Before this last elective surgery I was working on a blog
about Dylan, with a little Hemingway mixed in.
As the date for my trip to the hospital neared the list of things to get
done before I couldn’t walk loomed large, and I didn’t finish it. A random FB post had thrown me into a binge
of old Dylan music, some of it on vinyl, and I became immersed in lyrics. Before I knew it I was under the knife.
The word elective surgery is fairly new, developed I’m sure
during my lifetime. The idea is this-
“it's not necessary to keep you alive, but if you want it done, someone will do
it. Whether they pay for it is another
matter.” Really? I can see the farmers I used to work scratching their heads at this idea. Just for a little while mind you, before rejecting it completely. The best way to avoid painful medical treatment, their steadfast goal, was to stay away from doctors first, and then hospitals at any cost. And speaking of cost, those guys didn’t buy health insurance till the government handed it to them in the form of Medicare in the mid 60's.
Dentistry, and I mean the entire field, was seen as elective for my Dad. He grudgingly let Mom take us to the dentist as kids, and even get dentures herself, but he
elected to forgo dentists entirely. He
lost his teeth gradually. Most of them
blackened and sort of evaporated, the process hidden from us, until he got down
to the molars. Those he had to work fairly
hard at.
I didn’t see my Dad him with pliers or vice grips in his
mouth, but I wouldn’t be surprised if he secretly used them to persuade the exit
of those big teeth from his gums. I have
a couple of his molars, yellow with long white roots. He saved them in his desk drawer with the
paper clips. You tell me why.If you wonder why you rarely see chopped sirloin on restaurant menus anymore, it’s because guys like my Dad are largely a thing of the past. We’re now a country of straight white teeth, except of course for the poor, whom we don’t seem to care about. Modern dentistry, along with fluoridation, has made those Americans who can afford it a country of proficient chewers.
I made hay with a number of farmers who had complicated
leather and steel trusses designed to hold in hernias. There we were, trapped in hay mows on long
summer afternoons, hoisting 75 pound bales of hay, and sweating our asses
off. It was hard work, but I was a kid and
had no intention of continuing to work that way once I graduated high
school. The men I worked with, both
tenant farmers and land owners, had worked that hard their entire lives. They worked on, burdened by the pain and
trouble of hernias among other ailments, without complaining.
“You can usually push them back in,” our neighbor once told
me, after showing me what his truss did, custom made to press on the hernia and do basically the same thing. “If you can’t get it back up in there you have to worry. You gotta watch out they don’t get strangulated. But if you don’t panic it usually takes care
of itself.”
Those men were known not to panic.
None of the farmers with hernias elected to get them fixed
that I knew of. Not when you could
manage it and avoid the doctor.
We now consider health a worthy investment. An improvement I’d say. Our collective goal is taking care of our
bodies so as to manage these much longer lives we’re living. And with attitudes changing we now find
ourselves with a menu of procedures to choose from.
For the purely cosmetic procedures, satisfying vanity more
than improved function, you’re on your own dime. But if you want to say, continue to use your
shoulder as you are accustomed, or walk without pain, both Medicare and private
insurance are more than willing to accommodate you. Meet some low threshold criteria and the door
is open for a raft of expensive procedures funded routinely every day. I think the medical folks,
and their partners in the drug industry, want the work. And at the rates paid in the US for those
procedures who wouldn’t?
Don’t get me wrong, I think this is a good thing. I’m benefitting. My Mom needed artificial knees in the worst
way. Had she been able to get them, she
could have avoided years of pain, and enjoyed increased activity, maybe even
living longer than she managed, alone there in our farm house, making it from
the recliner, to the kitchen, out once a day to get the newspaper at the end of
the walk, talking incessantly on the land line.
Trouble was no one she knew had gone through that new idea of
knee surgery. No one at church, no women
at the beauty parlor. They took the best
anti inflammatory pills and pain relievers the hometown family doctor could
find and put up with it, so Mom did too.
I’m not willing to do that.
I want to walk down streets in towns I’ve not yet found. I want to hike over the next hill. I’m on this two year program to improve my
mobility. Last year I had my long messed
up left ankle straightened and repaired, and this year it’s the knee on the
right, maybe damaged by accommodating the weird gait of its partner all those
years. In any case, I’m joining the
ranks of those with both bone reshaped, reconfigured, and repositioned to its
original purpose and bionic joints, titanium replacing bone, plastic filling in
for cartilage.
My legs served me well, and I used them hard. I hitchhiked with a back pack for years in
the 70’s, on four continents. The longer
I traveled the less I carried on my back, but all the same it was a load. When vehicles stopped past me on the road I
made a habit of running to them. I
thought it was bad form for a guy wanting a free ride to walk. My backpack would bounce as I ran. I could feel it in my knees but never thought
a thing of it.
I wasn’t what you would call cautious about life then, and
certainly not about my health. That left
ankle was never the same after a bad ski accident. It was my second time on skis. I thought I was ready for the big hill.
While elective surgery is now available, there’s still a
calculation. I’ve decided there really is
no gain without pain, hard work in therapy, and recovery time. When my friends related their new knee
experiences, they encouraged me.
“It will be nothing compared to your ankle I guarantee.”
My ankle, which was done early April of 2017, was long
term. I couldn’t bear weight on it for
months. When I did walking was tentative
and gradual. It took a long time to get
to anything that resembled normal. It’s
still getting better now, 19 months later.
The surgeon told me I’d see improvement for up to two years. I thought he was kidding me. Funny, how we hear things but don’t believe
them. Some things seem incredible.
Knee replacement is totally different. When you get out of the hospital there is a
fully functioning knee in there. My
ankle procedure required bone to knit together.
