Through the keyhole

keyhole-surgeryBack in 2011, according to the medical summary I always carry with me for the benefit of any health professionals I might encounter during my accident-strewn existence, I had undergone two VATS wedge resections (left lung July, right lung August) to excise lesions from each of those organs via the medium of keyhole surgery. Following the second procedure, I wrote the following:

“I have been returned by the NHS into the safe cocoon of my home and family. Sounds like a successful kidnap, doesn’t it? Except that no money changed hands. It would have been well spent, though, I can assure you. I don’t think there’s much left in me to cut out now, so I’m not expecting to be carted off again in the near future; there’s nothing scheduled, anyway!

I’ve said this before but, in my opinion, keyhole surgery is one of the marvels of the age and, afterwards, they have you up and about very quickly – subject, of course, to the IV tubes, drains and other devices to which you are connected; on the morning after the day of my operation, I would not have looked out of place behind my television at home.

On the ward, there was a friendly old chap in the bed opposite whom I correctly guessed was itching to chat and, during a lull in proceedings (when I was being poked, prodded and pierced by one of the nurses and she had gone to fetch some other instrument of torture), he leapt up and came over, seating himself in the recently vacated chair. With no introductory platitudes whatsoever, he simply said “My groin hurts.” I tutted sympathetically but with not a little apprehension, wondering where this might be leading. With the aid of an extraordinarily detailed diagram which he took out of his dressing-gown pocket (where did he get it from? The diagram, I mean, not the pocket), unfolded and spread out on the bed, he proceeded to explain exactly what surgery he had undergone and extolling the virtues of keyhole surgery with which, of course, I wholeheartedly agreed and which, he enthused, had certainly delayed his untimely demise by several years, probably. I have to say I couldn’t help but share his optimism.

As he was highlighting various salient points, for some strange reason, the song ‘Old MacDonald Had A Farm’ leapt into my head (“…here an aorta, there an aorta, everywhere an aorta…”); perhaps it’s just me. Anyway, thankfully, the nurse came back before he had a chance to deliver a full ‘in the flesh’ presentation but, just in case, I spent the rest of the time pretending to be asleep.”

Wildcat strike

Steve*, a colleague of mine rang me the other day about some work matter or other and he rather foolishly mentioned an issue in which he was then embroiled with Royal Mail. He (or, more specifically, his good lady wife, although I suspect that, in the event of personal injury proceedings being instigated, both of them would very likely be regarded as jointly and severally liable) recently received a letter (which, in itself, is a novelty, as you will soon see) from their local Royal Mail Delivery Office headed “Potential suspension of deliveries to your address”.

It starts thus:

“I’m writing to let you know that we’re experiencing difficulties in delivering mail to your address because of the actions of a vicious cat at your property. As a result, a health and safety risk assessment has been carried out, and has determined that the level of threat requires action to be taken to ensure the safety of our delivery staff.”

I am suspicious of this introductory paragraph which uses “I’m” and “we’re” rather than the more formal “I am” and “we are” as if the writer were somehow trying to lessen the seriousness of the accusation that Steve is harbouring some kind of domesticated velociraptor. I would have expected something considerably less chatty; it was almost like a policeman saying to you “I hope you had a great holiday in Benidorm last week, I bet it’s good to be back at work, eh? Oh, by the way, I’m arresting you for murder.”

Anyway, the letter proposes two suggested courses of action to protect the lives of the postal delivery staff, either:

  • Ensure that the cat is restrained at all times, OR
  • Provide an alternative safe delivery point for your property

Dire warnings ensue, outlining what could happen if neither of these suggestions are undertaken within 14 days of receipt of the letter, including, most importantly, that failure to take remedial action to control the cat’s jungle warfare demeanour could render Steve and his missus cut off from all written and printed communications, to all intents and purposes isolated from the outside world.

During a subsequent conversation, Steve told me that the presence of the cat was the result of his daughter (to whom the cat was originally gifted) leaving home some time previously, conveniently forgetting to take it with her.

