But I'm glad that you're through the doctor-visit part of it, and that it was manageable. I hope that after this probably-pretty-yucky 48 hours is over you see significant improvements.

I'm trying to think what my criteria for acceptable doctor's visits would be. I'm not sure. I do think that doctors' being excessively pleased with the work they've done on you deserves a caution sign. It's not always bad, of course - the doctors were very pleased at saving [livejournal.com profile] nmsunbear's life when she had her pulmonary embolism, and I'm very pleased about it, too. But on the whole one would prefer to be more boring than that. If I go the rest of my life with no medical treatments that doctors feel the need to put their initials by, that will be just fine. Other than that...I'll think. But your criteria sound good.

Take care of yourself. I hope the time passes quickly and bearably, and that it ends up being very much worth it.

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