It Began Monday Morning

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I woke up Monday morning this week and it was Tuesday afternoon.

I mean I had been awake on Monday. I was driving towards my standard morning appointment: me and the crossword in the back of Starbuck's. The next thing I knew I was in a very uncomfortable bed in a very small room with lot a lights flashing and going beep-beep all round me.

It took me over sixty hours to find out what had happened, but even immediately on waking I had been sure that I had not been kidnapped for exploitation and amusement. Alas. It was the beginning of a blog not a story, in spite of the very short opened backed garment I was dressed in; something besides my humiliation was the intent. I don't know why believing the intentions more benign made accepting humiliations easier, but it did. Of course, it also makes the story less fun too, I guess.

It seems that on Monday morning I drove my car directly into a car parked beside the road, and pushed that car into another parked car, and that car went into third. Loud popping of auto airbags and car alarms and so forth ensued. I was the only human around, think God, and except for some bruising that might have been caused by the airbags, I wasn't hurt by the wreck at all.

My old steed was ruined I've been told; I haven't seen it. Eight years and it had never once been in a body shop, but the current damage will cost more than its value so it won't be fixed, I guess.

Some of the people that work with that lizard with the British accent that shows up on American TV all the time tell me I'm not liable for any of the damage. An act of God; even my insurance rates won't go up (they say). That's nice; I can live with that since I had done what was legally required to take care of damage I caused; if people had been injured, I would have a different view of my responsibility, however.

Even though the air bags hit me in the face when they popped, even though the seat belt bite into my shoulder, I wasn't really in my car at the time it hit the parked car. My heart had stopped.

I don't remember any of this at all.

Someone started CPR on me at once (there must have been people around, just not close enough to be involved in the damage of the cars.), I don't know by whom, and the official channels don't seem willing to let me know easily. But it was begun before the ambulance got there. I have, it seems, a broken rib and a collapsed lung now. Do the official channels think that I will be angry at the person who did the CPR? Fools.

Well, the rib only bothers me when I cough. You know what works? Take a large pillow and hug it to you chest very tightly, then you can almost manage a reasonable cough.

There is still a hole in my side, some how (I don't understand this) that helps to keep the lung inflated. I don't know how I'm supposed to bathe with that bandage there, and no one has explained it to me, but I haven't had a shower since Sunday night. The hospital people managed things, usually in the dark of night, so I don't feel too rancid, but I need to do something soon beside a sponge bath.

Last week the only prescription I kept in my house (on principle) was Acetaminophen 3, just in case I hit my thumb with a hammer or something. I now have a shelf with seven new prescription bottles on it, and probably will for life; plus some nitro to carry with me always. I feel very old. I am, suddenly, very old.

If I had gone and sat in my garden and let the Zantac I took for the really bad heartburn I had Monday morning kick in, rather than going ahead and go to get my espresso, I would have vanished. All at once, none of you, none of a great many people, not just virtual contacts like you, would have ever known my fate. I would simply have faded away.

SEEK JOY!!!
Love; Jan.

Comments

I for one

I for one can't tell you how glad I am to hear
from you, even under such shocking circumstances.
I am so glad you are with us still, Jan. It makes
all the rest, the lot, seem unimportant.

Please take care of yourself, and do what they
tell you to do, so that you will feel better as
soon as possible.

Sarah Lynn

Wow.

That's a really scary story. It sounds like your guardian angel is working overtime.
It's good to see that you're still with us.

careful hugs

laika's picture

That's heavy, Jan! And I'm glad you're here to tell us.
Hope you make a quick and full recovery!