Apparently, he lives in the house furthest distant in a row of four at the end of a private driveway upon which all those properties abut. The regular post lady previously parked her van in the main road and walked along the driveway to each of the houses. Now, clearly in fear of GBH at the hands – or rather claws – of the family pet, she drives to the top end of the private roadway, stops for a few minutes, firstly winding down her window to check the immediate vicinity for signs of feral activity. When satisfied the coast is clear, she leaps from the van, runs to the front door, feverishly thrusts mail through the letter box and runs back to the van, relieved to have escaped being torn limb from limb.

On the occasion of a recent family holiday, a kindly lady neighbour of Steve’s agreed to undertake feeding duties in his absence.  Unfortunately, the cat trapped her between its dish and the exit door, accompanied – in varying degrees of intensity – by snarling, spitting and back-arching. She eventually managed to flee, having found a sturdy plastic bag with which to protect her arm and hand. Unsurprisingly, they do not anticipate asking for her help again.

I understand that the cat tolerates – even appears to display affection for – both Steve and his wife and leads a serene and happy existence with them. Unfortunately, however, it appears to despise everyone else.

Whilst putting the final touches to this sorry tale, Steve sent me an update and I am pleased to report that a compromise has now been reached with Royal Mail, who have stated that if, at the time the post lady arrives and, after standard reconnaissance [Is this a CAT scan? – Ed], the animal is observed lurking menacingly – or even just seated nonchalantly – in any area between her and the front door, she will not deliver any mail until the following day. This begs the question as to what happens if the cat decides to continue intimidating delivery staff on that day or on any subsequent day.

It is somewhat difficult to suggest a way out of this dilemma for Steve and his good lady, because, clearly, Royal Mail has reached the end of its tether.

Wait a minute – surely, that’s the answer, isn’t it? At the normal delivery times, tether the cat so that the end of the local Royal Mail office’s tether and any part of the cat’s tether (including the end) do not intersect at any point. Don’t know why I didn’t think of it before. Probably because I was fixating too long on the idea to cleverly incorporate the words ‘chain letter’ somewhere, in a similar context.

Anyway, job done – glad to have been of help, Steve.

*made up name

 

I am a human speed bump

hit-by-carOn Friday 13th, I made the mistake of opening my front door and embarking upon a perilous journey along the pavement to the local Tesco Express a couple of hundred yards from where I live.

As I negotiated the incredibly dangerous wildlife infested grass verge and the chasm-like cracks between the pavement flags, a nice comfortable safe little driverless car mounted the pavement adjacent to the car park and ran me down.

I actually screamed – twice. A man scream, you understand, not a girly one, but prompted by a fear of the considerable damage to my person and excruciating pain that I was convinced would follow. I was knocked unceremoniously to the ground between two parked cars with my left leg directly in the path of the oncoming car’s nearside front wheel, which then traversed the said leg in the ankle area agonisingly slowly, as I was fervently praying it would not actually come to rest on top of it – I seem to remember it almost did and the thought horrified me: I imagine the shock affected my ability to recollect the precise course of events but my leg somehow eventually finished free of the wheel, thankfully.

The Tesco manageress was very kind and helped to comfort me while I was lying on the ground and ensured someone called an ambulance (she also gave one of the paramedics a bag of ice to put on the injured limb – so far as I know, this is still in the A & E staff-room freezer at Salisbury Hospital – I forgot to ask for it back). Another lady who also helped to look after me turned out to be a nurse – so that was a bonus.

The policeman who had attended the incident called to see me after we’d returned from the hospital and gave me the driver’s details in case I want to pursue an injury claim through the driver’s insurers. He’d viewed the CCTV footage and told me he couldn’t understand how I was still walking! Apparently, it was an automatic car and the driver must have left it in Drive instead of Park and trodden on the accelerator as he was getting out – with the hilarious consequences hereinbefore described. The poor old gentleman was distraught and has surrendered his driving licence to the police voluntarily – a somewhat precipitous action, I think, and I do feel genuinely sorry for him – when all’s said and done, it was just a freak accident and, by all accounts, the only one he’s had in all his years of driving.

Anyway, after thorough examination, X-rays, cleaning of a couple of cuts and minor scrapes and the application of a compression bandage, I was pronounced lucky, fit to go home and nowhere near as scathed (is that a word?) as I ought to have been. I was instructed to sit with my leg elevated for a couple of days with an icepack applied two or three times a day. I have cut one of those pointless Vacuvin thingies, you know the padded jackets you chill in the freezer and that fit round a bottle of wine (useful only if the bottle contains its, er, contents for any appreciable period of time after opening – not in our house, obviously) into a continuous strip which can be wrapped round the bottom of my leg and is secured with the strap from a baby’s high chair. Ingenious or what?