My artificial knee was firmly attached to my bones. Don’t ask me how. I haven’t yet watched the video. The physical therapist in the hospital got me
up and walked me down the hall, mostly to show me it was possible I think. Recovery in the case of my knee is getting
the muscle, ligaments, and tissue around the knee back to normal after being so
rudely pushed aside.
It’s major surgery. Power
tools are involved. Protractors and stuff I’m sure. I’ll find out later. They’re surgeons, the orthopedic people that
do this work, but just as heart surgeons take after plumbers, the orthopedic
folks embody the hearts of carpenters.
Let’s go back to my buddies with fresh new knees. When I ask them how long it takes to fully
recover from the surgery they say:
“Well, it keeps getting better for a year I’d say. But it gets good pretty quickly.”
I’ll be a month past surgery next Friday. I’m convinced that as humans we lack the
ability to remember or appreciate physical pain. Maybe it’s the opiates. In any case because it’s my right knee I can’t
drive. Those pain pills became my
friends. I don’t regret doing it, but it
hurts more than I anticipated. Getting
back to a decent range of motion takes work.
I think the physical therapists are actually the most important part of
the deal. I’m doing what they tell
me. I think and hope I‘ll have a good
result.
Still in all, it’s a calculation. You sacrifice freedom for increased mobility
in the future. You willingly walk into
hospitals, surrender yourself to their system, allow someone you barely know to
knock you out and work you over in almost sadistic ways, and then you thank them
when it’s over. It’s counter intuitive
when you think about it.
Between loads the guys in the haymow, my neighbors, used to
take breaks. We’d climb down from the
heat of the haymow, find some shade, a breeze if there was one, and have a blow
till the next rack wagon arrived. We
had great conversation, five or ten minutes at a time. I’ve imagined trying to explain what I’m
doing with those old farmers. It would
probably go like this.
“So David, my wife found out from your Mom that you’re going
to get a new knee somehow. Mechanical deal.
Is that so?”
Farm women talked constantly and the men kept
their mouths shut. But if the men listened
to their wives they could find out everything there was to know about the people around them. I mean everything. It was amazing how little privacy there
was. You think social media is bad. Consider the party lines given to us by the phone company that we shared with four or five other families..
“Yeah, that’s right.”
“How’s that work? I
mean just what are they doing to you?”
“Well, they make a slice down your knee, pull away the muscle
and stuff to expose the joint, and then saw the top of your knee away from your
thigh bone, they do the same thing on the bottom, from your shin bone, and then
they put an artificial knee in the center of those bones, line them up good, pound it in to the ends of the bones and glue it.
They got the right sized knee already, from an x ray and a CAT scan.”
I can imagine how wide their eyes would be. Stubbly beards. Blue chambray shirts sweated through. They would all be over a hundred years old today.
“Who’s doing it?”
“Orthopedic surgeon out Bloomington.”
“Young guy?”
“Yeah.”
Eyes would roll.
“How many times you figure he’s done this kind of thing?”
“Plenty I think. It’s
about all he does.”
“Who makes that knee they’re putting in you?”
I’m sure they would feel better if the manufacturer was Allis
Chalmers, or John Deere. Craftsman or Snap On would work too. They would be
thinking of the joint as something like the knuckles we used on the speed jacks
and power take offs. I still do sort of.
“I have no idea.”
“I’d find out if I were you.”
There’d be a pause.
Reacting to their suspicion I’d tell them more.
“As I get it with these tests they find out the exact angle of
the bones, then a computer gives them real precise measurements, maybe even
something of a jig, so they cut the bones exactly right to accept the
knee. Pretty high tech.”
Their eyes would grow wider.
“What kind of saw they use?”
“Probably something like a small hand held power Skilsaw. I didn’t ask.”
“And when it's all over this artificial knee is going to
work like your God given knee?”
That’s what they say.”
“Is that right.”
Those farmers used that particular line "is that right" not as a question. Their voice didn’t rise at the end of the sentence. They
didn’t expect an answer. You didn’t know exactly what they meant. That’s what they intended. They rarely expressed disbelief, giving you
the benefit of the doubt. But they
doubted a lot of things without showing it.
We would hear a tractor down the lane. When we looked, a rack wagon stacked with
bales would be making its way toward the barn. We would pull on those yellow cotton work
gloves and head back towards the haymow.
“Yeah well good luck with that knee deal David. Let us know how it turns out.”
They would no more have their knee sawed out of their leg
and replaced with a mechanical one than they would go to New York City on
vacation. To them it would have sounded
crazy, risky, and expensive. They wouldn’t
have asked how much it cost because where I lived it was impolite to talk about money. But there is no way in hell those men I
worked with fifty years ago would have turned their body over to some doctor
for anything as drastic as that.
Times change. Today we
have developed faith in both the skills of our medical folks and the technology
they use. We’ll take outrageous measures
to extend the useful life of these bodies we have. I hope I’m right on this one. I’ll let you
know.
Love it! I've bucked hay myself, all the years I had horses, and had farmer friends when I lived in the DeKalb area. I can HEAR that conversation. It's like Lonny's truck, which triggered memories of the accepted way to greet someone coming toward you on the blacktop -- one raised finger or two? Seriously, though, ain't science grand? The surgery I thought I was going to have but may not be necessary involves cutting a hole in the front of your throat, shoving everything in your neck out of the way, pulling out a beat-up old disc, sticking in a plastic one, and screwing in a tiny brace to keep it from falling out. (It's probably best not to think about it).
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it. My goal is making the voices of my characters authentic, and it sounds like you heard them. Take care of your neck. Good to know that surgery is available if you need it.
ReplyDeleteLove, love, love your short stories! And this one is no exception. As a 60+ year old myself, I was especially interested in this subject. If you ever decide to publish an anthology of your stories, I'll be first in line to purchase a copy!
ReplyDelete