Saturday, November 22, 2014

An Adventure to The Pandorica in Beacon, NY

My friend Roben and I took off on an adventure today, taking the Metro-North train up to Beacon, NY to try out a restaurant there called The Pandorica.  We heard about this Dr. Who themed restaurant this summer when the internet caught wind of its existence and prompted a run on Who-vians needing to try it (and who then showed up to find it very crowded, apparently, as there were then some Yelp reviews of there not being enough tables and waitresses). We took a cab from the train station to Main Street, not knowing how far it was (not very far at all, if you're used to walking around NYC a lot as I do).  I had forgotten the street number of the restaurant, so we got out a couple blocks onto Main, figuring it couldn’t be too hard to find it, and it wasn’t. (We had actually passed it already!)

It’s a modest little place, but adorable. A weeping angel hangs on the wall near the door, and there’s a cool mural on the back wall of the T.A.R.D.I.S. swirling through space. A tv hangs in the back right corner, playing episodes (10th Dr., while we were there).  I was amused that, although there was only other one table in the whole place with people eating at it, they sat us right next to that other couple.  (I’m used to restaurants spreading people out a bit.)  We sat and were immediately asked what we wanted to drink, and we asked to look at the menu first but did say that we would like some water (which when they bring it, you get both a glass and a bottle of chilled water for the table, so if you want more, you don't have to ask).




The menu had quite a few things on it that I’d have liked to have tried. They had some lovely sounding salads, and I was very tempted by Cottage Pie, but as it was lunch and as I already knew before sitting down that I needed to save room for dessert, I ordered a meatloaf sandwich and some Earl Grey tea.  (My decision was helped by one of those sandwiches arriving at the next table for the guy sitting next to me—it looked so good I had to try it!)  Roben ordered a turkey and brie sandwich and a chai latte.  I then excused myself to go to the ladies room.

HA! The door is the door to the T.A.R.D.I.S., and it’s actually pretty spacious on the inside (yes, bigger than it looks from the corridor). I remarked later to Roben that if I’ve ever spent a visit to the ladies room giggling to myself like I just had, it would have been after having too many margaritas. 





We didn’t have to wait very long for our beverages, and I felt oh, so British when my tea arrived in a pot with a cozy and a lovely china teacup, instead of a teabag in a mug as one so often gets while out.




The food didn’t take much longer, either, and it was yummy and a generous portion. Pretty much everyone I know feels that Their Meatloaf is the Best One Possible, but this was really pretty good for not being mine (which is the Best Meatloaf Possible, of course, LOL).  The pickles on the sandwich were an unexpected surprise (they were hiding under the meatloaf, while the lettuce & tomato were on top), but tasted liked they belonged there. (You don’t have to have the veggies on it—the guy next to me had the sandwich without them.)   Roben also enjoyed her sandwich, and remarked that she’s not a cole slaw person but that she liked theirs.




For dessert, I ordered the Fish Fingers with Custard (also available as an appetizer).  It’s not real fish fingers, but battered & fried French toast roll-ups with something sweet & gooey in the center—OMG, where have you been all my life?  They came out nice and warm, and the custard had been warmed up as well.  Roben got the pecan pie, which she said was good. (But I later learned she resented her pie for not being the fish fingers!)




The ladies who worked there were absolutely lovely, and we remarked after leaving that we definitely need to go back sometime.   And Beacon is a cute little town. We told the woman who did most of the waiting on us (I’m guessing she was the owner—she seemed in charge) that we had taken the train up just to go there, and she laughed and seemed delighted by that. She told us that the shops went on for a mile and a half.  We didn’t walk the whole stretch, but did pop into a few other stores. The one right next to The Pandorica is called Play, and is filled with gag gifts and humorous stuff like you might find at Spencer Gifts or stores like that. I could have easily dropped a lot of money in there, had I had a lot of money to drop!  I didn’t come home empty handed—I am now the proud owner of a “Spin and Fly T.A.R.D.I.S. (that I have yet to take out of the box and try). 