Ah, yes, the speed bump…

human-speed-bump

[July update: the injury is now an open wound which will take several months to heal *gulp*]

[September update: still an open wound, but slowly healing; down to once or twice a week at the medical centre to have dressings changed and compression bandages fitted]

[October update: almost healed and all bandages/dressings dispensed with; however, it still bloody well hurts!]

[December update: I am being referred to an orthopaedic surgeon. An appointment has been made for March 14th – apparently, the earliest available!]

[September 2017 update: now undergoing lower-limb physiotherapy once a week – two sessions to go. Seems to be helping but I can’t see things will improve much more. However, I have resurrected my bike from the depths of the garage so will continue to try and help myself]

Right on queue

m6-congestionAs Manchester City season ticket holders, we drive north-westwards from the town in the New Forest where we live for every home game. We have experienced more than our fair share of adverse traffic conditions during the last four years or so of these sojourns and I have penned previous accounts of them elsewhere, most of them shamelessly – but deservedly, in my opinion – vitriolic. Recently, we have availed ourselves of the services of Virgin Trains and/or CrossCountry depending on the cost, and this is fast becoming a preferred means of travel, barring further landslides.

I don’t think the despair, frustration and, yes, hatred, engendered by some of the journeys comes close to that suffered on one Saturday just after Christmas. The traffic queue stretched from the A31 in Ringwood – less than a mile from our house – to Junction 19 (Knutsford) of the M6 – approximately 223.5 miles from our house. Naturally, this was unexpected and contrary to the – as it turned out, somewhat naïve and pitifully unfounded – theory that most people would have been at home languishing in a kind of sedentary post-Boxing Day haze.

Normally, it should take just over 4 hours, which includes a half-hour stop for food and coffee at Warwick Services; well, there was even a bastard great queue to get in there. As a consequence of all the vehicular challenges we encountered, it took a little longer this time: we had left home at noon and arrived at the Premier Inn at Bucklow Hill on the A556 at Mere, near Knutsford (a regular resting place of ours), at 8.00pm.

Needless to say, even with the obligatory halt at Cherwell Valley Services on the way back – Gregg’s: two regular lattes, steak bake, ham and cheese baguette, cream scone and a yum-yum, oh, don’t forget stamps on the coffee reward card – it took just under 4 hours on eerily deserted roads.

I can’t see it getting any better. *sigh*

Diary of an impatient patient

nose-bleeding-smiley-emoticonThis is a medical blast from the past – April 2010, to be precise. To cut a long story short for the uninitiated (and avoiding mentioning some unsavoury details by the use of cryptic rhyming clues), they found a [rhymes with a word meaning unsubstantiated gossip] in my [rhymes with the name of any one of a,e,i,o,u] and surgery has been undertaken to remove it. It seems all is clear but, as a precaution against any recurrence, I will be having to undergo a home-based course of (colloquial shortened version) [rhymes with the name of the captain of Jules Verne’s submarine Nautilus] for a period of 24 weeks, starting about the middle of June. I understand that the only possible side effects of this treatment are soreness in the mouth, hands and feet. My hair won’t even fall out – result!

Read on for a diarised summary of my NHS experience. I should emphasise that the care I received from all the staff at both hospitals was impeccable, even the doctor at Southampton who failed to spot the painfully obvious shortcomings in my ability to enunciate English. You meet him on May 1st.

Monday 26th April – Having finally found a suitable vein in which to infuse anaesthetic (four attempts this time!), had operation which the surgeons say was successful. Spend the next few days and sleepless nights recovering, keeping my wife up to date with my ever-shifting location within the ward complex and trying to count the number of holes that have been made in my skin; gave up on the latter exercise.

