Entry 2: To drift

Trees in the wind outside my bedroom, 4 February 2024, a year ago.

OK. So maybe it wasn’t norovirus after all. And I thought it was getting better, but…

Tuesday, after days of malaise, zero appetite, a fever, and pain increasingly located in the “lower right quadrant” of my abdomen, I went to urgent care. Urgent care sent me to the emergency room. Tuesday was sheets of rain weather in San Francisco, the most rain that has fallen in the city in over 130 years. All around was flood and tree limbs bent in the wind, puddled intersections and inside-out umbrellas. Lucky for me, the city is also bounteous with hospitals. Since we are relatively new here, my husband and I sat in the car and read emergency room Yelp reviews before making our choice, adding a particularly ridiculous and random feel to the day. We picked a well-regarded emergency room that wasn’t that far from our house and set off on our appendix adventure through rain, wind, and worry.

The day is fuzzy to me now. Triage. Waiting. Hearing the moans and pains of others. Since I was only in real pain when I moved or someone poked me in the lower right quadrant of my abdomen, nothing felt particularly urgent to me about my situation. I was wheeled off for a CT scan, where the fellas were surprised that I did not have an IV, billed as an integral part of the contrast imaging process. One failed attempt at an IV later, we went for a “no contrast” scan. I was in surgery to remove my appendix laparoscopically a few hours later (with an IV despite my “wiggly” vein). Luckily, my appendix was not perforated, so the procedure was straightforward, with no complications. I spent the night in the hospital.

I am fatigued. Grateful we went to the hospital and to have medical care. In some ways happy to be distracted by something so basic, and to be able to take days off from work to recover (though I also don’t get paid for time off and am concerned about the effect of unexpected time off on clients). I have thoughts about the chaos of hospitals, where there is too much going on, no one has what they need to sleep uninterrupted, and there is a feeling of being more of an object, a problem, and less of a person. I wonder about those years of intermittent stomach problems that I had, which I now suspect might have been recurrent appendicitis. I learned that there may be a genetic component to appendicitis and remember my dad’s story about getting his appendix out in the first semester of his freshman year of college. I wonder about that connection, so close to the eighth anniversary of his death. I tear up with grief and despair for the way things are right now, nationally, globally, environmentally.

Why not welcome the fatigue, the excuse to rest and take space, to hole up on another rainy day and watch the magnolia outside, in full bloom in February, sway in the winter wind, to drifit in and out of sleep?