The last store we looked into was a combination ice cream shop (we were way too stuffed to eat any!) and Christmas decoration shop.  I saw something that, again—had I a ton of money, it would have come home with me, but I couldn’t see the price tag while it was in the case. I asked the owner, “How much is the pretty giraffe ornament?” He replied, “Oh! You have good taste…” I laughed and said, “Have I managed to pick the most expensive thing in the store?” and he laughed and nodded.  This cutie from Italy is $96 (!!!!!), but the proprietor was kind enough to let me take a picture of it.




We walked back to the train station—it wasn’t too hard to find again, and was downhill heading back.  It was a lovely day to be out doing this, albeit chilly, and we had great fun!

Just don't blink!!!



Thursday, October 2, 2014

Actual conversation between body parts this morning

Ears: Guys....hey, guys... does anyone else hear music?

Rest of body: Mmmrph. Shut up.

Left hand: I'm asleep...

Rest of body: We all are. Shut up...

Left hand: No...that's not what I mean...

:silence:

Ears: da-da-da-da, dum-tee, dum-tee... I swear I know this song, too...

Rest of body: Shut. Up.

Lower abdomen: Ow. ibuprofin, please?

Rest of body: We are not moving. Shut up.

Left hand: I'd really appreciate it if you'd move me...

Rest of body: GO BACK TO SLEEP!

Left hand: *sigh*

:silence:

Right big toe: :taps in rhythm:...

Ears: See!? Yeah, this is where it goes to the fast part... why does it sound like it's so far away?

2 cells in brain capable of rational thought at that hour: That sounds like a song we have loaded on the iPod. Isn't that the one we use as an alarm in the mornings?

Left hand: *PRICKLE*

Rest of body: OW, wtf?!?!?

Left hand: I =told= you I was asleep...

Control center: Left shoulder, elbow! Get that circulation moving again!!

Another small part of brain: Wait... who said something about an alarm?? Yeah, that does sound far away...

Ears:  I told you so...

2 cells capable of rational thought: It might sound like that if it were buried in our purse...

Panic center: ZOMFG, what time is it?!?!?!?!

Body: all right, all right... :rummages through purse:

Eyes: Panic's over...we haven't overslept!!

Left index finger:  Initiating sequence!!! :hits snooze:

Rest of body, lying down again: Ahhhh...zzzzz....

Lower abdomen: You =could= have gotten me some ibuprofin just now, since you were up...

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Review -- A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder

A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder = L*O*V*E*D it!!!!! I laughed so hard that I snorted (twice) and I am already trying to figure out when and how I can see it again.
First, an "I am an idiot" disclaimer: I have wanted to see this since it started in previews and in all this time, I had no idea it was based on the movie Kind Hearts and Coronets.Even when a friend mentioned it earlier today on my Facebook post saying I was going, my thought to myself was "what does that have to do with anything?!?" It wasn't until before the show when I was telling my friend Deb that I was really surprised that the actor who played all the diff't parts hadn't won the Tony and she said, "Oh, I was wondering if they did it like the movie..." and I said, "what movie?" "Kind Hearts & Coronets" ... Me: I don't think I've seen that... Deb: "Oh, Alec Guinness plays all the family members that get murdered..." and I had a sudden picture in my head of him as the Parson and I said, "OH. I think I =have= seen that, but it's been so long that I don't even remember it!!!" It came back to me as the evening unfolded, to a point where I exclaimed, "OH!" and threw my hands to my face, as I realized what was going to happen, LOL!!! (Another person learns I am apparently a riot to sit next to...)
Second, we sat in the balcony. Before you click "yes, I want to purchase this seat," it gives you a big disclaimer that it's obstructed view. It's not really too bad...there's a little half circle runway protruding from the stage and when people went out on it, we had to lean forward to see what was happening out on it. If that will annoy you, don't sit in the balcony. If not, we paid $50 a seat, which, while it's an "I don't do this often" splurge, it is a great price for a Broadway show, much less the one that just won Best Musical. Also? Most comfortable balcony seats I've encountered in a Broadway theatre yet--I didn't at all feel like my knees were up above my shoulders and there was some leg room, so my knees didn't hurt at the end from not moving for 2-3 hours.
The show itself is wonderful. =Clever=...very, very clever--the dialogue, the lyrics, a lot of the music and the set and effects. (OMG, the bees and the way the Vicar "falls" are just hilarious, as is the weight-lifting scene...and omg, the skating scene was, again, hilarious!!!!!!) It was SO SO SO SO refreshing to have a non-electric, only gently-amplified band/orchestra --omg, my ears didn't hurt once and I'm still having snippets of the songs running through my head. My only quibble with the whole thing is that occasionally the words were so quick and/or the English accents were so broad that I missed things and I don't want to miss a thing. (sorry if I just gave you an Aerosmith earworm...) The chorus was great--the number they top the 2nd Act with about "Why Are All the D'Ysquiths Dying?" was hilarious. I cannot say enough good things about Jefferson Mays (the Alec Guinness role)--omg, he was brilliant all around, and I still don't know how he didn't win the Tony--singing, delivery, physical comedy: he's awesome. Bryce Pinkham, Lisa O'Hare and Lauren Worsham were all wonderful (OMG, lyric voices instead of a lot of the scream-sing you hear on Broadway these days...I wanted to run up on stage and hug them all and thank them (and the producers) for that!!!). All the smaller parts were well done, too, and Joanna Glushak as Lady Eugenia was HiLARious. It's a very small part and she totally stole the scene.
I also have to give the Walter Kerr theater and the woman in charge of the lady's room "Mad Props"--we had to go down the stairs and halfway across the back of the house (and then behind 4 women who cut in front of us and were rude) because the line was so long and it didn't seem possible they could accommodate all of us in 15 minutes and they did. That was astounding, LOL.
I don't think I'm missing anything--seriously. If you get a chance to see it, I can't recommend it enough...

