Nature's antibiotic |
I swear, it was like that scene in Fatal Attraction, where Glenn Close pops back out of the bathtub with that knife. I mean, WTH? I was feeling BETTER. I biked 20 miles last Monday. Sheesh.
As is my wont, I assumed that orange juice and OTC meds would cure all, and, honestly, I never took people who complained about sinus infections seriously anyway. Just a fancy name for a head cold, that's what I thought. So I soldiered on, through Thursday, when I acted like a person who isn't about to die from the worst sinus infection of all time and did a bunch of stuff I can't remember now, and through Friday, when I drove the girls an hour away to pick strawberries in an open field under hot sun, and did I mention that sinus infection?
There were MORE than this. |
I like that guy.
Saturday, still suffering, I worked at the yoga center, came home and hung out with neighbors at a grown-up birthday party, and then, FINALLY, lay down on the couch. At which point Brian said, "Best Buy wants me to start tomorrow and I need black pants and black sneakers and a white polo shirt." Larry, sensing that I was incapacitated (maybe it was my lying on the couch, moaning in pain, while dialing the Urgent Care hotline - he's very perceptive like that), volunteered to take Brian to Kohls, for which I am forever grateful.
Guys, sinus infections are REAL THINGS.
So I staggered into Urgent Care and waited over an hour, along with other people in similar states of distress. When I left, I was clutching my prescription of antibiotics and thanking God for people who actually want to do science-y things like cure diseases and make medicines.
I slept maybe 3 broken hours on Saturday night, because antibiotics don't cure things right away. (And why not, you science-y people out there? WHY NOT?) And here's the kicker: I was supposed to bike 56 miles on Sunday for the Tour de Cure.
Larry, saying HE would go to Kohls. |
The girls and I went to see the movie, me clutching my tissues and Ricola cough drops, and it was as awesome as it always has been. Seriously, BEST MOVIE EVER. When I am dying (I mean, if that's not what is happening right now), I am going to make the hospice nurses show me that movie.
Do they show movies in hospice? Must check.
And when we came out of the theater, we saw all the Tour de Cure bicyclists milling around, just back from their rides, and I felt a teensy bit guilty I wasn't among them. Then I remembered that, if I had ridden, I still wouldn't have been among the finishers; no, I would have been lying dead somewhere along the route and causing the race organizers no end of headaches, what with the extra paperwork and dead body removal and all. And who needs that?
Exactly. You needed your own cure -not to race for another one. I need to get my girls to Casablanca. One girl is already 18 and still hasn't seen it yet (either one -the place or the movie).
ReplyDeleteOh you poor thing! But at least you still have your sense of humor. And they'll always have Paris. (I <3 that movie)
ReplyDeleteNow I feel vaguely guilty...I have never seen Casablanca. Not even bits and pieces. I blame my mother as she didn't see fit to make this a priority in my upbringing.
ReplyDeleteHope you feel better soon.
If you don't get in [antibiotics] you'll regret it. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of [the month].
ReplyDeleteYeah, but my health problems don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world...
DeleteI have never seen Casablanca.
ReplyDeleteThat can (and should) be remedied.
DeleteThey should definitely show Casablanca in hospice settings.
ReplyDeleteDid you ever look up that 100-day virus? Because you seem to be exhibiting everything about it. OUT, damn virus! (Wrong genre, I know.)
Sinus infections definitely require immediate antibiotics. An early warning sign (for me, anyway) is aching teeth. Who knew? Not me, the first time. I learned quick. Hope you're feeling much better by now.
ReplyDelete