Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Proud of Maple Syrup

...and hockey, but that's about it right now. In as far as being proud to be a Canadian goes.


I love my country. I love the people (not all of them) and I love what we (most of us) stand for. I am proud of the role Canada has taken for it's self as an international leader that is working towards a better world. Unfortunately, for myself and like-minded Canadians we can no longer take a sense of pride in Canada's role as a leader in those respects.


Recent events have had me shaking my head and feeling the urge to (and indeed in some instances I have gone through with) apologizing for the backwards slide of our nations stance on certain issues which once defined our global image. Canada's (old) New Government has destroyed the country that I held pride in, and has replaced it with something so foreign that I feel this may be one of the largest disgraces in our short history as a nation.


Unlike the FLQ crisis and the sponsorship scandal, the current problem, while still getting attention, doesn't seem to be sparking the public outrage that is needed for the government to realize the intentions of the people. Or maybe I am wrong, and Canadians aren't any better than some other western countries when it comes down to having a government that is...what's that word...oh yeah, responsible to the citizens.


In specific I am thinking of two stances that our government has chosen to dig in on. They are, as you may already be guessing, our country's stance on capitol punishment, and even more concerning is the stance (or lack there of) on the environmental issues facing the entire planet.


Canada, a global leader in the fight to stop capitol punishment has slipped well past even being a contentious objector, to simply saying “well we don't kill people, but hey if you catch one of us and want to kill us, well whatever, we don't do that but hey we wouldn't want to be rude and make it seem like you are bad guys for that, so go ahead...just keep those trade routes open, eh.” Now I am not saying a convicted killer should be free to roam the streets, but taking a stance against the institutionalized murder of a murderer is not saying that either. What I am saying is that our nation needs to stand up and protect our citizens that are facing this situation in other countries. Even if we don't repatriate these people to Canadian prisons, let's at least fight for the staying of their deaths. If we are against capitol punishment, then we should be against it, not just sitting back on our haunches feeling morally superior.


The next one is the real sad state. OK, the Liberals didn't take the proper steps to get Canada prepared to meet our Kyoto agreements. Great, that's on the table. But hey, what a great chance for the new leaders to step up and show what a good job they can do. How about trying to save the sinking ship instead of just telling everyone to grab a PFD and hit a life raft? Or maybe the (dis)honourable Mr. Harper is trying to send a message to the youth of our country. If you can't do something in the time you said you would, just don't bother. Or maybe it's: if you can't do 100% just quit before you fail. Either way, Canada's New Government's new morals are a real asset to our nation, and our new PM (the 10kg spare tire he has is definitely new) is showing his wonderful leadership.


What gets me up in arms even more than him pulling us out of the Kyoto Accord, is the recent hypocrisy that his representatives have shown. If we were drawn out of Kyoto because of it's lack of binding targets for all parties involved (India and China being those of note) then why on earth did his government block a commonwealth agreement that would have placed binding resolutions on the commonwealth nations, which surprise include India! This is Stephen Harper showing his true colours. It includes green, but also blue, purple, red and brown. The colours of our surprisingly strong cash.


With Australia's recent elections and change of power, Canada now stands as only the second country that has not ratified Kyoto (in bed with the states, fuck I hope we have a condom, we know the diseases that they have) and the only nation that has not signed on to the commonwealth environmental agreement. Great leadership.


Granted, there is still controversy about global climate change...but there is also still controversy surrounding the connection between HIV and AIDS. But we pass the latter off as a bunch of goofs who are arguing semantics and standing in the way of actually helping. Why has the government shown that is not willing to do the same for those who dispute the former? Oh yeah, green. Big fat stacks of it flowing black and silty out of the ground in northern Alberta.


So this is it. This is my challenge to you Canadians. If you believe that the government is misrepresenting your beliefs and your image of Canada, stand the fuck up and say something. Post it on the net, speak it in your local cafe, hell, write it on a bathroom stall or bus seat for all I care. We have sat back for seven years and berated the American public for standing by a leader who they say does not represent their beliefs, but here we are and the shoes are on our feet now...and ah, fuck it, pass me another beer a hockey game is just about to start.


Well pass me a cheese grater, cause the maple leaf I once wore with pride hasn't faded nearly as fast as the principles of our nation.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Start with a Seasonal Comment

That's how you start a letter in Japanese: Recently it's gotten really cold, hasn't it? Did go see the leaves changing colour? The momiji (Japanese maple) trees look really beautiful now. It started snowing in the mountains.


As it stands now, those are all true. It temperature has dropped quite quickly recently. The leaves of the Ginko trees are a beautiful yellow and are covering the ground surrounding them. The Momiji leaves are a brilliant red, and a few have just started to fall. (They are quite resistant to the cold, and many leaves hang on until the snow starts coming down.) The amazing Karamatsu pine trees are changing colour. (That is right, these pine trees have needles which change to brilliant reds and yellows every winter.) And yes, the peaks of northern Nagano were dusted with white the other morning. This is Autumn in Japan.


The concept of seasons and temperature is such a regional idea. The weather in Vancouver has been colder than Nagano for the last few months. Your leaves are already falling, or have been whipped off the trees by the new November weather of high winds. Most of the leaves here have just recently started to drop, and the temperature as well. Our nights and mornings are finally colder than those of Vancouver. While a few nights of negative temperature would signal the onset of winter back at home, here it is the mark of mid-autumn. Even the first snows are not enough to have people thinking we are in winter.


Winter is getting closer to being around the corner, however. The next few weekends will be busy for the residents of northern Nagano. Yard and houses will begin being prepared for the coming season. Seasonal plants will be removed, one that live through the winter will be given protection from heavy snow and cold, kotatsus will be started, and heaters fuelled and fired up. In the mountainous areas windows will be boarded up to protect them from the weight of the ensuing snow. The turn of autumn is not just evident in the plants, but in the life here as well.


For me this signals the last push. My leg has been getting stronger and stronger, as the few hours of physiotherapy I do everyday are starting to show some improvement. Living free of my DonJoy has been simply euphoric. My knee feels strong and stable, most of the time. There are still the moments when I worry that a twist or a back-pedal will have me in the hospital again, but I think these are more in my head than my joint. Also the screws in my leg have been sensitive to the cold recently. A wise friend (with the experience of a large plate and half a dozen screws in his leg) told me that your body has a hard time making calcium around metal, and that minuscule gap is enough for the metal to expand and contract, causing the pain. Despite that, I have joined the gym again to ride the bikes, run, and swim. I don't have the time to do it, but I feel my knee needs the dynamic exercise that my at-home-physio isn't providing, so the time will have to come from somewhere (probably sleep). This push will continue strong until early December. That is when Judgement Day comes.


No, this is not some movie about robots from the future coming back in time to save humanity from impending disaster. This is me going back to my least favourite place in Nagano: Matsushiro General Hospital. On December 6th I have my next appointment with Dr. Horiuchi. Short of staying there and experiencing the joys of the nurses and the food, I will have a full course.


I will lie down on a slightly padded plastic tray, and have the lower half of my body inserted into a large white plastic orifice. Then, as a reminiscent of about a thousand of those old-school force-fed-paper computer printers drones, magnetic waves will be passed through my knee, creating a resonance image that looks something like this:

I will be strapped to a chair and my leg will have to glide through the full range of extension and flexion, with the resistance getting harder and harder. I will also be made to walk a two metre plank (thankfully no hungry sharks at the other end) again and again, making sure that my footfalls are in a specific location, but while still keeping my gate normal. Finally, I will lie on a bed and my knee will be twisted and tweaked, extended and flexed, while Dr. Horiuchi searches for problems in my knee.


After all these tests, I will finally be a person again, or at least I will be treated like one again. Dr. Horiuchi will sit down, pull out the beautiful images of my knee, read all the lines of data about my strength and balance, and take the feel from his physical manipulation of my joint, and he will make an assessment about my knee. If all is good he will say something like this: “Your knee condition is good. Your course is excellent.”


Those are the words I am working so hard towards. Those are the words that will open my life back up. Those are the words that will begin my full return to sport. They won't free me from the hours of sitting alone lifting ankle weights, and doing squats, but they will mean that the countless hours I have already spent in that fashion have achieved the goal I had in mind. Those words will mean that the days of my winter will not be spent in my house feeling down, but rather up on the slopes learning once again how to ride my snowboard.