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Well, no Triple Crown winner this year...

I haven't mentioned it on the blog yet, but I love horse racing. Back when Saratoga had a paddock tent where you could sit and have a lovely lunch and see the horses up close as they got ready, my brother was able to get tickets for that for the Travers every year -- standing birthday present for me, yay! -- and since they took down the tent, we've been in the grandstand.  I like the festivity and the fancy hats, but most of all I love to watch the horses run.  I've never been to another track, though, and have never gone by myself.  (Well, ok, when I was in elementary school, I went to Batavia Downs with my friend Debbie, to watch her father's horse run in a sulky race.  I recall he asked me what horse I liked in a race and it won. Sometimes this still happens; sometimes it doesn't, LOL!)

I think California Chrome is a fabulous horse, and I really felt he was going to win the Triple Crown. The more I thought about it, I decided that I wanted to see it happen in person, so the day before, when I read that the LIRR was going to run extra trains out to the park, I decided I was going to go.  I got my train ticket on the way home from my dayjob, and was very glad the next day that I had done this, as the lines for the ticket machines were crazy--easily 300 people waiting to use 6 kiosks at the first area at Penn Station I came to.

I didn't have to wait too long for a train, as they were running extras out to the track.  Everyone on the train was in a party mood, and everyone cheered when we started to move.  It was a short ride, although we had to wait a couple of times for other trains to go by so we could cross to other tracks.  As advertised, the train station is right next to Belmont Park -- you can see the park from the walkway over the train tracks.

I paid the general admission ($10) and got a program ($6) (this was also the first time in years I haven't gone to the track without a Daily Racing Form--I felt not only spontaneous, but unprepared!) and looked at one of the monitors to see what race was next.  I had obligations in the morning, so didn't arrive until mid-afternoon.  They were just about to start the 7th race, so I walked over to where I could look out over the seats and see the track and watched the race, after which I used the ladies room. (Train ride, etc... The lines for the ladies room were insanely long, if you ever plan to go...)

After that, I looked at the program for the next races -- the Belmont was the 11th race on the card for the day, so I had 3 races before. I don't remember who I chose for the 8th, but he lost. While watching it, though, I thought, I don't want to stand way up here--I want to be right down by the rail if I can!!  So I chose my horses for the next 3 races, placed my bets and then figured out how to get closer to the track.  Well, you really have to be there at the crack of dawn to get right by the rail!  No, seriously, while I was getting dressed around 8am, the news anchors were reporting people had been there waiting to get in since 6am-ish! But I got pretty close:

I had not brought a hat, and with the wonderful sunshine, I wished that I had one!  I liked 2 long shots in the 9th race--#11, Broadway Empire and #12, Romansh.  I don't recommend my method for choosing horses--I do go by history and sire/dam, but I'll also consider the jockey's outfit and color, the name, the look of the horse, and just my own gut instinct.  One of the fellows near me also had money on #11 and we were jumping up and down together, as the horse took off like a shot and was way in front until well after the far turn, but he couldn't hold on.  #12 came in 3rd though.  He was my win for the day.

