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jaronbs.com
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by Jaron Summers
I
am talking about a procedure involving the insertion of a six-foot tube
into your body to have "a look around." This snake-like gadget
is along the lines of common garden hose with a camera in it and some
other high-tech toys so that an alert doctor can zap any polyps in your
intestine. The
hose is driven into your body through what medical science refers to as
the poop chute. I
was somewhat reluctant to have this procedure performed, however, the
test detects benign tumors called polyps -- these can easily morph into
cancer of the bowels. No fun. Colon cancer killed my grandfather. I
told my wife that I was frightened.
After all colonscopy is painful and for the well being of the
patient and convenience of the medical team, you're knocked senseless
with drugs that pigmies along the Amazon developed for felling tigers. I
explained to Kate that being under an anesthetic would be tempting
death. Kate checked our life insurance policy, discovered we were paid
up and concluded that I was just a coward. "Go for it," she
said. She happily agreed to drive me to and from the procedure. Here
is what happened at the clinic after I purged myself. (I'll spare the
reader the hilarious specifics of the pre-op procedure where the writer
cleaned out his own colon.) This involves turning the poop chute into a
poop shooter. Anyway,
five pounds lighter, I arrived at the clinic and they took my clothes
off and put me on a slab. A nurse inserted what I assumed was a sterile
needle into my arm. She hooked me up to enough monitoring devices to
track a Saturn Rocket. I
was terrified because I sensed that today I would be as close to death
as I had ever come. I
decided to make up a joke. What
is the similarity between a patient who cannot pay his bill and a
proctologist? Answer: they are both in arrears. Okay it is not all that
hilarious but I figured when I was wheeled into the operating room (OR),
that this might amuse the garden hose crew. In
the OR I was greeted by a delegation in green scrubs who would start my
close-to-death journey. My doctor smiled at me and told me to turn over.
I did and asked -- "Do you know the similarity
between--?" The
cunning anesthesiologist introduced the Amazon pygmy knockout solution
through the needle that was already in my arm. Bang!
I was in cloud cuckoo land. (Got
to hand it to those little fellows from the rain forest.) The
next thing I knew, the jolly medical staff was smiling at me and telling
me everything was great and that one small polyp had been located and
removed. The
doctor warned me not to drive a car or operate heavy machinery for
twenty-four hours. His
nurse made sure Kate would drive me home. On
the way home I asked my wife to stop so I could buy a magazine across
the street. (There was a
story about me in the October issue of "Publishing Success" --
a Writer's Digest special issue.) I
staggered across the street, bought the magazine and signaled for Kate
to meet me at the far corner. I was woozy and did not want to chance
re-crossing the street. Kate
suddenly and inexplicably accelerated across the street and into the
alley where I was standing. Being
near comatose from the medical procedure, my feet were rooted to the
ground. Kate sped at me at her customary Mach Two.
Somehow I managed to leap out of the way or I would have been
smashed to atoms. As
we continued home, Kate inquired why it had taken so long for me to jump
out of the way of our car. I
explained that I was still in recovery from a horrendous medical
procedure involving six feet of garden hose and a deadly anesthetic.
Furthermore, the doctor had given me the wrong information. He told me
not to operate a car, alas he had neglected to warn me about standing in
front of a car driven by a supposedly loving wife who should have had
the sense to slow down when approaching a befuddled husband in a
comatose state. "Well,
don't worry," said Kate. "You're alive." "Yes,"
I said. "But today's medical procedure resulted in the closest I
have every come to death thanks to your insane driving." "Silly,
Baby, I was only trying to help," she said. "Stick your nonsense where the garden hose goes.
I hope you enjoyed this week's column. By the way, if you'd like to read the first three chapters of my new children's book, go to Betty's Greatest Adventure. And if you'd like to look at the beginning of a steamy thriller set in Malibu and Bel Air, then click on Damaged Goods. The bad guy is a lot like one of the CEOs I met on the way to Hong Kong. Cheers, jaron
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