But that is looking too far ahead. For now I have to focus on doing that physio everyday, on making my leg even stronger, and on making that possibility into my reality. It has never been hard to quit or slack off...but in the end neither of those is really an option. I know the result I am looking for, and nothing but my hard work can make that a reality. This is it, as fall starts to wane into winter, I press on with my final push.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Going Commando

Pardon the long lack of an update. I am not sure if anyone even reads this any more. Summer was extremely busy, with the old guys going home, and some new dudes coming in. Between the proscribed physio and trying to get away for a bit, my summer vacation quickly slipped away. Events with work have left me angry with my employers, but then I have a good day with my kids and I know why I still love my job. Things have been up and down, rinse and repeat. But this week has brought some of the most amazing developments in about half a year.

My birthday later this month, will mark six months to the day since I received ACL reconstruction surgery. The process of rehabilitation has not been an easy one, nor did I expect it to be. The daily exercises have been time consuming, and in the summer heat, unbearable. The parts of my leg that the brace covers have been in a constant state of heat rash for months, and worsening as the temperature rose in August. It has been as difficult as I foresaw.

Last weekend I went it for my six month check up (a few weeks early, as my hard work had paid off, and my schedule was bumped up a bit). I did the full sphere of strength tests in the physiotherapy room. And then it was on to the doctor. He asked the usual questions, and then performed the stress and stability test. All seemed good, so I started to put my Don-Joy Custom Leg Brace (or Non-Joy as I have actually changed the name on it with white out) when bomb dropped:

He saw what I was doing and said this: “You don't have to wear the Don-Joy in your daily life.” I was elated. I had never ventured to imagine that I would be free of the Don-Joy so soon. He told me that running, biking, and swimming were all ok with the brace off, but to put it on when I do other sports. That got me again! Up until now I haven't been allowed to run or swim, let alone do other sports! But then he laid something else on me. He asked me to please wear the brace at least the first few times I go snowboarding. WHAT! I was resigned that I couldn't board this year, but he said to take it easy at the start, and wait for after the next MRI to push it.

I was shocked. It was some of the best news I had heard in a long time. My week had been really shitty, and that just turned it around. I am not going to push it too hard on my leg yet, but I have started to add some running and biking to my physio schedule. I am determined to get my power back up to full (currently at 70%) so that I can fully enjoy this winter. But the dream that is so close to a reality, of getting back to my sports unexpectedly pales in comparison to what he had said before.

Three days with out the Don-Joy and I am loving it. The freedom of movement and the lack of sweaty itchy leg is simply amazing. But it is also strange. I have been trying to explain to people, because they all ask what it's like to be with out it. The only answer that I have managed to find that fits the feeling is this: if you are a habitual underwear wearer, and then you miss laundry day and go commando one day, you don't feel bad or good, just different and strange. That is pretty much how it feels to be Don-Joyless. Strange, and sometimes unnerving (say at the bottom of a flight of stairs) but also exhilarating free.

So I can run, I can jump, I can swim, I can most likely board this winter, and I don't need to have the Velcro and plastic prison on my leg all the time. I have been busy, and had some ups and downs recently, but now I am way on top. And the view, it is damn sweet.

Friday, June 01, 2007

not for the faint of vocabulary

I'll write more soon, but for now you'll have to suffice with simply a rant, and no news.

I am going to kill my (expletive deleted) neighbour. He is a big (expletive deleted)ing (expletive deleted).

This spring I have paid my friend to re-do my backyard. We built a wood deck, a traditional Japanese BBQ pit, and a flower bed. The next thing to come are some mountian rocks, and a tree. This is all being made out of recycled and eco-friendly products. It looks really nice to boot.

Now my (expletive deleted)ing (expletive deleted) neighbour decided it would be a good idea to come over into my beautiful new backyard, and go to town on the hedge seperating me from the street. He absolutely butchered it. Essentially he cut the bushes in half, entirely removing the side on my backyard. He did this today while I was at work, but he only did half of the freaking thing...which is better than the whole thing, but it looks even more stupid now. What really pisses me off though is that the flower bed we dug and lined is now in the middle of nowhere. It was all sized up to give me more privacy, but now my yard is even more visable than before.

I went over and told (expletive deleted)in (expletive deleted) to stop it and not do any more. He seemed to not understand why I had a problem with him playing Edward Scissor hands with my backyard. In the end he said he won't do anymore, which leaves me with just one problem: how do I instantantly regenerate half of a half of a hedge?

What a fucking asshole.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Day 29 and 30

I used my clichés quota up in my last post, so I can't use all the good ones about getting toward the end of things. There are so many that would be perfect, but as crutches must be shed before walking well, clichés must be left behind in the interests of half-decent writing (since this is only a quarter-decent writing, I might throw one or two in towards the end of the line...did I sneak that one past you?).


Day 29


The last full day in the hospital started like all the ones before and the one that will come after; six something and the lights snap on. The cheerful “ohayo gozaimasu” is sweet enough to cause instant cavities, or turn your stomach. My stomach turns, as do I to assume my patented Morning Nurse Evasion technique. It may be that I was half asleep so my fake sleeping wasn't convincing enough, but I am tapped on the arm and roused out of my sleep. Plan two (Hiro and I created this one to try and avoid early morning blood tests), the moment after my arm is shaken I “wake” in a startle and convulse a little bit. It shocks the nurse, but she still hand me the thermometer and takes my pulse. I lie about the number of times I went to the bathroom yesterday, because honestly who keeps track of that with out writing it down. Ah yes, the last full day is going to be just like the others isn't it?


Morning physio and lunch come and pass with nothing special to note. Time is dragging today. Is it because my time is almost served, or is there some other reason that hours fill the spaces between movements of the seconds hand? On top of time being drawn out, I have begun to get a very strange feeling. I have waited so long to be in this position, ready to leave. It is just that thought that is sitting a little strange with me. I have been away from my life for a month, from my kitchen and my bed, my couch and Kuno. As I quickly as I was plucked from that life, I am about to be dropped back in it. I have been having thoughts about whether I am going to handle that well. The excitement surrounding cooking my own food and relaxing in my own space is definitely there, but I am also carrying around some apprehension. This is probably a very normal feeling, especially since I live alone, but to a very minor extent (in comparison) I have now gained a greater understanding of the feelings expressed in The Shawshank Redemption. I have things to go back to, and I have only been away a month, but going from such a regulated environment to one in which your freedoms are almost endless is very daunting. Even the desire for that freedom makes it none the less daunting.


Having just gotten to afternoon physio and strapping on my ankle weights, I am suddenly informed that I have an MRI. The test is no surprise to me, but the fact that I hadn't been informed of the timing earlier is a little annoying. Same old routine, lock up the valuables, take off all metal bits, and stand in front of the dude with the metal detector. I wonder if it is easier to get on a plane in the United States. Finally, I am lying down on the bed and my leg is being fitted into a support. When that is over the bed rises up and slides into the narrow centre of a giant cylinder. As the test begins, the same old sounds are emitted. I can compare them to nothing, as they are extremely unique, and if I were to be head first in the machine, probably quite frightening. Uncontrollably I shake, as I come back awake. As usual the sounds have mesmerized me, I just hope my jolt wasn't enough to screw up the imaging. Soon it is over, and I with drawn from the narrow passage and sent back to physio.


Back in my room I have begun the final stages of my preparation to leave. The trouble last night as actually wound up giving me a great head start on my packing. Most of my clothes are away, and since I know that I only need enough for tomorrow I can put most of the rest away too. I am having a hard time taking down my cards and other decorations, as I don't want my last evening here to be stark and sterile. After that it will really just be my computer and my valuables. Tissue and water are a few items that I will give to my friends in the ward. In these final hours, as I have taken care of most of what is possible so far, I can only sit and wait for that second hand to make it's cycle again and again until the time when I can take care of the rest has finally arrived.


I need to break this cycle of looking around and trying to figure out how I can better prepare for tomorrow. Since there is no Canucks hockey on right now, I am going to play some on my PSP.




Day 30


A month ago this day was unimaginable. Two weeks ago this day was a dream. Last week this day was still too far away. Three days ago this day was still undecided. Yesterday this day was coming all too slowly. Today is this day.


Waking up this morning, I could barely believe that it the last time I would wake up to those awful lights. The feeling could have almost been called joyous, save the fact that I was still woken up by those damn lights. Continuing along with the standard morning routine, check my temperature, make up some number of times I went to the bathroom yesterday, and take a shower. Breakfast wasn't half bad this morning, but then again it wasn't half good either.