I liked a couple of horses in the 10th, one of which was #10, Chamois.  I joked on Facebook that I expected him to "clean up" (ayuck-ayuck), but alas he didn't.  He was a pretty horse, though...

After this race, close-to-the-rail-territoriality set in.  So many people had been waiting for so long, that they weren't going to let just anyone get close to the rail, LOL, with good reason--I was amazed at the audacity of some people that just wanted to squeeze in where there wasn't any room! (For those who know I don't deal with crowds well, I was uncomfortable, but with the big open sky over me, I was ok.  Oh, and also to do with the sky--there were a bunch of barn swallows flying around and one buzzed my head while trying to catch a bug, and then I saw a pair of Red-tailed hawks flying right over the upper level, but I missed getting a picture of them!)  I had been down close to the rail long enough and was friendly and chatty enough that I was "accepted by the natives."  A little bit of photo-bombing went on and we all felt awful for the girl who had waited all day and then, 20 minutes before the big race, had to go to the ladies room. She tried to wait, but couldn't...I hope she was able to get through the crowd!!

I was really surprised that there was going to be an entire hour between the 10th race and the Belmont -- I suspect this is for NBC to sell more advertising...  (And I'll add that my feet are really feeling all the standing on concrete that I did yesterday!)  They had LL Cool J perform for everyone, but he was down by the winners circle, so we watched him on the giant-screen tv they have in the center of the track.  That's also where we saw the bugle call -- I was rather shocked we really couldn't hear it.  Finally it got to be riders up time and the horses came to the track.  Everyone cheered as California Chrome trotted in front of us:

(As you can see, everyone was taking a camera phone picture!)

The race was exciting, and people kept waiting for him to make his move and take first place, but as we know, that didn't happen.  The cheering was still thunderous as the horses raced in front of us:

I don't think I've ever heard such a loud crowd go silent so quickly, though, as it became apparent that he wasn't taking the lead.  And then there was a photo finish, with everyone questioning, "Did he make it? Did he catch up--was he one of the horses they're looking at?!"  Nope...

I'm glad I went--it was an experience I'll remember.  However, had I known what was going to come next, I might have stayed home and watched it on tv.  I didn't run straight for the trains, as I had to cash that ticket for my 3rd place horse way back in the 9th. ($7.90, woo-hoo!)  However, I went to the windows upstairs (the level I needed to be on to get to the train) and around the back and didn't have to wait too long--maybe 10 minutes?  Well, holy moly...this is what I was confronted with as I headed toward the little attached train station:

 Oh my gracious... it took me =two hours= of standing in this line, advancing with teeny steps once in a while, to even get to the train!!!!!  That is twice as long as it takes to get the 36 miles from the track at Saratoga back to Albany where we stay when we go!!!!! It took me 4 hours total to get home from the track and that was just ridiculous.  I did have an interesting conversation of all sorts of things about horses and racing with one of the writers from Horse News, but still--4 hours???? People were furious at the LIRR and at one point either some water fell from an upper level or came bursting out of a pipe and started soaking the crowd and I thought we were going to have a panicked mob, but then we were able to move forward again.  "The Desert Highway," an Eagles tribute band, was playing down on the grass where we could see and hear them from the walkway to the train, so that was a bit of a distraction, but only a very small bit.

The day seemed rather like California Chrome's run -- an exciting adventure with a frustrating finish.








Sunday, March 16, 2014

Adventures in cat-sitting...March 16th edition

Scene:  I am asleep. There is suddenly one of the cats I'm cat-sitting through tomorrow on the bed, by my face.

Thor:  GET UP! GET UP!! The sun is rising!! You have to feed us NOW!!!

Me:  Oh, hell no...go back to sleep.

10 minutes later, I hear a "thunk." My iPod Touch (I use it as an alarm clock) has been removed from the nightstand to the floor.

Thor:  Seriously, woman, you need to get up and feed us.

