Wednesday
Oct152003

Tid Bits and Random Thoughts

Mum's the Word: Barbara and I went to Home Depot and bought some chrysanthemums, the $6.00 size. I love the rich colors. A wheel barrow holds four pots and is parked in our front yard for all to enjoy. What an autumn color burst it is. Replacing the impatiens with the chrysanthemums or any other switch usually has me feeling like a traitor or I am being unfaithful. Three pots of worn out impatiens have been relegated to the side of my shed. Seems like an injustice. All they did was bloom all summer and look beautiful. Even in the plant world it is "what have you done for me lately."
Puppy: My twelve and a half year old dog Hobo takes arthritis medicine. He has difficulty standing up and laying down. It is so hard to watch him decline. He ran out of the medicine so we stopped by the vet on the way home from work. Inside the vets office I struck up a conversation with a lady who was waiting for her dog. The conversation could have been about our children. We discussed their ailments. She was also there to look at a puppy. Our vet, as are most vets, also broker in abandoned dogs. Our dog was abandoned. The vet got him healthy and we gave him a home. Anyway, this particular puppy had been found in a dumpster. Some compassionate responsible person must have felt a dumpster was a good way to get rid of a puppy. He was rescued nonetheless and brought to Dr. Maher. When the nurse (I guess she was a nurse she was wearing scrubs) brought the puppy out to the lobby I got to take a turn holding him. Then I had to go get Barbara out of the car to come see the pup. She took a turn holding him. He was black and brown with floppy ears and a thin tail that wagged continuously. He was very snuggly and seemed to love the attention. I thought about how holding a puppy brought out such positive emotions in everyone there. Barb and I were coming home from work, quiet, tired, barely talking. One second with the cute puppy and we were laughing and smiling. Moral of the story, if you are not the kind of person who feels it OK to throw a puppy in a dumpster then go hold one any time you want a lift. Oh, Hobo smelled the puppy when I came home and gave me the cold shoulder like I had been cheating on him or something. He does not have to worry though - he is the top dog for life - his life.
Bed Side Manner: I remembered a funny story involving one of our former patients and the medical doctor at our facility. Doctor Lee as, I will call him, while accomplished in medicine lacks bedside manner. His personality flat, no small talk, no smiling or anything resembling kind human interaction. If he is irritated he is even less congenial - if that is possible. Dr. Lee comes to the hospital once or twice a day to oversee the medical conditions of our psychiatric patients and to do routine history and physicals, H&P's. One afternoon, Dr. Lee was going about his business and was being interrupted by a very intrusive bipolar patient I will call Martha. Martha had no concept of interrupting or intruding. Dr. Lee (who is Filipino) is frequently errently referred to as "that Chinese doctor." "That Oriental doctor." Martha kept hounding him. Finally getting enough of her pestering, he said "go away you are bothering me." Martha looking highly insulted fired back, "you don't have to talk to me that way - after all - I support your country - I eat Chinese food." The fact Martha was making what she thought was a valid point was even funnier than the look on Dr. Lee's face. The nurses in earshot did a good job concealing their urge to burst out laughing. Dr. Lee headed for the door in his customary method of not saying good bye.
Bad Day: I get up in the morning at 5:00 AM. My running partner Neil comes to my house at 6:00 AM. That gives me an hour to wake up, post my blog entry, stretch, and most importantly, get the coffee ready for Barbara to push the button when she heads back to our room from the shower. If I do not have the coffee ready there will be trouble. The kind of trouble I would just as soon not deal with so I make the coffee every day. On Monday though, I woke up with a start. You know the feeling in your stomach when you realize you just over slept? I jumped out of bed at 6:00 AM. Neil had come and gone so I was going to have to run alone. No big deal, but I hate to make him come to my house to run and I am sleeping. Next task, make the coffee. I began the usual routine. I rinsed out all of the coffee maker components. The carafe was sitting on the counter and I had the disposal running to deal with the coffee grounds I had just poured in the sink. When I turned off the disposal, my hand knocked the pot on the floor shattering the morning silence and itself into a zillion little pieces. At this juncture I had the thought, "this may be a bad day." At least it was certainly shaping up to be one. I broke the news to Barbara and she took it pretty well. Given the degree to which we like coffee, I had envisioned a scene reminiscent of Ray Milland in The Lost Weekend, tearing up the house looking for a bottle. Luckily we still had our old coffee pot. Bad day averted. I just got back from Bed Bath & Beyond with the replacement carafe - $25. I guess it is cheaper than crack.
Until the next time
John Strain