The smile that I could feel across my face was stuck there for most of the morning. In physio my knee brace angles changed to 20 and 105. It is amazing how such a small change in angle can make all the difference. The discomfort of twenty degrees of extension is notably different from thirty degrees. Only one new exercise was proscribed today, the exercise bike. It is exciting knowing that I can try to ride slowly. The bikes here are tiny and archaic, and with the limited flex of my knee and the fact that the seat post only goes up to my hip, it is next to impossible for me to ride the damn things. A little modification (a sandbag on the seat) made it a little easier. After the standard routine it was time to start walking. Down the hall and back, up and down the stairs, and all quickly. The feeling was euphoric. If you have ever used crutches you will understand the joy of walking with out the damn things under your arms, but this was even more than that. A month ago I could barely move my leg, and now I can walk. I can go up and down stairs, I can turn, I can carry things. While running and jumping are still out of the picture, I can at least start to get some normality back in my life.


This is it. I am watching the Canucks game online, and finishing the last post I will make from this bed in room 607 of the hospital. In under an hour, I will pay my dues, and get a ride home. It is still almost too much to comprehend. Walking through that front door and knowing I don't have to come back is going to feel so wonderful. I really don't know what more to say about it, because I haven't sorted through my thoughts on it.


Before I go, I want to make some acknowledgements. My thank you list to the people who came to visit me:


Yurio

Kojima-kochosensei

Takayama-sensei

The Gals – Eriko, Tomoko, and Miyuki

Tokunaga-san

Brandon and Aya

Rich and Kaori

Maruyama-sensei and Kobayashi-sensei

Sayuri

Mochida-sensei

Shoko

Yoshikawa-sensei

Koujo Mitsuko

Mera Minako

Kou and Akiko

Jun

Shimoda-sensei and her family


These are the people that took the time from their own lives to visit (some many times) and make my stay in the hospital a little easier. They brought treats and flowers, and most of all support. I feel extremely lucky that I have so many people here that care about me. On that note a big thanks goes to all those in Vancouver who emailed and sent stuff, and to all you who have been reading my updates. While I often felt isolated up here looking out my sixth floor window, it was communication with you in Vancouver, and the support of those here in Nagano that really helped me get through this. I can never express the depth my gratitude to you all, thank you for your loving support, and please know that it made all the difference.


Next time you hear from me I will be on my couch!

Monday, April 16, 2007

Days 27 and 28

Fireworks are both pretty and explosive. These few days have seen both those qualities. I have never denied being a pain in the ass, in fact I have admitted to as much on many occasions. To put a slight spin on the next sentence you are going to read: the pain the ass gets the ointment.


Day 27


Clichés are so cliché, and this one is done like dinner, but it fits like a glove...so, when it rains it pours. Today was torrential, and it was a beautiful sunny Sunday. Today's storm was not water falling from the sky, but rather people arriving at the hospital.


It was around half past ten when my phone rang. My friend Jun was down stairs in the hospital, but since it wasn't official visiting hours they wouldn't let him leave the first floor (in all honesty they probably weren't even supposed to let him in the door, but the guy at the visitors window knows me apparently). Since we couldn't hang out inside, we left. I wasn't supposed to leave with out first getting doctors approval and filling out a form, but since he couldn't stay and I wasn't about to go to the sixth floor and cut through the red tape in my chainsaw style, I just left. We went to a sunny spot near the hospital and hung out. Jun is my hero as he came prepared; he brought some snacks, some coffee, and two cans of beer. Since I was already breaking the rules, I decided why not break them some more. So we kanpai-ed and I enjoyed my first cold one (in fact the first drop of alcohol) in twenty eight days (I know it was that long as I enjoyed a few my last night of freedom).


As noon was approaching, Jun had to be on his way. I came back up to the sixth floor. I knew there were going to be questions, and I was debating just making something up about being somewhere in the building, but in the end I told the truth (which is probably good now that I know the guy at the visitors window knows me). No one said a thing, which was good, but I seriously though I was going to hear about it. The fact that I had a bit of a buzz from the beer in the sun made my Japanese slower and probably simpler. The thing is there wasn't even a whole lot of time for the staff to notice before the next wave hit.


The plate of less than appetizing fish and rice had just shown up, and I was in the process of trying to decide how much of it I really wanted to try and eat. It was at that point that an English teacher from Kosha, Mrs. Shimoda, and her family showed up. Her boys were carrying flowers and chocolates. Since the room is small for four visitors, and I didn't want to disturb my neighbour during lunch, we went to the lounge to talk. It was at that point that the third wave broke.


Sitting at the head of one of the tables, with a big bag of picnic supplies, was who other than the night class gals. I gave them a wave, but sat down at talked with the Shimodas for a while. They are really interesting people, as they lived in Viet Nam for three years. Both mum and dad are English teachers, so the boys speak a little bit. We talked about the hospital and about school, and I gave the obligatory explanation of my surgery. They couldn't stay long, as I am sure they were off to go look at cherry blossoms. When they took their leave, I transferred over to where the gals were.


The previous identification of a large bag of picnic goods was indeed correct. I was presented with the choice of stay in the lounge or go outside. Is that really a choice? So after hacking through the aforementioned red tape, and filling out the stupid form, we were off to the ruins of Matsushiro Castle. They are ruins,but they have been recently updated, with a few modern replica pieces and sakura trees (cherry blossom) to fill up the rest of the space. Today was full bloom, and the trees were simply spectacular. We found a spot outside the ruins and enjoyed a great chat and some wonderful food.


Food was consumed, coffee was drunk, and photos were taken. It was then that the wind started to pick up. While this made for a beautiful blizzard of blowing blossoms, it also made us all pretty cold. We packed up and headed to the next stop: 82 bank. They knew where the actual bank was (before Yuriko and I just went to the ATM). They actually only found it because they got lost one day. The nurses had told me it was close to the hospital, but never exactly where. The style of building is not normal for a bank, and the sign is very small and only visible from the street directly in front of it. That is really all justification for me not knowing that it happens to be the building in the middle of the parking lot immediately out the window of my hospital room. Quite literally, if I could go outside on the balcony and throw a frisbee, I am sure I would land it right on the roof.


The time to return 'home' (I don't know what is more disturbing, referring to this as home, or that I initially wrote that with out even thinking about it) had finally arrived. Food was stuffed in my belly, cash was stuffed in my wallet, and I settled back in my room. Dinner came shortly, and then it was just another Sunday evening. I played some hockey on the PSP (the Canucks beat the Stars twice!) and read for a while. After all the excitement I was pretty worn out, and I went to bed pretty early.


Day 28


It was going all too well. I should have expected that things would not continue to go as smooth and as easy as they were, but I has been so long since a Monday was actually good that I just got caught up in feeling happy.


Since Shouhei went home on Saturday, and Nonoka went home today, there is no longer a bottle neck in the physio room. Prior to today, the two of them and I all needed to use the same machine, of which there only happens to be one. With only Nonoka and I using the machine today, I did not have to wait around for twenty minutes for my turn. This morning I was able to breeze through my new physio routine in record time.


The carrot on a stick; motivation makes people work harder and get through things faster. For any expat Canadian living overseas it is hard to imagine that the chance to watch an NHL playoff game live would not be motivation to get past the most difficult obstacles. This weekend while surfing the internet, I stumbled across a page that offers programs that can access streaming TV. The page I saw stated that CBC broadcasts of the playoffs would be offered on this program. That was enough of a hope for me to race back to my room and buy some internet time. Sure thing, after about ten minutes I had downloaded the program and I was watching the Canucks and Starts in real time. This is only the second time I have seen a real time NHL hockey game here in Japan. The other was in a Canadian Bar in Tokyo and I skipped the morning session of a conference to do so, and that wasn't even the 'Nucks.


It was nearing the ten minute mark of the first when the first image flicked to life on my computer screen. The resolution had noting on HD, or even your standard CRT (cathode ray tube, you know, normal old tv), but I could see the puck and the players, and that was good enough for me. Beyond my elation at now being able to watch hockey in Japan, I was thoroughly entertained by the game. Edge of the seat, talking to the ref and the players, suggesting strategy, that's me when I watch hockey. Today was no different. In fact, when the Canucks put their first puck in the net I cheered so loud that the nurses came in to see if I was OK. Nurses and Doctors flowed through my room as is usual, but today they all got a little lesson on the game of hockey. My enthusiasm showed them how passionate Canadians are about hockey, and I was able to tell many of them that it is not football or baseball that brings the most sports fans together in Canada, but hockey. Even my friend Hiro wants to come to my room to watch the next game.