Me, retrieving device:  You can wait another hour.

10 minutes later, there's a cat sitting on my head, licking my hair...

Thor:  I will not take no for an answer. Get up and feed us.

Me:  You will too take no for an answer. (And he gets removed to the foot of the bed.)

10 minutes later, I hear "rustle, rustle..."

Me:  What are you doing? Stop it. (rustling stops for maybe 2 minutes...)

"rustle, rustle..."

Me:  seriously, where the hell =are= you and what are you doing??! (rustling stops...)

"rustle, rustle..."

I put on my glasses, and he's trying to eat some of his owner's papers, which were under her laptop.

Me:  Will you STOP it!?!??! (I get out of bed to go push papers back under the computer...)

Thor:  Since you're out of bed...

Cleo:  YAY, YAY, YAY, she's up, it's breakfast time...

Me:  :Facepalm: Ok. You win...

10 minutes later, I was back in bed. 10 minutes later the alarm went off, whereupon I turned it OFF instead of hitting Snooze.

4 hours later...

Me:  ZOMG you guys, I was going to go birdwatching, you let me go back to sleep!!!!


Thor:  What? We ate already...but are you going to give us more food now?

Saturday, February 22, 2014

So I had this horrible stomach virus last night...

And, as usual, got my appetite back around midnight.

Scene: at the diner, after taking a mouthful of chicken rice soup:

Stomach, rumbling thunderously:  WHAT…IS…THIS?!?!??!?!

Mouth:  Oh, Great, Unpredictable Stomach—this is chicken rice soup!  You were pleased by our evening offerings of popsicles, jello, applesauce and dry white toast, and you demanded that we all come over here for either soup or eggs, if there wasn’t chicken soup, remember?

Stomach, continuing to rumble:  SILENCE, IMPERTINENT ONE!!!!

Brain: Oh, geez. I told you not to get dressed and come out…

Mouth:  Oh, Mighty Stomach, the soup doesn’t taste bad…and it came with crackers!!

Renegade Tastebud: Yeah, but they’re those Krispy crackers, not the good Nabisco saltines…

Brain: Hey, you find a diner that doesn’t serve these Krispy brand crackers, we’ll go there.

Renegade Tastebud #2:  Actually, the soup’s pretty salty…

Mouth: Will you guys SHUT UP!?!?  (to Stomach) Besides, we have this lovely cold ice water!!!

Stomach:  Hmm.  Yes.  Yes, you may continue with your “soup.”  And you may Release the Crackers!!!

Eyes:  (roll back into head)

Brain: I suppose that was inevitable…

Stomach:  But not the carrots and celery bits.  Pick those out…

Mouth:  Yes.  Yes, we can do that.  Thank you.


And…scene.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Post office adventure of 2/8

Ok. Nearly an hour in line at the post office could have been massively annoying (well, was a little), but it was actually pretty hilarious. A common enemy will serve to unite a people... the People of the Line. There was one fellow who was pretty vocal and kept up a running commentary about how ridiculous it was that only one person was doing the packages line for most of the time we were in it (another clerk showed up later), but he was very amusing. I pulled out the scarf I'm knitting, when I realized it might be a marathon wait, and several ladies, agreed, "See? She's got the right idea!" There was a strip of broken floor that had caution tape over it, and one lady was telling people not to fall over it, and I said, "but if you -do- fall and you get hurt, do NOT leave to go to the hospital until you have your package if you've already waited this long!!" That got laughs and led to more conversation. The fellow who was keeping up the running commentary took a phone call and was telling the person on the other end that he was on line and someone should make a documentary about it... it would be a "saga." I quipped, "A Trilogy..." When he was done, he got bonus points and a big laugh from me when he said, "And Madame DeFarge here... so what are you making?" I laughed, "a scarf..." He said, "It'll be a sweater by the time you're done here!!" When the other clerk showed up, she called out did anyone have yellow slips (which is picking up stuff from post boxes, as opposed to people with pink slips which is registered or packages that couldn't be delivered to apts.), and I and several other people joyously yelled, "YES!" (By this time I was 8th in line, and the chatty guy was 3 in front of me...) We pretty much danced to the front and gave her our slips and we were high-5ing each other, LOL. The chatty guy was joking, No way!! And we with yellow slips collected our packages and wished everyone else, "good luck!" and went our merry ways. But that was all not as awesome as what was in the box I'd been picking up...But for this, I need my camera...

