Thursday, May 26, 2011

MY FIRST TIME IN THE HOSPITAL FOR SURGERY

When is the first time that you were committed to a hospital?  If it has never happened to you, let me assure you that in all truth, you don't know what you're missing.  The last time I was in the hospital because I had to be there, was a real thriller.  The first time provides me with some rather interesting memories.
I think I was about six years old.  It was the Providence Hospital in Holyoke.  Dr. Daniels suggested that since I had a tendency to be sick all the time, that I should have my tonsils excised.  The preparations were all done and so we left the house and went to the hospital.  The night went by rather rapidly because I slept through it.  I think I must have been drugged.  I remember the morning came quickly and I was "escorted" into the operating room to get my tonsils removed.  I remember so many unpleasant things.  I remember fighting the ether and I remember that I seemed to be somewhere on the edge of a reality that I really hated because it was so strange and uncomfortable.  I'll never forget it.  I don't remember the act of surgery at all, but the surrounding feelings and emotions are still with me.  I got back to the ward and in my bed.  I don't exactly remember how it happened, but I came to find out that my uncle Donald was in the same hospital recovering from an industrial accident.  He had fallen off a garage roof and broken both his wrists.  He was ambulatory, so he made  the mistake of coming by my bedside as I was coming back into the world.  As I came around, I started to feel the pain in my throat and I started to cry...not good for the tonsils ..., I mean for the  throat that used to have tonsils.  Then I saw my uncle and so I cried all the more and begged him to get me home so I could be with my mother.  He showed me his wrists in casts and I cried the more out of sympathy for him.  I could not figure out how he could be in this weird place and not be crying too.  It was so mysterious to me how he could be in such fine humor.  All this mystery and the pain, made me cry all the more.  He got sick and tired of my lousy attitude, so he left.  Well, that made me cry all the more because now I had an abandonment on top of pain, on top of homesickness on top of frustration.  Somewhere along the stretch of the hours, crying all the time and shouting that I wanted my uncle Donald, I discovered that I was actually hungry.  Ha!  Hungry after tonsillectomy, are you?  Too bad little boy, you can't eat for at least another day or so.   So now I really get down to raising Hell, even in a Catholic hospital.  I really didn't know too much what to expect from the nuns, but I do remember that it was a good thing that I didn't have any preconceived notions about them.  If  I had, I'm quite sure that I would most likely have turned Protestant.  So it got to be afternoon, I think.  I'm still crying and still raucously shouting for my uncle, my mother, my father, anyone.  Then, I started to get nasty because I was hungry.  Sometime during the day, some kind soul, I didn't think that she was so kind. All she brought me was some luke-warm water in a glass from which she allowed me to take a couple of sips through a straw.  I have to admit, I remember that at first I thought she was stingy, but after the couple of sips, my throat actually felt better. That was the good news.  The bad news [95% of all news was bad that day] was that she put the glass out of my reach and said that she would come back in an hour to give me couple more sips.  That set me off again. I think I had stopped crying for about 15 minutes at some point.  But I got back on the angry train and didn't ever get off again.
I think it was about 7:00 PM when my mother and father came to see me at the hospital. You think that made me happy?  Nope.  first words were, "I wanna go home."  Second words were, from EFR Dion, "The sister told us to take you home."  Then I got sober and thought of Donald, the uncle who wasn't there all day when I needed him, but I did think of him and asked is he was going to come with us.  They said no.  He had to stay a couple more days.  That was another downer, but at least I wasn't alone.
All in all it was a bad experience for me.  Through the years I have revisited that experience and it is humorous, sad and technically rewarding.  How so?  I am sure that because of my ugly self the medical community decided to hasten the development of outpatient protocols for tonsillectomy.  They had had enough of PA Dion to last forever.  I would not be surprised to hear that the good sister Superior had to spend some time in purgatory over the nasty thoughts she surely entertained about me during that fateful day.   I have a secret for you... That was well over sixty years ago, and I wasn't done with the medical world yet.  The first time was a little humorous, the second time was rather ugly.  But I'll tell you about it.  Sometimes the funniest stuff comes out of the ugliness of life.  You know, like how nice flowers grow best when there's a lot of manure around them.  So, hold that thought, while pinching your nose, and we'll talk about it a little farther on down the road.  When the wind changes direction.

2 comments:

  1. From Cousin Maggie:
    Hi Paul, I read a half dozen or so of your blogs and laughed at most of them..I'm saving them to read a few a day when I'm not so busy. Like you, retired doesn't mean what I always seemed to think it would. Anyway, thanks for putting me on your "mailing list". As I was reading, I started to recall a few highlights in my life that included you. One.. when you visited me in Phoenix on your way home from being ordained. That was a GREAT weekend. And the day at Aunt Betty and Uncle Vince's when you were saying Mass and heard my confession so I could receive Holy Communion the following week with my son, Matthew. Oh, and the help you gave me when my dad died, starting with accompanying me to the coroner's office, then on to the funeral home (which you chose for me since I was hopelessly helpless about it all). I'm not sure how things may have gone without you there for me. Those were the priestly things planted firmly in my memory. You and I are the oldest living Dions (I think...I'm 71 as of April 27; how old is Denis?) I'm pleased and proud to have made it to this ripe old age...it's kinda like setting new records for the family. I, too, have some fond (and not so fond) memories and I think you may have inspired me to start a journal of them to leave to my grandchildren.

    Please hug Belle for me...and here's one for you.. love, Maggie

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  2. From Emelie:
    Heee...Nope, you weren't alive yet. You were right, it was in the mid to late 40's when the whole tonsillectomy thing began to go away. It really was a few things. One, the superstition that the tonsils were causing a lot of the childhood sicknesses, including allergic conditions like asthma and it was therefore capitalized on by the doctors as a cash cow. The scientific community and the logical thinkers of the time began to rebel against the pratice of removing tonsils because, after all, if they were so bad, we wouldn't have them as part of our physical make-up. It was then determined that if they weren't bad, they had to serve some good purpose. Dad was right on more than one count in this case.

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