After the inevitable overtime I was pretty pumped up. I worked hard in physio, especially since we have to end early on Mondays. Rounds not only require us to sit around waiting, we have to burn through physio faster than normal as well. None of that bothered me, as on Friday Horiuchi-sensei said during today's rounds that I would be informed of my discharge date. Finishing physio and then waiting for rounds is standard fare, but feeling happy while doing that was new for me. When the gaggle gathered and gawked, I was ready to learn my fate.


Legend-his-own-hospital Dr. Akizuki led the group again this week. He manipulated my knee and said some stuff in Japanese. He looked at me and repeated it, and said “OK?” Not really understanding, but knowing that I heard the word for injection (and not being afraid of needles, either before, but most definitely not now after this experience in the hospital) I said my favourite way to agree with out really showing support and gave him a “sure.” Then they were out the door.


I was a little stunned. What happened to my promise? Dr. Horiuchi told me that I would find out today, and that I should be out before Friday...but no one said a thing. He knows that I need time to make arrangements before I get out. The biggest thing on my mind is Kunoichi, not only because I am paying per day to have her watched, but also because I know that girl has a job and organizing the earliest convenient time is going to take some work. That is the biggest thing on my mind, but there are two issues that are the most important to take care of as early as possible. First, I need to get a ride home. Since some of my friends don't have standard schedules I should manage a ride home, but the day and time I am released will determine who it is that can pick me up. I will have to make a few phone calls to make this happen, and that requires some advanced notice. Furthermore, my friend Jun has been doing some work on my garden, and he has my house key. I need know that he will be home to give me my key, or we need to arrange a place for him to hide the key (but I only want to hide it for as short a time as possible, hence needing to know when I am going to get out). On top of all that, since I am good to go, I don't want to have to continue paying for the hospital room and the food that I pick at. The criteria for release is apparently if my bad leg has over fifty percent strength of my good one. The test I did today clocked me in at over sixty. So what is the hold up?


One of the nice nurses is in charge of my room this evening. I called her in and explained to her that I was promised that I would learn my discharge date today, but I hadn't learned that yet. She went and called someone, and came back with probably this weekend. First, that is not a set date or time, and secondly Dr. Horiuchi said that I would be home before Friday. There was a feeling deep down in the bottom of my gut that told me not to believe I would learn anything today. Right beside that feeling was an other that was telling me not to believe that I would be out by Friday. The problem he gave me a loose promise that thing were going to go that way, and since he is the doc I'm inclined to hold him to that.



Time Warp. Today's post until now was written between five and seven, the time that rounds ended and I spoke with the nurses and seven the time something was finally done. It is now eight thirty, and the situation is slightly different. If the squeaky wheel gets the grease, I have been bathed in it. I finally decided that I had reached my limit with the staff not communicating with each other, and not getting a straight story or follow up answer from anyone. Dinner came, and I refused it, I told them I was on a hunger strike. When they tried to pull out the shelf to leave my food, they found I had jury rigged it closed (don't mess with a man who knows his knots). When a new nurse came in to see what the problem was, I told her I had already explained it. My room mate explained to her that I had spoken with another nurse but never gotten confirmation, she said that they had changed shifts so she knew nothing about it. High five for sharing patient information girls, keep up the quality health care!


Since the sincerity of my problem was not being addressed in a manner in which it was obvious to me that they understood the severity of the issue, I decided that they needed a demonstration of just how serious I was. I started to pack my bags. I put all my snacks except water into a bag. I took all my books and computer stuff and put it away. I started to remove clothes from my closet and put them into my suitcase. Now, I know this is extreme and probably more than what the situation called for, but I needed to make a gesture that showed that I wasn't willing to wait around for their hierarchical bullshit to get in the way of my care. I was never planning on going anywhere (I left the book I haven't finished, the clothes I need for the week, and my towels, and flowers and cards, and all my valuables in the lock box) but I did a good job of making everyone think I was. Half of the on-duty staff must have come in and tried to speak with me, but I just kept packing. I'm no card shark in poker, but no one here was calling my bluff.


After putting most of the stuff I could afford to pack, and leave that way, into my bags, I realized that my own haste was my enemy. I couldn't keep packing with out putting necessary items away. My room mate Serizawa-san gave me a bit of a break when he asked me what I was doing. He was trying to calm me down in a very hand-off way, and made it seem more like he was trying to help me make plans. I saw right though it, but it gave me a chance to stop, but still look to the staff like I was engaged in getting ready to fly the coop. I explained to him honestly (when the staff weren't around) that I was just making a gesture to show my level of seriousness in the issue. I confessed that I wasn't about to run out, but I wanted the staff to think I considering it. He admitted that he still didn't really understand, and he seemed genuinely concerned for me.


After the break, I was forced to figure out how to continue with my charade and not make more work for myself or stall out and call my own bluff. I was standing around with my hands in my hair, when yet another nurse came in. This time the news was music to my ears. Dr. Horiuchi had returned and was waiting to confer with me about my discharge. The conversation was full of apologies, him for not explaining the situation to me during rounds and not informing the staff, me for the manner of which was required to bring him back. This guy is really a great man, and a wonderful doctor. Even when I was super pissed off at him, I couldn't be that pissed off in front of him. He has a really diffusing nature, and he listens and then responds (the nurses are great listeners, but I often feel like I would be better off talking to the wall...at least I might hear my own echo or something). Dr. Horiuchi and I talked about my leg, my treatment, and my post-discharge care and concerns. I did and do feel genuinely sorry for him that he had to walk into the shit storm of this evening, but I am not ashamed of what I did, as I honestly believe it was the only way for the nurses to break the hierarchy and call him back. He remembered our chat from Friday, and said that he meant to keep his word (he couldn't say it because he cannot break rank, but I got the feeling that he was going to talk to me during rounds, but the divine one Akizuki stole his chance).


I was given the option of Wednesday or Thursday. I really wanted to select Wednesday so I could get the hell out of here as fast as I can, but I did have all those pesky little preparations that made learning this info very important. I placed a few calls, and in the end Wednesday is going to work. Yuriko is going to come pick me up (she really has been my saviour, I guess she has been my surrogate family for the duration of this stay). Jun is going to hide my key on Wednesday morning. And as soon as I have typed this, I am going to email Sayuri about Kunoichi.


I know I should feel happy that I know when I am getting out, but tonight has taken so much out of me. I am completely exhausted, but my heart is still racing and I know I am not going to sleep very well. As I am coming to the end of this post maybe I am supposed to have some epiphany where I say if I could go back and change it all I would, but screw that, I got results. I am not proud of it, but I am sure as hell not going to be ashamed of it. I know when I am leaving now, I know my schedule between then and now. And to top it all off, I already have most of my packing done. I will bring Dr. Horiuchi some nice sweets next time I come, and I will bring something for the nurses too. I have no hard feelings toward them, I just wish they would have been more contentious about communication and getting back to me with answers. I hope that between now and Wednesday afternoon that my favourites all have a shift, because I want to get a picture with them before I go.


And it is here that I must stop for the night. I will write one last time before I leave...and I will even post it from here for simple posterity's sake. If the news of my discharge has brought a smile to your face then I am glad, I have still yet to crack one, but I just might soon. Again thank you all for you support, being able to write in a candid manner to people who know me pretty well has probably been the best form of therapy in dealing with my time here. Two more days. I just smiled.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Days 21 to 26 inclusive

Accountants use them. Sailors use them. Surfers use them. Stage Managers use them. In fact, I bet there are not many jobs that don't use them at least occasionally. What are these magical things I am alluding to? Charts!


An episode of ER, or any other hospital show, will enlighten even the most backwater person to the fact that hospitals function on the use of charts. Any complex system that requires organization and order can be made to run smooth with the implication of some form of charting. In the hospital scenario, charts can be a matter of life and death. From allergies to injuries, charts are what keep hospital staff from making serious mistakes, and help avoid millions in malpractice allegations. Protection of the staff and the patient are the reason that charts are kept accurate and up to date.