I've got a unicorn out of whose butt come sprinkles & you don't!!!
I am now the proud owner of the most hilarious tchochke I've seen since I bought my Dad the crabby looking plastic sheep with a Santa hat on that "poops" root beer jellybeans when you press down on it. To cheer me up after having to go to the ER last week, my brother and sister-in-law sent me a plastic unicorn "sprinkle shaker"!! BWAHAHAHAH, you put sprinkles in it, and then they come out 3 holes on top of it's backside. I now need to go buy ice cream so I have something to sprinkle sprinkles on. And if that weren't enough, they also sent a Hello Kitty Pez dispenser.





Tuesday, January 28, 2014

ER "trip report"...

So, as I already said on FB and via emails, yesterday morning  I hobbled off to work.  People asked why I’d come in and honestly, my only response was, “well, I come in if I have a headache--this is just pain somewhere else. I’m here because that’s what I do on Monday mornings -- come here!!”  It was strongly suggested I go to the doctor before any powers that be decided to =send= me.  There’s a clinic associated with Columbia Presbyterian a half block away on 51st St, but they couldn’t see me until the next day, so I got in a cab and went over to St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital near Columbus Circle.

I filled out a little card and told the triage nurse what was going on.  I was really nervous and didn’t want to be there and was trying not to cry.  I had in the back of my head how my temping-friend Cathy went to the doctor for a cough in November and turned out to have stage 4 breast cancer and was dead before Christmas.  I haven’t seen a doctor in ages (haven’t really needed to!) and this was the first I’ve had to be in the ER for myself in almost 19 years.  I was considerably nervous and my blood pressure showed it, but she didn’t say anything and later when they took it again, it was well within normal.   She asked me how bad the pain was and I said, “what, on a scale of 1-10?” Yes. “14.”  She started to put her hands on the computer keyboard to enter my response, then =looked= at me and laughed.  I said, “honestly—It’s way off the charts of any other pain I’ve felt before” and was trying not to cry.  She nodded, said they’d fix me up and gave me some papers and my wristbands and told me to follow the yellow line on the floor to another nurse’s station. I said, “wait—don’t you need my insurance card??”  “No, not yet.”  (Me… damn!!  My memory of ERs is that this is the first thing they usually want!)  So I stood up and this was the only time of the entire day that I thought, “I can barely walk…why don’t they put me in a wheelchair?!” but I hobbled off.  (And when I say that, I mean I was really limping and sort of lurching to the left…)

I got almost all the way there and had to stop and lean against a desk—several times throughout the day the pain was blinding-and-making-me-dizzy-bad (an episode of this while I was still at work is what made me decide that perhaps everyone else was right and maybe I =ought= see a dr.) and a nice man in scrubs saw me and had me sit and took my papers to the nurse I was to give them to, and then they put me in a room.  I have to say right up front, everyone I encountered yesterday was really =nice= and friendly. Or at least they acted that way in front of me.

I sat there, and then decided that lying down was preferable (there was no comfortable position), and then a young woman came in.  She introduced herself and told me she was a 4th year medical student.  She asked me a bunch of questions and I told her about the grapefruit-sized ovarian cyst I had in 1994 and that I thought I’d pulled a groin muscle while gardening in 2009, but had never seen anyone for it—just laid low for a couple of days, and those were the only things I had ever felt comparable pain to.  She had me walk for her and I showed her what I could do (hobble) and couldn’t do (turn around or walk backwards), and she went off to tell her attending dr. all this.  I lay there a bit, then pulled out my iPod to play Bejeweled butterflies to try to distract myself.  It was only then that someone came for my insurance info.  (Which at this point was on the other side of the room, LOL, so I had to get up and get it…)

After a bit, the 4th year came back, looking a tiny bit embarrassed and told me that she’d forgotten to actually =look= at the site of the pain or otherwise physically look at me.  I laughed and said, “Oops!”  Some of my memory of yesterday is a skootch fuzzy, but at some point she told me I have a great sense of humour and it might have been this point.  Shortly after, Nurse “K” came in to help me get out of my pants and top and get into a gown and to take all my vitals, and the doctor came in and I told him everything all over again and tried to explain the pain, that it was mostly in the front and sometimes in the back and when I first lay down on the gurney, it felt like someone had driven a lance through me. He nodded, examined me, asked me more questions, and told me about the various tests they were going to do and all the things it =could= be.  He said they were going to give me a Percocet and a Tylenol and first they were going to do a sonogram.  (Somewhere along in here, I decided I better let my family know, so called them, and then posted on FB.)

