Mackworth Water Tower by Simon Johnson |
You may or may not have noticed, but I’ve been away from the
keyboard and have not replied to comments or written any new posts. The posts since
Friday have popped up automatically out of the queue I set up on Blogger.
I won’t go into the gory details, but I had an urgent
hospital admission on Friday because my bladder has applied for early
retirement - cheeky sod. It’s pretty sobering for a blogger to discover he’s
full of piss.
Anyway, I’m back now and at least I’ll be able to write a
few posts about the experience.
The first is how easily the days
slipped by even with nothing to do but read my Kindle and make some blogging
notes. I expected to be bored but wasn't. Keen to get home and get on with life, but not bored.
I’ve only ever been to hospital as a visitor, apart from
having my tonsils out at the age of four, which I barely remember. For some
reason I associate that remote experience with the drawings of Mabel Lucie Attwell.
Anyway, on Friday I was admitted to the Derby Royal, a big and much extended hospital on the outskirts of Derby. I had a bed by a large window, which
helped pass the time whenever Thackeray's writing palled. The days ought to have been long and dreary, but were not. Long yes, because we were woken as six in the morning by the bustle
of staff changeover - but not dreary for some reason.
Idle days didn’t drag, at least not for me. They were punctuated
with clockwork routines such as meals, hot drinks, endless tests of blood pressure, heart
rate, weighing, medication and the taking of blood samples. Alternating bouts
of bustle and quiet – that’s what it was like. I quickly became used to it.
As I lay there or sat by my window (my window?) I could see Mackworth water tower in the distance. The old water tower is a local landmark
I’ve barely seen for over fifty years. It’s the area where I grew up - felt
strange to gaze at it again, childhood long gone, age catching up with me rather more
quickly than I’d hoped.
Ah well – life goes on. At least there seems to be nothing
malignant in there, chewing away at whatever time I have left. Quite a major
relief really and I only had to gaze round the ward to see many who were not nearly so
well off as me.
8 comments:
Ouch! Much sympathy and I wish you a speedy recovery.
Several 'wind & piss' jokes arose in my (very) sub-conscious mind but they all lacked wit, so I will simply wish you well again as qucikly as possible.
Indeed AKH, get well soon.
Welcome back and best wishes and hopes for no more troubles.
Best wishes, indeed, hope all goes well.
All - many thanks for your kind comments. All a bit of a shock but I'm on the mend.
Get well soon! apologies for the belated wishes. My comments will come later than usual, as the techies at work have diddled with the software and blocked your blog!
Sam - thanks on two counts, you've made my day! A blocked blog must count as some kind of achievement however incidental it probably was.
Post a Comment