Friday April 30th – I am to be discharged today and, having phoned home, I walk to the ward window to admire the view of the Wiltshire hills in the distance, which is a bit difficult as this is obscured by three massive air ducts and the hospital laundry. Suddenly experience a severe posterior epistaxis – sounds better than a “bad nosebleed” doesn’t it? Following a quite traumatic visit to ENT, I am told I will have to stay in. Epistaxis occurs on two further occasions, the second (at about 11pm) resulting in the on call Registrar having to drive from Southampton (I am in Salisbury) to take charge, and a blood tranfusion (two units).

Saturday May 1st – Am taken by ambulance to Southampton Hospital (“blue-lighted”, in the vernacular, I understand! Exciting, eh? Not). Spend a total of four days (and more sleepless nights) in Ward F5, not being allowed to eat or drink anything hot because of the epistaxis thing, and not being allowed out of bed for the same reason.

Wondered why, when I arrived, a doctor persistently asked me my name, date of birth, address, normal medication etc. etc. when both my nostrils were completely stuffed with some special material, and covered with a bolster (look it up) which is fixed by tying it behind the ears, all of which prevented coherent speech (and, come to think of it, breathing, coherent or otherwise); wasn’t all this information on my chart? He could have shown me and allowed me to nod confirmation, surely? Seriously. Even my walking stick had a sticky label containing all my personal information affixed to it (this actually proved very useful as one of the nurses at Salisbury kept borrowing it to draw the ward curtains). So I ended up shouting everything to him very slowly (and succinctly, I imagined) but he still entered some medication on the sheet that I had never heard of and asked how to spell Ringwood. It’s only about 15 miles from Southampton; I had had enough by then and I’d only just arrived.

During my stay, nobody seemed to know precisely what new medication I had been prescribed and I was repeatedly asked what certain items had been prescribed for; I explained – somewhat testily on occasion, I have to admit – that, as I hadn’t actually prescribed any medication to myself, I didn’t know, but had been perfectly happy to rely upon the relevant practitioners’ expertise.

Wednesday May 5th – I can go!! They tell me this at 1.30pm and I ring home with the good news. My wife arrives at 3.25pm, having queued for 45 minutes to get into the car park, I get dressed, and all we have to do is wait for my sack of medication to be wheelbarrowed up from Pharmacy. We manage to get away at 6.05pm. No, you needn’t say it, I already have.

So there it is. For the record, I was told (via a leaflet given to me) that, for about two weeks following discharge, I would have to:

  • Avoid blowing my nose (I don’t think I will ever want to again)
  • Avoid picking my nose (ditto)
  • Avoid strenuous exercise (drat!)
  • Avoid lifting heavy weights, such as a full kettle (it really does say that!)
  • Keep baths/showers cool (hmmmm, I don’t think so)
  • Avoid bending over (wilco)

I always do as I’m told.

Naming names

namesYou may remember me telling you about the young lady BBC News reporter I discovered one day while watching the lunchtime news and whose name is Julia Caesar (sadly, she doesn’t don a toga to deliver her on the spot news reports); I was actually going to ring her Mum and Dad to have a go at them but they are ex directorium.

This reminded me about some names I encountered when (often) thumbing through one of the issues of the erstwhile Kelly’s Directory of Bournemouth, Poole and Christchurch. My predecessor at the office where I worked had thoughtfully kept all available editions of that splendid work (1935 to 1973, if I remember rightly) and it had come in useful on countless occasions. It had two sections, one with entries ordered by address which were alphabetical, split into subsections depending which side of the road (geographically) they occupied, and punctuated with indications of when other roads joined the one you were examining – marvellous! The other part was an alphabetical list of occupiers – I’d like to see Mr Kelly try and slip that one past the Information Commissioner and his data protection Nazis.

I find it inconceivable that some parents seem oblivious to the consequences of the names they give their offspring and I could only begin to wonder what abuses and indignities must have been suffered by Mr and Mrs Hood’s son, Robin – it’s true, I tell you! In later life, he would surely have been marched straight to the nick if he gave that name to the police. And I desperately wanted him to marry a woman called Marian, but Mr Kelly stopped producing his magnum opus in 1973 and I never found out whether he did or not. And you can believe me or not, because it’s often a joke, but I really did find a Justin Thyme. And a Carol Carroll: shameful. I wonder what sort of car Austin Healey’s dad drove?