Everything I own is crap, so no Will, but I am going to
tack a black envelope to my door with instructions to my
sister on how to contact this site if I should die. Whether
she would or not, I can't say---and believe me, it wouldn't be
me just messing around, I'm not that deranged---but that's my plan.
You're my friends here, closest thing to a family for me, and I love you...
~~~Laika

I meant to

kristina l s's picture

I did. Having seen a recent little thing on the FM board that struck me as not quite right. I thought... I should drop a line and ask if all is well. But I let it slide. Don't we all do that too often. I hadn't seen any comment or such for a bit, but again... I am glad you're sort of ok and I do hope you get better more properly. Do look after yourself... fading away is not on.. right.
Hugs n stuff

Kristina

I hope you know...

erin's picture

...Jan, that you mean a lot to us, too. That's three of my online friends who've had serious health problems in the last few months. Very worrisome.

I've lost my mom, my life partner, and my best friend other than my partner, all within the last three and a half years. In that same time, several online writers have vanished and only one of them do we have any idea what happened. Darla Raspberry was killed in a traffic accident less than a year ago.

As for me, Bob Arnold and my brother both know all of my passwords here and other sites I run so if something happens to me, Bob or Don have my permission to find someone else to run these sites.

Jan, I hope that whatever Providence protected you this time continues to keep us all safe enough to enjoy many more years of our family and friends, both here and in our offline lives.

Fierce but Gentle Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

How ironic

As I read this and write this, the ad at the bottom of the page is the lizard you mentioned holding a cup of coffee or tea. Its good to hear you came through as well as you did, with no additional major injuries. Anything else is so minor, as not to be worried about. It may mean some major changes in how you do things, but pay attention to the docs. They sometimes know what they are talking about. And its good to know there are still Good Samaritans around to help in your crisis. Hang in there, we can't afford to lose you.

You Were Lucky

joannebarbarella's picture

Jan,
So lucky that it happened in a civilized place and help was to hand. My brother-in-law had a heart attack while driving and drove into a tree at an estimated 50 m.p.h. but he was 30 miles out of town and by the time he was found-too late. Be careful in the future,
Hugs,
Joanne

I don't know you but..

I wanted to send you my best wishes for a speedy return to some sort of normalcy. This just goes to remind us what a slender reed we're holding onto in this life of ours. It's something of a miracle that we exist at all.

Kx

Heartburn is one of the possible symptoms

Heart attacks can seem some thing else at first. The symptoms can be easlily overlooked, particualry in women.

Often the symptons are just that, something inocent such as heartburn or an aching overworked left arm. But sometimes its a tattack. You were lucky as were others on the road. Get well and get a good cariaoligist. My dad was within a few moths of deat in hie late 70s from a failing heart valve. One operation later and he's off to Oskosh today for a gem and mineral show, driving. Mind you the cow that provided the valve did not fair well.

Best wishes, Jan.

John in Wauwatosa

John in Wauwatosa

Hole in chest

That was there to provide drainage and as you said, to keep the lung inflated, by putting a vaccuum in the chest cavity around the lung. Been there, done that (eleven broken ribs and a punctured lung). What happened to you is just another reason why people need to take the American Red Cross CPR course when one is offered in your area. I was a certified First Responder for some years, and yes, having somebody who's trained on the spot can make all the difference in the world. A delay of even 5 minutes can make the difference in survival.

Few of us will have the dubious pleasure of knowing just when and how we'll make our exit, I'm so far off the charts the odds makers in Vegas wouldn't make book on my continued existance. My brother has the information needed to make the appropriate notifications.

Glad you are back with us, honestly, isn't a handfull of pills a day a small price to pay? I have to sort mine into those little daily pill minders to keep track of them all. Take your medicine and stick around a long, long time!

Karen J.

"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose"
Janis Joplin


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Very glad

I'm very glad you're still with us! Please take care of yourself and listen to those Doctor types.
Very gentle and warm hugs!
grover

For just a moment

I thought this was a commentary on my piece by the title (I have a poem here by the same title as this blog). However, I'm glad that it seems you'll be okay. Take care of yourself, listen to the nurses and don't try to force the non-sponge cleaning until they say it's okay.