There is one problem that comes up when using charts; you actually have to read what is written. This week, a few occasions have occurred, where if my chart had been read properly, then much stress and angst would have been avoidable. Would have been. Unfortunately (I seem to have typed that word way to many times since coming to the hospital, for some reason that makes me very nervous) my chart seems to have a very bad habit of collecting dust. If the chart was in the hands of a responsible person, then you could bank on it being checked. The staff this week have proven themselves to be less than responsible.


Well, preamble aside, pull out your scalpel it is time to dissect my week. (there are also a few people I would not mind taking said scalpel to as well...)


Day 21


You wake up on Monday morning after hitting the snooze button one too many times. In the shower you discover the bar of soap has magically turned to a small white sliver stuck to the bottom of the soap dish. There are grounds in the coffee which spilt on your shirt as you rushed out the door. And you just creep along in in bumper to bumper traffic, till some full of sunshine person bumps your bumper. And since your car radio is shot it isn't until you get to work half an hour late, that you are reminded you were supposed to change your clock over the weekend, and you are an hour and a half late (or half an hour early, they both suck). I would put serious consideration in to trading your Monday for mine.


The boredom of the weekend or the monotony of the same old...it is hard to pick which is more draining, both mentally and physically. By the time Monday rolls around, the confining importance we impose upon our system of time is welcome. The problem with Mondays here is that while the daily schedule is refilled, the events that happen on Monday are so loosely slotted in to the course of the day that they are like invisible and very comfortable handcuffs. You don't even know they are there, but you are bound none the less.


Rounds. For those who have kept up to date with my posts, I think one simple word is needed for you to taste the bile that rises in my throat even thinking about Monday afternoon. As expected this Monday proved to be no less of a circus parade than previous weeks (for once I really wanted to be proven wrong.) The doctors gather in the nurses area in the middle of the floor at half past three. The patients are encouraged (and I use that word with more flexibility than a Chinese acrobat) to their rooms. The eve of Tuesday has usually fallen before the doctors finally start the parade in which the audience is actually the spectacle.


When they finally reached my room, I was half pleased (that he was actually there, and thus 'justifying' our imprisonment), and half repulsed (read previous post regarding doctor worship) to find that Dr. Akizuki was band leader. Being fluent in English, Dr. Akizuki asked me to remove my brace, examined my knee, and commented on his findings, all in Japanese. That was before they were out the door and off to their next performance (or is is viewing). I'm glad I understood none of what Dr. Akizuki explained to me, because that way I could break a sweat trying to imagine that there was actually a purpose to me waiting all afternoon for the exhausted one to grace my with his presence.


Day 22


Why am I keeping track of the number of days that I am in here? At first, I thought it would be like etching lines in the stone walls of a prison cell. I always imagined that doing so helped people in prison stay sane and keep track of time. I now realize (quite literally as I hit the 2 key twice) that it is very depressing, and is almost like further incarcerating myself. I have locked myself in to keeping track of how long I have been stuck in here, but with no set number of days in which I can earn freedom, I am in a sense just morbidly celebrating how long I have been holed up.


Lunch was a barrel of fun (if you are in that barrel and fun is a wild pack of rabid monkeys). The fun had nothing to do with the flavour of (or lack there of) the food. This fun stemmed entirely from the appearance of a new item on my lunch tray. For some reason I received an extra cup of water, with what appeared to be a wrapped tablet of some sort. I couldn't read the kanji characters on the tablet, and it didn't look like it was standard fare, so I called the nurse back into the room. Miraculously she asked for my electronic dictionary, but my elation that the staff actually asked to use my dictionary quickly faded as I saw the work that she had looked up: anaemia. She proceeded to explain that the results of the last blood test performed indicated that I was anaemic. She continued by telling me that the doctor had proscribed this supplement. When I arched my eyebrow in query, she took that for me thinking it was gross and explained that it was indeed delicious and dropped the sucker in the water and let it fizz


That arched eyebrow was less about the taste of the supplement, and more about the nature of my anaemia. For starters, I have had more blood tests than I can count on my hands (literally, I counted and I ran out of fingers) since starting the preoperative process until today. Not one of this myriad of tests has shown me to be anaemic. If I have recently developed anaemia, the most plausible cause seems to be the hospital food (which I have said from day one lacks proper balance). Furthermore, the last time blood was drawn was last Thursday, and on Friday the doctor made a point of showing me the test papers and telling me that everything was normal. So that arched eyebrow was really me wondering what test showed I was anaemic, and what the reason for my anaemia was.


After eating the edible portions of the meal, and leaving the supplement in the cup, I called in a nurse. I asked for an English speaking doctor, and she got a funny look on her face and ran off. The head nurse came in and explained that there were not any English speaking doctors in that evening, but she would help me. Starting by explaining that any rudeness would have to be attributed to the frustration of trying to do this in Japanese, I began enquiring into the nature of this anaemia. The nurse did a good impression of my arched eyebrow, and went to retrieve my chart. It turns out I have a very rare (or they would have you believe) form of anaemia: clerical anaemia. This is the kind of anaemia where the patient is actually fine, but someone makes a mistake, which is further compounded by incompetent people not checking charts. In other words, the kitchen staff screwed up and put some other patients drink on my tray, and when I asked about it the nurse just assumed that I had anaemia and proceeded to lie through her teeth about the test and the doctor proscribing the supplement.


Now this supplement was not going to kill me, or do any damage what-so-ever to most people. However, there is a principle here that needs to be addressed. A supplement is a form of medication, and here in the hospital there are many forms of medication that can have very harmful side effects if given to the wrong patient. There is another equally large problem that was illuminated by this situation. When a patient raises a question about a medication (even one as benign as a supplement) the staff should follow through with due diligence and check the chart, other wise what is the point of doing all these tests and recording everything (and I mean everything, they quite literally asks me every morning how many times I went potty the previous day. And none of them seem impressed when I say I can't remember and turn the question back around on them...probably because they can't remember either). It just seems to follow logical sense that if one has a chart that one would consult it before making assumptions about the situation, that is unless one is trying to experience the defending side of a malpractice case at some point in one's career (which would undoubtedly be cut short).


Today did manage to offer a breath of fresh air, in the fact that I went out side...for a breath of fresh air (now I am either lazy or a grammatical genius). Yuriko visited this afternoon, and I managed to get day parole for a few hours. The necessary stop at a bank machine provided me with a small window to partake in a wonderful spring tradition in Japan that I would have otherwise missed out on. Sakura is the Japanese word for cherry blossoms, and indeed they are as beautiful as their name. It was still a little early for viewing in this area, but there is an old saying about opportunity and knocking. Two brief stops at famous (well known and famous are the same thing in Japanese, I really think the former applies to one of these places, and the latter to the other) sakura viewing spots left me with a few dozen digital shots of sakura, and a sense that I am not missing out on all the beauty of the Japanese spring this year.


The weight of the supplies procured from the local supermarket and corner store, was noting compared to the weight of the invisible yoke that settled on my shoulders the second I re-entered the hospital. Quite literally the moment I stepped through the second set of double doors at the entrance to the hospital I felt a massive weight pressing down on me. My breath became shallow, and my steps laboured. It was an incredible feeling, though one I wish I had never had to experience. The sheer difference in my whole state of being changed in two steps. While this is a very depressing idea (and feeling), it does take me back to Kenan's comment on stepping out of the hospital at the end of everything and getting back into the Real. I can only hope that my feelings at that moment are the exact reverse that they were at the moment I re-entered the hospital. It is pretty hard to doubt that they will be anything but.



Day 23 – yes I am still counting days, I started so I might as well see it through.

Day 23 – yes I am still counting days, I started so I might as well see it through.

Day 23 – yes I am still counting days, I started so I might as well see it through.


Is it just me, or does it feel like that movie Groundhog Day?

Is it just me, or does it feel like that movie Groundhog Day?

Is it just me, or does it feel like that movie Groundhog Day?


Ok, I'll stop having fun with the word processor.

Ok, I'll...


This morning was going well, all to well, until it suddenly felt like Monday all over again. I knew that this day would come eventually, but I had no idea what to expect. Not much, and lots of waiting. Pretty much par for the course (of getting screwed around) at Matsushiro General Hospital. Today brought about more pointlessness, that really further helps me understand how all my money is being misappropriated. Today's version of the Sponsorship Scandal, is called 'Reha-kaishin' (Physiotherapy room rounds) but it might as well be called “please touch you toes” (and not because they are checking your flexibility).