There was actually a national newspaper article on just this subject, which opens with an exhortation to sympathise with the likes of Barb Dwyer and Paige Turner, just two of the many unfortunates who had turned up in a recent survey. Investigations further afield, notably in the US, uncovered such gems as Carrie Oakey and Bill Board.

One of my favourites is the retired airman from Gloucester, Stan Still. He was interviewed by the BBC and explained that his name had been “a blooming millstone around my neck my entire life. When I was in the RAF, my CO used to shout ‘Stan Still, get a move on!’ then roll about laughing. It got hugely boring after a while.”

Finally, a Susan Mee from Doncaster wrote: “I used to be Susan Frame; I am a lawyer and my husband Robert is a banker; now we are Sue Mee, a lawyer, and Rob Mee, a banker.”

There are many others that I’m sorry I never found: Alan Key, Ben Downe, Arabella Fontie, Daley Starr, Minnie Cooper…I could go on.

But I won’t.

Odour Cologne – Phil causes a stink in Germany

beer-steinThis was the title of another of my larger-than-life stories from the old pub newsletter concerning two of the regulars. Richard owned a local cycle business and Phil worked for him. They both attended a big Cycle Show in Cologne for an entire weekend and, in a frank interview later, Richard told me that, as far as he could tell, there had not been as much damage inflicted on the city since about 1944.

The lack of food provided by their accommodation necessitated frequent visits to a nearby hostelry; this was nothing much more than a convivial local pub in a working-class district and on the first night Phil was soon integrating enthusiastically into German society by engaging the clientele in friendly competition. As the evening wore on, the local artisans were warming to Phil in a big way. They also had difficulty remaining upright. During the course of this revelry, Phil encountered two Bulgarian businessmen who were in town for the same show. This proved commercially fortuitous and a meeting was arranged. Several steins later, however, they joined the rest of the customers under the table and forgot to attend the meeting. That took care of Friday – and about half the native population.

Richard recalled that a particular sight for sore eyes was Phil, arm in arm with several inebriated gentlemen, joining in a mass sing-song. This was no mean feat as Phil neither spoke German nor knew any of the songs but, with true British never-say-die doggedness, he accompanied his new companions by simply singing a variety of English words at random – nobody seemed to notice or care. That took care of Saturday – and the other half of the population. The German Grand Prix happened to be taking place the same weekend and on the following night Phil took on the might of the Cologne Ferrari Supporters Club; that took care of Sunday.

To cap an action-packed weekend, someone at the airport wrongly checked in Richard’s suitcase as Phil’s and Phil was promptly taken into custody by two armed policemen because they thought Richard’s nebulizer was a bomb. Phil told me later (well, this was the gist of it): “I never provoke an antagonistic confrontation with a representative of a law enforcement agency or anyone else who is pointing a gun at me!”

Guess what he actually said.

Shock treatment

electricityOne day, during our tenure of the local pub, I received a standard letter from a well‑known national supplier of electricity. As a result of my telephone call to them consequent upon that letter, I would respectfully suggest that they reword it so that falls in line with situations occurring in the real world. Something like this, perhaps:-

Dear Customer,

Thank you for changing – without even realising you had – to Business Electricity Plan Flexirate 2. You will see this change on your next bill from us.

As a Powermen (made up name) customer with a Business Electricity Plan contract, your prices will be fixed for the length of your contract and we are pleased to be able to give details of the Business Electricity Plan you believe you have chosen all by yourself without any help from us overleaf.

Remember, if you are a Tesco Clubcard holder and you have a mere 17 minutes 55 seconds to waste, please contact us at the number below to attempt to register your Clubcard with us as part of a promotion which, as you will soon discover, is only available to private residential customers. Please try and ensure that, before ringing, you have a telephone with a speaker button so that you can get on with some work while you wait the 15 minutes 43 seconds it takes to actually answer your call. With this scenario in mind, you will, of course, appreciate that our operative will thereby have actually dealt with your actual call very quickly indeed, actually.

Do remember this call will be free but it would be of great help to obviate delays for other customers with genuine account queries if you were to ring on a separate occasion just to thank us for not charging you for ringing us – this usually only takes 12 minutes 40 seconds or thereabouts. You would – if the Clubcard facility were available to you – earn 1 point for every £1 you spend on your energy. That’s 224 points a month you will discover you will have lost just by ringing us – free!