Edeyn

Get well, stay safe, and keep in touch Jan.

Add another very unique and special experience to your life Jan. Not many actually die and get to come back with their brains still intact and in good working order.

You were given a special gift, what you do with it now is up to you Jan.

Huggles and very glad you're here.
Angel

"Be Your-Self, So Easy to Say, So Hard to Live!"

Get well soon,

Angharad's picture

I have to do basic life support training every year. I have had to use it once, sadly the patient had had an aortic aneurysm pop, so it didn't help. However, I didn't know that until the PM was done.

The incident was out in the sticks, which meant the ambulance took 20 minutes to get to me. Ever tried doing CPR single handed for twenty minutes? Bloody hard work, but at least I gave it a go, sticking my mouth over a stranger's, me who won't share a glass with most people or use any crocks/cutlery if they look slightly suspicious.

I didn't have to think, my training took over. I think everyone should do it. It might change somebody's life.

Angharad

Angharad

Who's the lizard?

I've had an attack of heartburn that was so bad my family and the paramedics thought it was a heart attack. After a night in hospital I was told it was just indigestion and I could go home. I felt very foolish and apologised for wasting their time. The doctor said "It's better to treat indigestion as a heart attack than the other way round."
I'm glad you didn't wait for the Zantac to kick in, and you were very lucky that there was somone who knew CPR at the scene of your accident. Take it easy, listen to your body, and get well soon.

Are there many career opportunities for British lizards in the American insurance industry? Our weather is a bit too cold and damp for reptiles, I'm sure many British lizards would love to work in the warmer parts of the USA.

Sinisterpenguin

CPR

I personally have been certified in CPR for so long I can't remember and have been a trainer in it. (Some will know my job and why) I have used CPR many many times.....2 saves out of all of them, but I did work at a major university will a major med center and med school, so my chances were more than many. One of my "saves" had another heart attack 2 years later and this time, there was no one to help. I lost count of the number of times I have used the Heimlich, including my own kids twice. We also had a McDonalds House and used CPr a few times there on sick kids. Basic and advanced first aid have come in handy also, including one suicide attempt on both wrists. Plus the auto accidents, one of which included a beheading (no that wasn't pretty). You never know where or when it might be needed, so if you have the chance, get the training. Having someone you know or trust with some info about you is good, just to get the word out if necessary. I was a cores[ponding friend with a person in the South. He had a total secret from his family, and even wound up divorced over it. We traded emails for a couple of years. I went a couple of months without hearing from him, several emails went unansewered. Them out of the blue, I got an email from his wife. He had died in a crash, and in cleaning things up, she found some files on his computer and was able to let several people know. It didn't make me feel better, but did stop the worry. It was a total shock to her, and the people she mailed.

Thinking of You Lots

Jan, I just adore your wry vignettes. Here you have made a terrible experience (albeit one blessed by guardian angels) sound, well, interesting. I am so glad you are still with us, and thinking of you often, hoping for a speedy convalescence. No hugs for now . . . .

Love,

Daphne

Daphne

Jan Update

This is the kind of blog that needs an update isn't it? Sorry its been so long.

First though, Many, Many Thanks for all the good wishes and smiles. They have meant a lot.

I think I'm doing much better - in part each day I wake up and say, "Boy, I was really a fuzzy headed mess yesterday; I'm glad I didn't do something even screwier." And then feel the same way the next morning again. But no bridges have burned or wars started and I just get tired too easily and too out of hand. (And do things like write emotional attention garnering blogs).

I am working hard to fight the impulse to open direct line to the Doctor's office. But do wonder if my chest (not chest but the muscles around it) and arms should be so sore and tender. And then there is the cough (made worse by sore chest.)... Two days to the schedualed appointment, AND I know I'm getting better, so I'm keeping my worries in check.

OK, that's probably way more than you wanted to know but, all and all, I expect to be around rousing rabble for some time.

Hugs & Joy; Jan

PS. Someone told me that lizard was actually from Belize, perhaps live in the Governor's General garden ... garden of the Governor General, which explains the public school accent.

Dear Jan S

joannebarbarella's picture

Please don't think any of us out here don't want to know how you are doing,
Hugs,
Joanne