I think I sort of liked being in surgery. Is that weird?
I wonder what it's like to be in a burning building or to get hit by a car. Not that I want to get hit by a car but don't you wonder too? Don't you wonder what it's like in Antarctica and outer space? Being in surgery felt like being in outer space. Sure I was afraid but also amazed, awed, like in a museum of my own self. Like, do you realize what they did? And I was there! In fact, they did it to me. And I survived! I survived being drugged and cut open and having doctors move things around inside my body, and cut off part of my bone, my sacrum.
My friend Brian tells me the sacrum is indeed something sacred. I love the sound of "sacral chordoma," like something you might sing in a church, I wondered about the etymology and Brian suggests his scholarly meanderings indicate that the sacrum was the preferred bone to offer up in animal sacrifice, thus the sacredness of the end of the spine; Eric Partridge suggests that a "sacrum" may be among other things "a small chapel," which is nice to think that the small chapel of my pelvis has been remodeled, and with a remodel as we well know comes the opening of walls and destruction of old obstacles and the letting in of light and improvement of energy flow, but that is not what I started out to say. I started out to say that I am somewhat shocked to find that I looked at the surgery as a life-and-death adventure, and that I do not hold my life so precious and dear that I would not risk losing it to prolong it; knowlegeable men had said that this is your only sane course, so I approached it as a gift, a gift of our century of science, a gift of medicine without which I would surely die a slow and painful death, so think about that for a minute, OK, it's mildly sobering is it not, but in that necessity lay also adventure: We stand on this cliff and our attackers grow close. We can wait for them to slaughter us, or we can leap from this cliff and take our chances in the water. So we leap, preferring a chance of survival, facing the fear of the unknown, our skin tingling as we fall until we splash down ...
and I awake in a bright room with tubes down my throat, unable to talk but ebullient with the knowledge that I've been given new life; I've jumped into the lifeboat and skilled men and women have done the remarkable, have done it with pride, intensity and courage, skill and precision and energy and inspiration, have journeyed into me with knives and slain my enemies microscopic and perverse, and so yes I awoke ebullient like a man who finds himself launched into space, who has been on an amazing journey and lived to tell about it and then is cared for like a baby, friends and family hovering.
There was very little pain in the beginning, as I had all the intravenous anesthetics at work. I returned from surgery with a glow. Now I know how heart bypass patients feel, how the saved-from-drowning feel, how it feels to surrender to the necessity of battle or flight or in this case the knife and return starkly changed by the ordeal.
Why do I keep thinking "northern," "an ordeal across the ice"? Waking up in the ICU felt like waking up at the north pole, or in an alien spacecraft, frozen, barely human, transformed, but in the presence of controllers who seem deeply committed to your well-being, and whatever autonomy you once had, for whatever reason you have now given up and do not give it a second thought, as walking out of here is not even an idea, every movement seems fraught with danger, the kind of danger you don't even kid about, as if it might kill you to turn over, and it might, but you cannot speak because of the tube down your throat, a big tube, and not the only one, so your wife hands you a tablet and you write Happy! on it. Happy, yes, to be alive, to have come out of that blizzard of anesthesiological magic, having passed through the gantlet of surgeons' hands, having been opened and lovingly altered and lovingly closed up and sewn together and wheeled in here like a birthday prize. You feel important lying there with all these people around, with the button that brings a bolus of dilaudid and the button that brings the nurse: Ah, to be in the center, the focus of attention. We are not supposed to long for that with such ardor but it is one of the many longings that I readily admit to now that I am completely, body and soul, an example for study: Waking up in that hospital bed with tubes coming out was like being a star on the stage with his makeup all done when the curtain opens; that ICU room was my stage and the room beyond it a vast audience; the machines monitoring me were the cameras and microphones beaming my performance across continents and nations; my body was performing admirably; the notices were good; all the preparations had proved wise. I had given the surgeons exactly what they needed; my performance was praised and remembered; there would never be another one quite like it, you can be sure.
And then there was blessed solitude of long nights alone in a strange room in and out of a dreamy half-reality among humming, glowing machines and blinking lighs, my tubes tying me to a great outside world of fantastic science and also to the great and mysterious dark inner world of my own biology, reading me in ways that I have no inkling of, as though my body had been purchased for study or amusement or both, purchased by an institution whose people were for some reason keenly interested in my blood, my skin, my urine, my healing wounds and their swelling fluids, my breathing and my pain levels.