Yours faithfully,

Elaine ******

Customer Service (oxymoron)

The heat is on

bbq-grillI’m shamelessly blowing my own trumpet here, but there you go; I’m in control, after all. This is an article from the very first issue of the newsletter I used to produce for our local pub when we owned it. It concerned the barbecue on Comic Relief Night in 2001 run by Tony, one of our  fine regulars; his company supplied the burgers and hot dogs. The article was entitled “Tony’s Grill ‘n Griddle – a gourmet’s delight”.

It went as follows: “Tastes made in Heaven”, “I’m going to recommend it to all my friends”, “Why isn’t it in the Egon Ronay Guide?”, “How can you follow this without going to the Ritz or The Savoy?” These are just a few of the statements not one person could remember hearing on Comic Relief Night about the latest “in” eatery – Tony’s Grill ‘n Griddle at The Marquee In The Pub Back Garden (their staff will serve you right).

Tony and his assistants, Martin and Dave, were the purveyors of fodder to the starving masses. “You’d have to be starving”, confirmed one customer to me through the toilet door.

Tony’s revolutionary pre-cooked non-shrink burgers ensured at least that nobody would be poisoned. “We only had to make three replacements”, said Tony later. “Why was that if the burgers were pre-cooked?” I asked him. “Well, they didn’t like the fact the middles were still frozen”, he explained, “we didn’t have any complaints about the sausages”, he added proudly. Did he have any top tips for us? “Well”, he said, “don’t read between the lines; I’ve tried it and there is actually nothing there, oh, and be careful what you say and do, otherwise you’ll end up in the Newsletter!”

His remarks were prophetic; also somewhat ironic as tales from his own chaotic and confusing life proliferated in the cleverly named “Times At The Bar”.

An Anagramecdote

scrabble-lettersYou may have read the Anagramapoem in ‘Other Poetry’, in the introduction to which I refer to my brilliant invention, the Anagramecdote, of which that poem is an example in verse.

An anagramecdote involves concocting an entirely implausible and totally disingenuous story about someone (or something) and peppering it with anagrams of the subject’s name in capital letters, sorry, upper case! Well, in this case (upper or lower, it matters not), the story is not actually about THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, but contains anagrams of those three words. A variation on a highly original theme, I’m sure you will agree. OK, please yourselves.

Well, then. Our tale concerns Emmett Hammond, a quiet unassuming Londoner from Camden. Camden, you ask? Well, I SHAN’T CONDEMN EMMETT for that, you have to come from somewhere; I have better things to do with my time THAN CONDEMN EMMETT’S roots. Emmett was not afraid of hard work and had always wanted to run his own company. Unfortunately, his business ideas lacked a certain practicality – HAMMOND CEMENT TENTS Ltd was a prime example, although for a very short time it was a cause célébre, even attracting the composition of a classical anthem extolling the virtues of “concrete canvas”: a notable Telegraph headline at the time was: “ANTHEM COMMENDS TENT”. Unfortunately, ANTHEM COMMENTS TEND to be short-lived and the company quickly became the Bankruptcy Court in CAMDEN’S TENTH MOMENT of company cessation that particular day. All of this despite the extensive advertising campaign NAMED: “C’MON THEM TENTS!” (I think this is an example of “hard sell”).

Emmett left the court ruing his foray into the hardened camping market, muttering “DAMN CEMENT – THEM TONS of useless grey powder! What possible use are you?! Wait a minute! I could make boots for people who wanted to lean forward at a 45-degree angle without falling over!” Then he thought, “Hang on, Emmett, HADN’T CEMENT, MOMENTS before, epitomised my ineptitude in the concrete industry, indeed, industry generally? Forget it!”

Actually, although his business acumen proved wanting in many respects, he had salted away a little cash – just about enough to buy a bicycle made for two – right, let’s have your TANDEM COMMENTS, THEN; he and his girl-friend were planning to buy a flat and they would enjoy cycling around to view various suitable properties. TENANTS COMMEND THEM, apparently – flats, that is, not tandems.

Well, there it is – get the idea? Don’t pinch it, or, if you do, please send me the results of your anagramecdoting.