Today the standard Monday afternoon parade goes on tour to the Physiotherapy room, starring everyone's favourite egoist (not me, I'm not that famous) Dr. Akizuki. Reha-kaishin involves a change of roles, in opposition to the patients sitting around waiting for the doctors to walk around, today the patients sit around waiting to walk around themselves. The doctors, smartly dressed in their embroidered white coats and starched self righteousness, make a large semi-circle. The nurses line up all the patients, including the elderly and feeble (like lambs to your table...there's a step that I'm missing in there...what could it be) When it is our turn to stand in the circle of judgement, we are asked to turn around and walk the other way (I swear I felt the laser sight of a rifle on my back). After getting about five steps, the next one in line is sent along. Is this a ritual dance? Some form of seance or evocation? No, apparently the purpose of this is for the doctors to observe our gate (not like Monday's rounds, which are more mysterious than how the caramel gets inside the Caramilk bar).


That in itself is an entirely reasonable and necessary observation, but observation alone is entirely unreasonable and unnecessary (I will try to stop using these mirrored sentence patterns - and breaking the flow of my sentences with amusing musings [shit, I did it again {the inserting too many parenthetical insertions}]) As I was saying, if they are going to go through the effort, or put us through the effort rather, of observing our strut (and might I add mine is mighty fine {I gave up on my resolution [remember the one about parentheses]}) they should at least provide feedback on their observations. As far as I could see not a single patient was told how to improve their walk.


To be fair his Highness Dr. Akizuki, director of the Hospital, God of the limp-ed, did come up to me (to my disdain) after everyone had finished their best super model impression. His exact words, and I quote (hence the quotation marks) “So, what do you think about this hospital?” Good one, you just made a few soccer teams worth of mostly elderly and currently mobility impaired people walk for you, and the most intelligent thing you can think of saying is “So, what do you think about this hospital?” Had I been witty I would have asked “What is the fee for this reverse consultation?” but instead I tucked my tail (saving my big words for the blog) and gave him the very political and quite transparent answer of “I think the doctors are all very qualified for what they do.” I left it at that. So did he. I am still wondering how much I am going to be charged for my opinion (and what it is the doctors actually do).


Day 24


Newton's first law of motion is “Inertia is a property of matter” which is better expressed as objects in motion tend to stay in motion (objects at rest tend to stay at rest). Newton's third law of motion is “For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.” These definitions work really well when talking about vectors and velocities, but when applying these to my life I see them in these terms:


Adam's applied version of Newton's first law: When shit gets bad, be happy, cause it is only going to get worse.


Adam's applied version of Newton's third law: When you waste my time, I will take time to get pissed off at you.


These laws, while slightly vulgar, are generally considered universal unless you are operating under the auspices of special relatively. Unfortunately (I used it again) here at Matsushiro General Hospital, the standard laws are in full effect.


Today is a happy day (and by happy I mean getting bit by fun ). This day marks three weeks after my surgery. As is the same with every passing week, my then angle of my knee brace and my physio “menu” changes. The three week mark however is like a sweet sixteen, a coming of age of sorts. So I put on my cutest little pink dress and put my hair up in pigtails and headed down to the physio room to the the first one there.


At the stroke of quarter to nine, I was indeed the first one in the room. Knowing that the angle of my brace would change, and seeing the big changes that the people who have already reached their sweet sixteen, I took a seat in a very visible spot in the physio room. A few minutes later my physiotherapist came in the room, and started checking some papers and then left the room. Within a few minutes she came back and stood around. I was across the room, but very obviously looking right at her. She never came over, and never even seemed to acknowledge that I was there. Since my knee brace was off and ready to be changed, I couldn't hobble over to her, and I thought she would eventually come help me.


Twenty five minutes, passes and she was still doing (look) busy work. At that point, I decided that, as I have finally received the English instruction manual (and I saw it done before), that I would change my knee brace myself. It really is dead-simple, four screws, two plates, pop out two stoppers and replace them with the ninety degree ones. It was as I was finishing this process that she finally noticed me, and I overheard her comment to herself “Oh, it's Thursday.” Real quick in the morning. The next words were about me changing my brace myself, and more irritation directed at me regarding waiting for her to change my menu (what exactly did she think I had been doing for the last half hour?)


When she was convinced that I had performed the in-her-opinion open heart surgery on my brace successfully, she told me to do the standard first set of exercises. This was quite strange, since it was obvious to me that all other people at three weeks stop the normal warm up for a more difficult one. My attempt to raise this issue was cut short, as she turned and left to go administer massages to some other patients. Two points: the physiotherapists are very busy, and I had some time left on my internet which I was planning on using to listen to the hockey game and make some phone calls.


I am going to cut this story short, because it is long, and makes my other rants look like sunshine and lollipops. If you refer to my applied version of Newton's laws, you should being to understand that this downhill slide continued, and feeling my time was being wasted, I got pissed off. The big reason I felt my time was being wasted comes down to simple time management skills, or more precisely the lack of them that my physiotherapist displayed. It makes simple sense to me that if a massage takes fifteen minuets to administer, and instructions for new exercises take about a minute to teach, that you teach the instructions then give the massage. That way the person receiving the instructions can exercise with the massage is happening. Maybe that is just the way I think, I could be entirely off base. I mean, maybe it actually makes sense to some people to have one person wait around for a quarter hour just to receive a minutes worth of instruction, and then be sent to do it themselves. Either way, I spent most of the morning sitting around between my new exercises watching my physiotherapist go from one massage patient to an other, and occasionally remembering “Oh, it's Thursday.”


Anyone who saw my face this morning would begin to use grapefruit instead of honey to sweeten their tea. There was a point when my physiotherapist asked why I looked so angry, and I just asked how long it was going to take. I even held in my rage when she told me that teaching my new “menu” takes time. It was true, just not the amount of time that it was taking. Noon was fast approaching, time for lunch and also the time that physio closes for an hour and a half. I left about five minutes before twelve, and at that point there were only four patients left in the room (and they were only there because they were waiting to be wheeled back to their rooms by the nurses.) First in, and nearly the last out.


Every ounce of my being wanted to skip out on the afternoon, and veg out in my bed, or skip outside for a break. I fought that urge, realizing that while her inability to manage time affected my schedule, I was not going to let affect my recovery. I pulled up my socks, and pulled down my cap, and prepared to enter the pit of doom with out snapping into a rage induced Hapkido fit where I start breaking arms and legs (the former being other people's, and one of the latter most likely being my own) Gladly, my perseverance held, and my rage seeped out in a few, less than under my breath, questions to my friends about why my routine was different than other people at the same stage.


Those comments were, as intended, overheard by another physiotherapist, who must have passed the news on to mine. When I approached her later with that very question, she very quickly said “oh, you mean the sitting leg raises? Yeah, you can do those from now on.” Now I really do have to give her credit for not showing a hint of shame in saying that, but I something like that is usually paired with an “oops, I forgot” or a “yeah, sorry about that.” This one, she was stone cold. Battle of Wits? This is the championship match.


A little later in the afternoon, she came over to see if I understood exactly how to do the leg raises. This could have been extending the olive branch, but if it was she ended up with olive juice smeared on her face. I answered no, as honestly I didn't understand, but also proceeded to question why other parts of my “menu” were different. It was at that point that she continued with the theme for this week, and went to check my chart. A novel idea if it was done in the beginning, or if not the very beginning at least the first time that she realized “oh, it's Thursday.”


In checking my chart she realized that she had made a few mistakes in my exercises. Now, I am not one to gloat, but if I were I would have been gloating then, with a big I-told-you-so smile plastered across my face. I am not one to gloat, but quite coincidentally I had a muscle spasm at that point that tightened my cheeks into what may have appeared to others to be a slightly crooked smile.


Day 25


This is going to be a record. It is almost ten, the lights here in the lounge have been out for sometime, I am about to eclipse seven pages, and I still have two more days worth of things, that would be extremely hilarious if I were to read them not write about them, to write. You can stop reading and come back to this spot. My internet time is going away faster than the Canucks lead in the series, so I just gotta write.


TGIF. Thank God (or was that Dr. Akizuki) It's Friday. I was definitely thankful (to neither of the aforementioned) that it was indeed Friday, for no other reason than the roller-coaster ride that was Thursday was undeniably over. Physio went well, save all of us ACL patients getting in trouble for having too much fun (I honestly wish I was joking, but we seriously got told off for a little bit of harmless goofing off. There is one physiotherapist here that definitely need to get himself a girlfriend...or whatever gets him going...and get rid of some tension.)