Yes, my pain levels! How wonderful to be asked every few hours, on a scale of one to ten, how is your pain right now? Imagine a world of such compassion that we inquired of each other about our pain? How to ask: How is your psychic pain this morning, boss -- on a scale of one to 10? Good morning dear, how is your pain, your eternal pain of loneliness that even I cannot slake -- on a scale of one to 10? And if she says, oh, dear, it's nearly 8, then we take immediate palliative measures! Dear me, how touching. What a world of compassion that would be.
And to think that sometimes, surprisingly often, I would answer honestly it was only a 3. The dilaudid was coursing through me every 10 minutes or so, and if I ever forgot to press the button the pain would rush up on me like a squad of thugs and unleash and electric fury through my leg and up my groin and the raw pain of incisions and bone-cutting was also ever-present but at times the sea would calm and there was nothing but a distant ache, to which I assigned the number 3.
Other times could honestly say it had crawled up to a 7, and if I was ever in true distress a nurse would appear almost instantly to care for me.
I would not care to do it again; next time I would like to go to Cape Horn instead, or to the icy wastes of Antarctica. But this was an adventure, not just a medical neccessity; however unpleasant, it was a journey; however unpleasantly it has transformed me, at least it has transformed me, and some of us, the restless types, seem to crave transformation of any kind above the stasis of simply doing well.

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How is your pain today?
Enjoy your bed-stricken
a lonely bedridden time
but what else can one do?
The bed sure can instruct.
I am not saying that's easy.
`
Weird. I love the word`weird.
The base of 'werthen' and sense.
Basic of "what is to come" - to turn.
IE. fate. *wert* destiny. the spirit reality.
Its worth a read in a good English dictionary.
Ay, supernatural things, strikingly odd, unearthly,
beautifully mysterious, fantastic, bizarre, eerie, etc.,
Old Scot - Weird out. [slang] unconventional, overwhelm,
eccentric, and the need to Be experienced - Fate. Destinies.
It even means`howling (Robin Sneed etc.,) soft non-earthen:`
`
Light
ho, weirdo.
extraordinary.
great thoughts.
I almost croaked.
O no go to a VAMC.
I thought I sure died.
When I got out of surgery the first woman I saw was an Ethiopian nurse and I asked her:`
Did I die? She was sun.
Sunshine! Luminous.
She smiled as a soft glow and responded. No sir. You are still in the `
Land of Thee Living!
I later went AWOL.
no tell the VAMC.
I went for lunch.
Wow honey wine.
She made brew.
I love the bread.
Eat with fingers.
Lick tips oh lips.
Ah! It's koshers.
Thanks. Be well.
I miss Ya @ Salon.
I love the words too.
So - Yes blessed, Ay.
The rites seem strangely at odds with the reality of the situation. Signing consent forms which are bizarre to say the least.
It seems to me that certain things need to be said and acknowledged and they just aren't.
However, you seem to get the fundamentally spiritual nature of this experience. I would only mention that there will be more. But, if anyone can handle it, I think you can.
I love that concept... I may try it.
That our bodies can heal themselves is the true miracle of life... I am amazed every time.
Best to you.
Very surreal to be operated on, know the feeling. I was (naturally) conscious during two C-sections. Very strange feeling...
Whatever it was, it sure felt like I had a great night's sleep. ( Except for the tonsil removal)
It amazes me that the process of major surgery can begin so quietly and unremarkably, in a room appointed like any regular doctor's office, sitting with other surgical candidates wearing our surgical johnnies and little rubber footed booties, glancing through magazines while waiting to be anesthetized and penetrated, and begin the journey that will change some of us forever.
I saved those rubber footed booties. I have not felt like putting them on again, but something about them feels important. I love that you are so capable of articulating these things.
You know how great a piece this is. I can see the book now. It's gelling in front of my eyes.
But one of the things I loved about major surgery (except for the waking up part--that part where you wake up, and everything hurts and they're saying, "Lorraine. Wake up, now." And the first thing you say is "Ow," and then you hear a voice say, 'Let's get the patient controlled anesthesia thingie set up (okay, that's not what they say but that's what they mean) and somebody tells you you get to push a button to make that horrible pain go away and it does), except for that part, which I hated, here's what I loved about surgery.
It took away my fear of death. My experience of anesthesia is that one minute you're awake, and the next minute you wake up from it and you have no idea how much time has passed. (Last time, I was supposed to be under for 90 minutes and I was under for almost 5 hours because there were complications) But I didn't know that.
