A most unsatisfactory swim today. Not entirely my fault, because whatever Toni had yesterday that made him a little hors de combat, struck me as soon as I got up. A slightly otherworldly feeling and a distinct disinclination to go through the necessary processes to get me to the pool for opening time.
At first I though it could be a case of ‘sympathetic panic’ at the onset of the new school term. Although VERY happily retired, I do share a sort of hysterical malaise at this time of the year. Usually it passes, almost at the same time as I see active teachers going through the doors of their respective schools, but this feeling of being down took me into the morning darkness and towards my trusty bike.
It only took a few metres, experiencing that sickening bumpiness on the back wheel, to realise that something was wrong. A flat tyre. And not on the front where it is easy to take the wheel off and get it repaired, but on the back wheel that has the gears and all sorts of other things that I do not mess about with.
So, back home and putting the bike back under the tarp and going over to the car to get to the pool. Even if not entirely well, I have a built-in rugged determination to have my daily swim!
Which I did. In a desultory and unconvincing way, with my even swimming extended periods of breaststroke, which is not a good sign for me as a dyed in the wool crawl swimmer. I did do my time, if not the full number of lengths, but honour was satisfied and I drove home. And promptly felt worse.
Whenever I feel under the weather (giving it is glorious sunshine who isn’t under?) I take to my bed. And I get better. It never fails to enrage Toni, who has a much more expansive attitude to illness than I, as a few hours prone usually does the trick for me.
As it has done this time too. I can’t pretend that I feel 100%, but I feel more than prepared to take on the normal stresses of life without whimpering for pity.
As is also normal during these times of unwellness, I have little to no appetite, though even as I type those words, the ‘concept’ of food is appealing, which is only one step behind getting something to satisfy what should be a growing hunger.
Time will tell.
The start of the month also opens the way for the medical establishment of Catalonia to attend to my clinical needs. There has been something of a hiatus during the summer, but now that the first of September has come and gone, there is a feeling of ‘let’s get going’ that seems to jolly up the whole country. I am, of course, hoping that this positive attitude will be part of my treatment in the coming months.
The first hospital appointment I have is a
scheduled one (on a rough annual basis) that is more to do with my proving to
the doctors that I am alive than having anything done to me. I will go and have my appointment (usually
with a doctor coming to the end of his employment) who will look at me, voice a
few platitudes and then say, “See you next year!” With any luck. Though he will probably have retired by the time I go back.
The more important appointment comes next month when I will see the fabled traumatologist for the first time.
I am building up a truly absurd amount of hope linked to this appointment. I know that my knees are a lost cause and that for them to be made workable, an orthopaedic surgeon will have to take hammer and chisel to them and sculpt something artificial to take the place of the bone rubbing on bone that is my present case.
I am also more than well
aware that such ‘routine’ operations are way down the pecking order to be completed, given the pressures that have been placed on the health service by the pandemic
and other financial restraints. I also
realize that the likely waiting time for the first of the two operations that I
need will likely be at least eighteen months or two years away at very best. And that, is a daunting thought, to put it mildly.
I understand that there are stop-gap measures of injecting something (any bloody thing!) into the space where there should be a membrane separating the end of the bone, that could give relief for a month at worst and months at best.
At the moment I am not even near being put on a waiting list, so I am looking at getting my first operation in my mid-70s! At which point I can hear a whole chorus of younger and needier people chanting, “Let him hobble!” And one does have some sympathy. But that is in the abstract, and the pain in my knees is in the very real and so I hope that Something Can Be Done.
The Opera Season will just have started before that first appointment. I wish I could find something apposite to say about arthrosis-ridden knees and Don Pasquale (the first opera of the season) but, apart from ridiculing old age, I can think of nothing!
At least Donizetti’s music is lively and that should buoy up my mood!
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