So they wheeled me to another room to do a sonogram, and the doctor and the 4th year came in.  I had a little trouble getting my feet in the stirrups (they wanted to view my ovaries from the inside as well as from the outside), because it hurt SO much to move my leg to the side like that and the doctor said, "They didn’t give you the pain meds yet?"  “Um, no… “  He frowned, but we went ahead with the exam. I couldn’t see the screen, but he was pointing things out to the 4th year, and was frankly sort of jabbing the sonogram’s probe sideways to my left side.  I winced and inhaled sharply, especially when I thought he was trying to reach my hip bones with it (and was trying to quell thoughts that I had a cyst or cancer or something awful), and he apologized if it was hurting me, but they were trying to get a good look.  I opened my mouth to start to say, “Well, things aren’t supposed to be going SIDEWAYS in there…”  and then I thought, “Omg, I can’t say that to him!!!” so said, “Mmm-hmm….” and started laughing.  I put my hands over my face and was trying not to shake with laughter because by this point it all seemed so completely absurd.  (I can’t help but wonder what they went home and told their loved ones about the weird lady who was shaking with laughter and pain during a vaginal ultrasound…)

They finished and left and the nurse came back in to draw some blood and put in an iv line (the dr. had changed his mind about the Percocet/Tylenol combo and wanted to give me some morphine).  I sort of lost my laughter at this point—fear of needles, etc.  I vaguely remember saying that I probably would have worn plain socks instead of my kissing polar bear socks if I’d thought it was the only thing of mine that I’d end up keeping on all day!!  She was swabbing my arm and I was trying to remain chatty but was aware that I wasn’t actually saying anything and I vaguely remember thinking I should probably say that I felt like I was going to hyperventilate, but then I was really =hot=, and said so.  She said, “oh, that’s the vaso-vago—that often happens when you pass out.”  That didn’t really register as I was trying to get my hair off my sweaty neck, and then I had a, “wait…I wasn’t lying down…” moment and what she said registered and I said, “Wait—what?!?  I passed out?!?!”  I started laughing and apologized.  She said not to worry—she had caught me and laid me back and finished the blood draw and I was only out a moment or two, and then I had snored a couple of times.  I started really laughing at that point and she said, “See? I knew you’d be ok…”

She took me back to my little ER room, and they wanted to send me up to the official sonogram dept. as the ER doctor wasn’t getting great views of anything, apparently.  And I had to start drinking this yucky stuff that tasted like plastic (o-something), because if the sonogram didn’t show anything, they wanted to do a catscan, and this stuff would help various parts of my body glow on a catscan. (I =really= wanted to see that, but they didn’t share the pix with me…dammit—I think if they’re going to make my body parts glow then I should get to see it…)  She gave me the morphine iv and FINALLY the pain stopped for a bit.  (Honestly? I don’t understand any fuss anyone makes about this drug…Yes, it stopped the pain and that was wonderful, but it only lasts about an hour and a half!!!  I was sort of wanting whatever they put in darts to tranquilize elephants…)  (also, somewhere along in here, I joked to Nurse K that it was probably useless telling her the catscan (with a cat) joke, as I was sure she and everyone else had heard it.  She chuckled and nodded...)