Morning and afternoon physio went smoothly, as I no longer need to receive (or not receive) instructions on my new routine. When I got back to the sixth floor, I met my favourite (and I mean that seriously this time) doctor, Horiuchi-sensei. This guy not only did a superb job (I'm taking his word for it) on my knee, but he is really understanding. It is unfortunate (I said it again) that I have to lace into him a little now.


In our conversation, I inquired about when I am up for parole. His reply was either next week or the week after. That week after part threw me for a loop, and I decided to see what the criteria for discharge is exactly. He told me that when the muscle strength of my injured leg was half that of my other leg I would be eligible for discharge. It was at that point that I informed him that on Monday my left (injured) leg strength had indeed been well over half of that of my right. To his credit he did this immediately, but again why was this not done earlier, he consulted my chart and low and behold I was telling the truth. It was then that he said that I should be good to go next week, and my release date would be discussed at next weeks Monday meeting. Next Monday during rounds I will be informed of which day of the week I can go home. At least one set of Monday rounds will have an obvious purpose.


Day 26


Having briefly mentioned the ACL gang, and as we lost a member today, I think I should elaborate a little more (also it is a good way to fill up a rather boring days worth of events). The gang happened to be four of us. Myself, Hiro, Shouhei, and Nonoka. Profile time:


Shouhei is a junior high schooler from Iiyama (my neighbouring city). He is in third grade, and was invited onto a pretty elite alpine ski team. That is how he tore his ACL. Shouhei did his time and earned his parole today.


Nonoka is also a junior high school student in the third grade. Remember her name, because if her recovery goes well you might well hear it again during Vancouver's Olympics. She lives in Hakuba, arguably the Whistler of Japan, and just happens to be a junior member of the Japan National Moguls team. She tore her ACL after a bad landing off a back flip. She's getting out on Monday.


Hiro is a twenty-six year old back country snowboard guide, which is another way of saying he is a bum. He and I get along like a pair of bad kids in the third grade. Hiro has spent a fair amount of time in this hospital, as this is his fifth time in here. He is lucky (or unlucky) enough to be using his knee brace for the second time, and this is indeed the second time he has torn the same ACL. He's got a week in here after I'm out.


That's the gang. Over the last few weeks we have hung out in the lounge here on the sixth floor, and down in the physio room. In the evenings, Shouhei, Nonoka, and I have studied English a few times (I really want their AETs to be surprised they haven't fallen behind in English). On other evenings we all play cards and Hiro spouts out the English swear words that I taught him.


The worst is when it is just Hiro and I. We have made a game out of teasing the nurses, and getting up to no good. It started with wheelchair races. Then we told the nurses we were going to go drinking, then we sent the elevator to the first floor and hid up here on the sixth. Listening to the nurses fret about whether we had left or not was a riot. At night we set the alarm clock at the front desk for just after breakfast in the morning, and listen for how long it takes them to figure out what is making the noise. We got a bottle of grape juice that looked like red wine, and started yelling “kanpai” and acting drunk in front of the nurses station.


Now we only do this when the nurses with good humour are on shift, and for the most part they laugh and smile. I think we make their night a little more fun, and it sure as hell helps us break up the monotony of long boring evenings. I am really glad that Hiro is here, because I have someone my age (and obviously my maturity level) to goof around with. His friends and I get along really well too, and I am sure that when this is all over the he and I will continue to hang out and be friends.


And speaking of things being over. I have more to write, and is just going to have to wait. Hope you enjoyed this instalment. Looks like there might only be one more before I am home!

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Days 16 through 20

Recent events in my life at the hospital here have been much more settled and more routine. The effects of this is that I feel much more settled, but also quite restless. A strange paradox has presented it's self to me. When things here are hectic and I feel they are out of control, I get very irritated feel quite put off. Conversely, when things are as completely routine as they have been recently, I get bored. This is not really a mystery to me, nor should it be to those who know me well. The full potential of my abilities are often presented in paradoxical situations such as this. I thrive on having the full picture of events, and having the ability to foresee and prepare for different possibilities. At the same time, it is the kinks in those plans and preparations that create the stress that causes me to be creative and spontaneous, and to function at my full capacity. Essentially I require the capacity to be in control of a situation, yet still have forces from outside my sphere of influence affect the events, thus creating a situation which is off track and requires my energy and focus to have it put back on track. It is a paradoxical control freak complex. I need to control the big picture, yet I also need things to challenge that ability and force me to operate at a higher level. This is not new to me, nor to most of you (I am sure), but my current condition has illuminated this and also given me the forum and ability to express it so.


Day 16


A day early, and a day late. Another paradox? Or is it more oxymoronic than paradoxical? Twelve curvy pieces of metal, holding closed four wounds, ranging from five millimetres to five centimetres. The schedule that the hospital seems to hold so religious (as do I, most of the time) and the schedule of my body are not necessarily the same. This is what makes medicine a blend of science and art, for if our bodies all acted and reacted the same then it would be pure science, and humans would be much more robotic. It is also this situation that created the current oxymoron...or is it paradox?


The itch inducing staples in my leg were scheduled to be pulled two weeks after surgery. That is the schedule that they follow for almost all patients. However, since the human body is dynamic, mine was healing a little faster. Itch and redness were the clear indicators that my body was ready to be rid of the staples. I was as convinced as my leg was, but it took a day for me to convince the nurses that that was the case. Today was the day that they finally asked the doctor to look at the staples, and low and behold he agreed that it was time for them to come out. A day early by the sacred texts, and a day late by my books.


With the shedding of these less than stylish piercings, I also enter a new and exciting stage of my hospital stay. The wounds in my leg have healed to the point where I can shower with out a plastic bag taped around my leg. This is wonderful because it also means that I am now able to use the shower in my room, and yes, shower in the morning.


Day 17


Again, according to the sacred texts, this is the half way point between the surgical bed and my own bed. The interim hospital bed is less than comfortable, but somehow I imagine it will feel more and more comfortable everyday as the end of my stay is (reportedly) closer than the beginning. The clock is now counting down, even though my blog entries (and hospital fees) continue to rack up.


The kilometre-stone (call me metro-centric) of two weeks also presents some new (and welcome) changes in my routine. The largest of the changes comes in the physiotherapy department. My disgustingly expensive knee brace has been inhibited to between thirty and sixty degrees of flex. Today the latter changed to seventy five degrees. Each week this angle will be increased by fifteen degrees. The forward flex will be kept at thirty degrees until six weeks after surgery, when the brace will be full open, allowing from zero to the theoretical flex of one hundred eighty degrees (not possible with a leg inside the brace). The other change at physio is the amount of pressure I can put on my leg. I am now up to twenty kilograms, which is slightly less than a third of my body weight. Next week that will go up again as well.


With the turn of this kilometre-stone, a one shot event also happens. With no external metal in my leg (only the internal spikes and screw) it is time for an x-ray. Of course, as with most things here, it is a waiting game. The radiology department fits hospitalized patients in when ever they have a break in out patients. As I knew was going to happen, they called for me right in the middle of my physiotherapy, but my doctor in physio is cool as all hell, and told them that they would just have to wait for me to finish. She didn't even know that I would be pissed that I had to go and come back, I assume she just didn't want the other department eating away at her time and schedule. So I got a chance to get back at the radiology department, and for once they had to wait for me.


Day 18


Good Friday. This is of course in no connection to the mythical religious festival that occurs on the same day. Today really was a great Friday. The previous morning there was not ample time to shower before breakfast. Today however, I dragged myself out of bed early enough to hop in the shower prior to feeding time. Washing my entire leg, getting the iodine and scabs off, was simply divine. Really feeling clean from head to toe was a feeling I had forgotten.


After getting feed, it was time to work out. Down to physio, and up the weight. The progression through the range of ankle weights is all patient dependant, and entirely at their own digression. I have been making steady progress, and today was an other time to step it up. My injured leg is now working on three kilogram weights, and my good leg is maxed out at four. I will keep pushing this week, and hopefully I can soon max out my left.


