Courtesy of webmd.com |
I am pretty sure I wrote the following passage
soon after the general anesthetic wore off post-procedure.
My colon
is like the river in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. Marlowe’s boat
navigates the verdant interior waterways of the Congo; it permits him to check
out the deep, unexplored and unknown dark territory. The boat is the foreign
vessel invading the interior of the continent. It threads the line between
known and unknown and symbolizes humanity’s good and evil sides.
Preparation
Once I committed to doing it, my colon screening
began with cleaning. Preparing for a colonoscopy stinks. Clearing out your bowels
can be tough. You get a prescription and a pep talk from the gastroenterologist’s
admitting nurse assistant, and a knowing wink from the pharmacist when you buy
the colon-blow juice. You need to restrict your diet at least 24 hours before
the procedure. That means stop eating at 18:00 the night before the procedure
and start drinking the horrid-tasting fluids. A few number ones and number twos
result and you think, what’s the big deal
about this? Then the intestinal typhoon hits south of the border, and your
dignity disappears as fast as you-know-what flies out of your rectum. But a clean
tube for the doc is a must, so you do it.
Not much sleep the night before, and no more liquids for a few hours prior to the procedure.
Not much sleep the night before, and no more liquids for a few hours prior to the procedure.
Performing
the screening: Into The Mystic
According to a BBC survey, this Van
Morrison song’s cooling, soothing vibe has made it one of the most popular songs for
surgeons to listen to while performing operations. Similarly, once I was wheeled into the operating room, I remember something reassuring,
like Enya or Christopher Cross. I had a chat with the doctor while lying on
my left side on the gurney, hooked up to monitors. Soon, the sedatives flowed through
an IV into my arm and it was hello, la-la
land. I don’t remember a thing. Zippo. But thank you for rendering me unconscious.
Courtesy of the Mayo Clinic |
This camera went where no camera has gone
before. I was told my procedure was normal, took between 20 and 30 minutes. It
was the second time in my life I have been unconscious, and not unpleasant. Just
blank. They wheeled me back to my recovery room to wake up from the sedative. Luckily, no
post-op nausea. It was no different than drinking three craft beers on an empty
stomach—woozy to buzzed, then slowly back to sober.
Payoff--the
clinical verdict
My biopsy samples came back negative. As
I emerged from the ether of unconsciousness, I peered at my chart fastened to
the side of the gurney. I am somewhat sure a comment read: “This guy is a real
asshole. But he’s cancer-free.”
I think I doth protest too much. People at
normal risk for colon cancer should undergo a colonoscopy at age 50 and every
10 years after that to remove colonic polyps and check for cancer. I’m glad I
did it, but can certainly wait ten years for the next one.
1 comment:
As much poop, fart, and shit humour you have dished out in the past 20 years I've known you, this is the most hilarious. Worth the indignity just for wise-ass remarks you can make!
Glad you are polyp free!
Mike
P S You ARE an asshole! But you're OUR asshole!
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