I didn't dream. I didn't feel. I didn't twitch. I was, for all intents and purposes, dead.
And maybe that's what death is like. You simply stop being. No pain. No feelings. Nothing. And what is there to fear about that?
I think I need to stop now. I feel my own blog piece coming on.
Bless you, Cary. I'm so happy that you're with us. I wish I was going to see you this summer, but I'll be thinking about you when I'm walking the campus, and thinking about our time together, and sending you healing thoughts and energies.
All through this adventure, the transformative aspect works on you for good. I am glad you came out better than you went in, and thank for for sharing the mystery and wonder of it all.
rated
Btw, having experienced both major surgery for cancer and Antarctica, I'd take the latter. And I feel you will find out for yourself some day, if you wish.
Heal well. And please keep writing.
I can see how some might crave it, as Steve Blevins remarked,
"...I felt "more rested" than ever before. I wish I could sleep under general anesthesia every night." Perhaps this same sort of craving is what drove Michael Jackson to hire a doctor who could provide that special feeling on demand, but, well, we know this a fragile line and one that Jackson crossed one too many times.
The three days I spent in the hospital following my knee surgery were not awful, thanks to the pain pump (demerol!) and urinary catheter. Like so many others the worst part was the anxiety before the surgery and uncontrollable shivering in the post op room. I shall never the forget one nurse telling me to "stop shivering." WTF! Who can do that?
Sending you good, healing thoughts for the next steps of this journey. My rehab was undoubtedly the toughest thing I ever did and it showed me how tough I really was.
There are things that I remember, if not lovingly, then at least reverently - about the events both leading up to and following the surgeries, as well as the immediate aftermath.
I wish you well on your journey of healing.
But I've always wondered how I'd react to a bigger, more critical, more painful, more "real" surgery. It's comforting to know that it's possible to have a similar response even with more serious surgery. Because I was semi-aware of what was going on during my surgery, I was intrigued at how suddenly a whole team of people became terribly concerned about the shape of the bones underlying my nose and worked to mold them so I could breathe better even though that wasn't part of the original goal of the surgery. No one, not even me, had cared that much about the quality of my breath. Now, after reading about your experience, I'm kind of looking forward to being in an ICU, if I ever should have to be in one!
I've been reading your column for years and have always appreciated the odd and surprising and helpful perspectives you bring to what seems to be ordinary problems. I'm glad you made it through surgery with that intact even if your body is somewhat rearranged. Best wishes for a continuing successful recovery.
it's not weird, and you've described beautifully why it's not.
If I may say so, it kind of seems like you are back.
(aka Demotage)
I hope you can get off all the pain killers cleanly. They have a habit of turning around and killing more than pain. Whereas you always write lyrically, Cary, I feel uncomfortable hearing anyone waxing rhapsodic about any experience that includes opiates. I tend not to buy any of the emotions.
BTW, it's not your style to reply to comments, Cary, but could you give a nod to us that you at least read them?
So glad to hear the surgery went well!
Dentistry tries to do some of this—real-time inquiry about how you're doing—alleging that they'll respond if you say you're in pain. Some practitioners and facilities do better than others, I'm sure. But I think the problem in that case is that they put something in your mouth just at the time they are inquiring... not totally great for conversation. I have suggested to my dentist that he get a computer and a keyboard, and let me type to him on a tool that does text-to-speech while he's working. I don't need to see the keyboard to type, and it would perhaps change aspects of that practice to get more precise realtime feedback on what the issues are. Perhaps sometime I'll bring a laptop.
Thank you for taking me on this journey with you.
Unfortunately, I have a paradoxical reaction to opioids. Last time I had morphine I was like a dog looking for its spot! Yikes.
I am only a recovering juicehead, but I totally get this post.
(I also used to give blood before I was gay, and always watched them pierce my arm and followed the blood flowing out through the tube, into the bag. Fascinating to see the boundary between me and notme punctured, and some of me flowing out.
Thanks for sharing.
yes.
I had cancer and reconstructive surgery years ago, and it was more like a 'vision quest' of going into the darkness than any of the drug trips of my younger years. It is a journey.
I have a greater understanding of how my mother felt when hospitalized for surgery. The last daughter left at home, she craved the focus of the world forever after.
Anyway, good to hear you sounding so strong. Hugs!
R!
Last time something threatened my life, I also felt an odd sense of peace and relaxation. Maybe we're all so isolated from each other that it's amazing to be inquired about so regularly. Just to be so very connected.
Hoping that you're feeling connected and nice to hear from your brain again.