My usual ritual of icing my leg after physio also brought about more good news. A doctor came in doing rounds, and I remembered that I was told after two weeks I would be able to go outside. The doctor agreed that it was standard, and since over two weeks had passed that I was free to go to the bank. When Yuriko came in the afternoon I told her the good news. I ate lunch with her and Sayuri (the girl who is cat-sitting Kuno). Sayuri even brought along her video camera and showed me some footage of Kuno and Donguri (one of her other cats) playing together. After eating we all headed out. Since none of us knew where the bank was, we went to the convenience store. I got some cash from the machine (thankfully not enough, as it gives me an excuse to go out again) and I stocked up on some snacks and water. We also hit the supermarket for some fruit. There was joy involved in getting these things, but the real pleasure was in the sun and the breeze, the fresh air that felt so cleansing. I had the same feeling you get after showering. The weeks of hospital air and grime just seemed to float off me as my skin exhaled.


Day 19


It is hard to believe that another week has rolled by. Time is so misleading in this place. Some days it flies by, and others it drags on. The weeks seem endless, and then suddenly seven more pages from my Farside calendar are in the garbage. The weekend is here once again, which means a lot more time for nothing.


Simple pleasures are what keep me going sometimes, and this morning brought a smile to my face. As usual I was first in the physio room, and my dedication brought a perk today. Now this really is petty, but I am not ashamed at all. The windows in the physio room face towards a narrow parking lot that is usually crowed with expensive cars and more recently the through road for some construction equipment (for a different wing of the hospital). While doing my laps up and down the hallway I caught sight of the first car to pull in. The copper coloured BMW SUV (to bad we can't abbreviate the entire English language, eh?) pulled into a space, but it was obvious, even from inside the building, that it was going to be in the way of the construction equipment. A labourer approached the vehicle and (I can only assume) asked him to move somewhere else. The driver looked irritated, and got out of the vehicle to inspect what was happening. In the midst of my laps I didn't catch the best view of the drivers face. I did however see it when he came back, looking sour, to move his all leather interior, gas guzzling, bank account depleting chariot. It was none other than Akizuki-Sensei, the hospital director, and the reason I have to sit around in my bed on Monday afternoons. Knowing that he was put out even slightly made me all warm and fuzzy inside. I know it is petty, and I know many of you will make the value judgement that my pleasure from this is wrong, but I don't care. It made me happy; it didn't hurt anyone; save your own morality for yourself.


A time warp then descended on my hospital room, or that is at least how it felt. With no afternoon physio on Saturday, and no visitors, time stretched on and on. There is only so long one can read, then watch a show on the computer, then read again, then pace (a real feet on crutches...is that a pun?) Minutes turned to hours and hours to days, and I spent about a week trying to stay same. As the only vice I can succumb to in my cell, I mean hell, I mean in the hospital, the coffee machine must have seen me a handful of times. The combination of boredom with my coffee addiction now means that even the cool coffee machine no longer excites me (cool as in kick-ass, it serves hot and iced coffee.) To understand how bored I must be for this machine to not be exciting, let me explain it a little:


This coffee machine (like most things in Japan) has a slogan: “Grind coffee on a mill.” Yes, that is a stupid slogan, but if you don't really understand English it might kinda be cool. The first reason to choose this machine over the other coffee machines in the hospital is the selection. It has about five kinds of iced coffee, almost ten kinds of hot coffee, and two cup sizes: big and jumbo (big being a coffee shop regular, and jumbo being a regular...and if you have to translate those into Big Green Monster coffee shop names you are thoroughly branded and should get back to the pasture). Those sound standard by Vancouver norms, but they are much better than the thimble sized cups that most machines in Japan serve up, and much better than canned coffee. The second reason to choose this machine over the other coffee machines in the hospital is connected to the lame slogan (read it again, bet it hasn't grown on you at all). It has beans that actually get ground and pressed. Hey, real coffee, what a concept...but I think that many Japanese people like the instant coffee better though. And the third and final reason that this machine is the number one choice of anyone who knows anything about coffee (ok honestly you don't have to even like coffee to enjoy this point, but I wanted to make myself feel superior): it makes the coffee right in front of you eyes...kind of. There is a camera in the machine and a screen on the front that shows the beans dropping into the grinder and in to the carafe; the water filling the carafe and getting pressed into the cup; any poison you choose to have added to your brew; the lid getting screwed on; then your coffee pops out the front.


When this exciting a process stops being fun, you can imagine the level of boredom that is required (and the disgusting amount of coffee consumed). This was the case in my marathon of monotony.


Day 20


Up with the lights. Not a freaking chance. Sunday is the one day of the week with no morning physiotherapy, and and opportunity that is too good to pass up. The skills I honed earlier in the week were put to full use this morning. The lights came on with an 'ohayo gozaimasu' and my pillow went over my face. For the first time, the curtains were drawn and the light of a grey dawn filtered in. The nurse left, and with the assistance of my crutch I shut the curtains with as little effort as possible. Then I went back to sleep.


I say I went back to sleep, and this seems to imply that I slept for a considerable amount of time, but the staff are persistent, and for whatever reason all patients are supposed to wake up on schedule at twenty after six. You think they would have learned how stubborn I am. They woke me up when they came to check my temperature, I pretended to be asleep still. They left. They woke me up when they brought breakfast, I pretended to be asleep (I checked what it was after they left, nothing you want to eat at half past seven, so I went back to sleep.) They woke me up when they came to clear the dishes and saw I hadn't eaten, towel over my face, I continued to feign being asleep.


Now in between these spurts of pretend sleep, I actually slept. Here is the really weird part. I was dreaming about normal weekend mornings in the hospital. So while I was actually sleeping in on a Sunday morning, I was dreaming that I was doing the regular old Sunday morning routine. This is a bit of an absurd concept, and it made for some really weird moments when I actually woke up. Since the setting of both my dream land and 'reality' were here in my hospital bed, it made for more than a few moments of pure confusion. In a groggy half-asleep state, waking from a dream about being in the same bed and position which I was currently in, left me with no ability to tell which state was actually reality and which was my dream land. When I finally woke up and figured it out I started laughing at the humour of the situation. I was awake in my hospital bed in my dreams, and in the hospital I was asleep in bed. I just hope that I am actually awake right now, because it would be very cruel to dream that I just wrote three and a half pages and then wake up...there is no auto-save function in my dreams.


The monotony of Saturday was thankfully shed on Sunday. Around noon, Tomoko and Eriko from night class came by for a visit. They brought coffee, water and food, and even better some good conversation. Since their command of English is at a very high level, and since they make a point of trying to learn new and complex words, we are always able to have really good talks. Munching on our MOS burgers and sipping on joe, we managed to burn three hours. That's half a week by yesterday's time scale. We covered a range of topics that I can barely even recall half of. The best part is that we can cover topics like alienation and isolation, and then talk about other things like social equality and historical influence. These rather complex topics obviously require assistance from my electronic dictionary, but other than looking up the nouns that are a little too academic, we are able to speak almost entirely in English.


They took their leave and I had some down time, and then right as dinner time was rolling around Brandon and Rich showed up. They also came bearing gifts of cheese burgers and espresso. I am starting to get the idea that people know me pretty well. I mean, I haven't even been wearing my “If you come, bring coffee” t-shirt. Or maybe I just have a problem. While I doubt there is a twelve step program for caffeine, and honestly I don't want to quit drinking coffee, I should probably cut back a little bit. But as I already said, it is the only vice I can succumb to while incarcerated...I mean hospitalized, so I don't think that I will be cutting back in the next few weeks.


That pretty much brings us to now. It is an hour before “lights out” (where are we, summer camp?) and I am juiced up. Having taken advantage of the very high speed internet connection here yesterday, my hard drive is now loaded up with new episodes of Colbert and the Daily Show. I am part way through a book, and I have one more after that. I definitely have enough to entertain myself this evening, and it just might be enough to make it to the end of my sentence.


Speaking of which, everyone asks, so I'll save you the breath and write the conversation:


You say something like: “When are you getting out?”

I reply with something like: “I won't know until a few days before, but probably around the 20th.”

You follow up with a neutral statement like: “Oh” or “OK” or my favourite “That's good.”

I grind my teeth and wonder how many times I will have to have this conversation and exactly what it is that makes around the 20th good.


Now, I just sound ungrateful...which really is not the case. I answer everyone politely, and I know they ask because they care, and that I have to answer the same questions so many times because there are a lot of people who care enough to come and ask. It makes me feel really happy and a bit embarrassed that I have the most visitors of any one on this floor. Maybe I should change my bring coffee t-shirt into a “My leg is good, physio is good, the food is bad, and I'll tell ya when I know when I am getting out” shirt, then when people come we can start talking about something else right away.