That’s what I told the endocrinologist yesterday when he said, “We’ll run a few tests the next time you’re in the area.” Dude! Dude. My husband and I cancelled all our summer plans and rearranged our lives to come here for this. For you! To Houston in the summer! Can’t you do them sooner?”
To catch you up, we arrived on Monday at the Escapees campground, which is as close to a home base as we get, seeing as how we belong to the Escapees program for its mail service. If you’ve ever received mail from me with a return address of Livingston, Texas, that’d be here.
It’s a huge RV park, not exactly resort-style, but we found a spot that suits our needs and we booked for a month. Our needs being full hook-ups, in the shade of a couple of large trees, and situated so Tracy can aim the Starlink receiver to an effective spot in the sky.
I like it because there are very few bozos like us here in this heat. Literally, there’s no one on either side of us or behind us. Not that I’m spending much time outside, with a real-feel of 108.
I know, cut to the chase about the doctor already. I’ll get there, but it’s a frustrating story and I have to work my way up to it.
So far here in Livingston, Tracy’s outfitted the trailer so as to stay as cool inside as he can swing it, with reflective, insulated paper taped ever-so-glamorously inside all the windows.
The resulting vibe is so much stranger than either of us anticipated. It feels like we’re in a tiny submarine way in the depths of the ocean. You can’t open the shades to look outside; you can’t open the ceiling vents or run the ceiling fans; there’s zero connection with the outside world at all. An ostrich could run by and we’d miss it. Which, you know, GAH. It certainly isn’t what Airstreams are designed for, I can tell you that.
What we’ll do inside for a month, I have no idea. Which leads me to yesterday’s big day of doctors’ appointments, which was a mixed up, muddled up, shook-up world of a day.
Totally good news: my orthopedist who did the ACL surgery says my knee is in good shape. The cadaver ACL (by now, my ACL) is fine, and I probably just pulled my quads the time I fell on my butt in Virginia and sprained my MCL the time I fell on my face in Louisiana. Both are healing on their own. The continued swelling at this stage (6 months post-surgery) isn’t unheard of, but if I can’t find an underlying cause with the other doctor, come back.
Drum roll, please, for the other doctor. That visit did not go well, and, now that I get to it, I don’t want to talk about it. Bottom line is I’m having a bunch of labs done on Friday morning, and if they’re negative, I’m going to my PCP next week to start from scratch. At least that’s what my several-page mindmap I drew up in the middle of the night points me to. There’s also a bubble on that map that says, “INSANE HYPOCHONDRIAC,” but my separate, insomnia-fueled yes/no decision tree doesn’t point to that, yet.
To keep myself from tilting the scales toward the insane end, I’ve taken up the idea of using this blog as fodder for a book. I’ve resisted that notion because I can guess how much work you have to do to prep a manuscript, find an agent, yadda yadda, or more so if you self-publish. I hate that kind of work; I used to do it for a living and am done. But damned if I really need some kind of intellectual endeavor right now, especially something I can do in the Deep Dark Night while Tracy sleeps. So, for right now at least, I’m writing a book.
My very first research step was to learn the Number One Rule to writing any kind of memoir-style/personal narrative piece of non-fiction, which is DO NOT RECYCLE YOUR BLOG. Well, poop.
Once I thought more about that strategy, I could see its pitfalls, which led me to a better plan. I started thinking about my blog as research notes for a book, and that’s when book ideas came out of my fingers faster than I could arrange them into an outline. Apparently, I’ve been thinking this way all along—somewhere in the back of my INSANE HYPOCHONDRIAC head—and all I needed to let it loose was to give myself permission.
According to my use of all caps here, I’m still stressed out from that doctor’s appointment, so I’m going to apply myself to a little book writing to escape from my own head. If I can pull that off, I’m saner than my decision-tree indicates.
Damn. I was really hoping you’d get some positive results from this doctor. I can only imagine how frustrating this must be for you. And you’re not insane. Trust yourself, and force them to take your symptoms seriously. No one knows your body better than you.
If that doesn’t work? Have Banjo bite them.
I might still figure out what’s going on and get treatment, so Banjo’s on hold yet. 🤣
Good for you to open up yourself to write a book. Good for you to keep persisting for answers to your body. I hope you receive answers in the next few days, answers that aren’t serious problems and can be fixed so you will feel better and whole.
That’s very sweet of you, thank you.
I think a blog is a great starting point for a book, recycled or not. Best of luck with the writing!
Thanks!!
Book! – had you looked at Dave Winer’s “Drummer” outliner?
I have not, but I will now! I enjoy using Scrivener, at least so far.
We all live in a yellow submarine. I personally could see using the blog to write essays or short stories David Sedaris style. Plenty of material to pull from. Good news on your knee!
I love Sedaris – his reading Santaland Diaries is a national treasure. For me though, I’m a big fan of long form, especially seeing as how I don’t have a serial contract with a magazine.
I do remember us talking about books under 1,000 pages as being rarely worth the bother so I see your point.
You and I share a love for the deep dive, for sure.
Hey Shelly, I’ve been following your blog and just caught up with this post. I’m so sorry to hear about the doctor’s visit. It must be so frustrating after rearranging all your plans. Kudos to you and Tracy for handling the Texas heat at the campground! It’s great to hear your ACL is doing well. Turning your blog into a book sounds like a wonderful idea. Wishing you all the best with the tests and everything else. Take care!
ARLEM! I love following you on Insta, but I’d love even more to catch up with you personally sometime, just to hear what you’re up to and how you are. Text or email when you feel like it, yes? Great to hear from you!