Anyway, they eventually took me upstairs for the other sonogram.  I wouldn’t want to play poker with the young woman doing it—she had the same look in her eyes as she was viewing everything!!  She did have a mask on, so maybe she doesn’t have as great a poker face as I was thinking at that point, but it sure seemed it!   At one point the machine started making a weird noise and I turned my head to look at it, and she told me not to worry—it was the sound of my blood.  She had to go get her supervisor, as she couldn’t find my left ovary.  (Ah-HAH.  This is why the ER doc was jabbing me sideways like he did—he probably couldn’t find it, either…)  I joked that it was tired of the cold and probably went on vacation without me. (This is when I learned that they just sort of float around in there…) Her supervisor found it and at this point I thought they got a good picture of it. (It was “anterior” and “ant-something else.”)  (No, not “-eater”!!)  When I finally looked today at the copy of the labs report that they let me take, I saw that they never really did get a good, =good= look at it, but they got its size and it didn’t have a cyst.  (The right one actually -does- have a little cyst on it… could have fooled me!!)  (At home I was still amused about this whole situation and imagined my shy, little left ovary wearing a chiffon headscarf, saying, “no…no paparazzi, please!!!”  Again… I suspect this was the pain meds, LOL…)

They took me back down to the ER and as nothing bad showed up on the sonogram, I had to finish drinking this awful stuff for the catscan.   I asked the nurse if she’d put down the side on the gurney so I could go to the bathroom and said, “you know, should this hurt??” (pointing to the iv line).  No, it wasn’t supposed to-- I’d blown the vein in moving and doing the sonogram, so they had to take it out…

Somewhere along in here they gave me more morphine. It might have been before that—my experience with each of the 2 doses was that an hour and a half later, I felt it wear off and suddenly had to pee!!!  (Yes. It is very hard suddenly having to pee when you can’t walk well, but I managed, LOL…)  Then a diff’t nurse (“Nurse E”) came in to replace the IV line.  Damn, that was a significant tourniquet she put on me (SNAP!) and she started tapping all my veins and I was being chatty.  Nervous-chatty.  I warned her that I’d passed out earlier and she said, “I =heard=!!” And proceeded to tell me about some guy she once had who was so nervous that he worked himself into a seizure.  And we continued to chat—she was funny and down to earth and reminded me a bit of my friend Roben, who’s also a nurse.

She didn’t like any veins on that same arm. (“Nurse K used the only good vein over here!!”) So, she tried my right.  She said that my veins were all “short.”  (not enough room in them for iv line—we had a huge discussion about veins at this point…)  I laughed and told her that I’m the shortest of my siblings and my brother teased me when I was little about being short, and I couldn’t WAIT to tell him my veins were short, too!  She got a kick out of that… I said what about these big ones in my hands?  (I’ve had ivs in there before…)  She said the catscan guys don’t like it when you use those.  (ok, whatever…) She thought a vein near my right wrist looked promising, so she put it in and I was looking away (needles, etc.) and she said, “Well, look at that.  Nope, that’s not going to work…” and I looked and saw a huge lump growing (she’d injected some saline to test the line)… Aaaand, Commence freakout.  She said, “no, no, it’s ok, It’s ok!!!  It’s just saline and we take it out and it’s fine!!!”  I calmed down as she went back to the left arm to try to find something there again.

She was tapping away trying to find something, and that’s when the 4th year came back in.  They also wanted to do a dye contrast for the catscan and I had to listen to all the potential perils and sign a consent.  After the first potential issue, I turned to Nurse E on my left side and said, “I was much preferring our vein discussion to all of this stuff she’s telling me.”  After the 2nd potential effect (allergy and anaphylactic shock), I was considerably frightened and said, “we =really= have to do this?!?!? All that yucky stuff I had to drink wasn’t =enough=!?!”  Nurse E assured me they do these every day and not to worry.  Somewhere in all of this while the 4th year was talking and distracting (aka terrifying) me, she got the new line in me and I didn’t even =notice= it happening!   She’s good.  I do have a little bruise where the first one blew and I have a tiny red mark where the 2nd one blew, but I cannot even =find= where she put this 3rd one in me (closer to my hand on my left arm. I am significantly impressed!!!)… I signed the consent and a bit later, Nurse K came back in and I told her that the dye thing sounded really scary, and she told me that in all the time she’d been there, she’d never seen anyone have a reaction and that made me feel sort of better.  (It didn’t occur to me until just now that I have no idea how long she’s been there, LOL!)

I had to wait a bit after drinking the yucky stuff before they could do the catscan and my phone had run out of charge so I couldn’t call anyone, and I was almost out of iPod charge, and I thought, OH, I have my knitting with me, but was afraid that the movement of my hands would dislodge the iv again, so pretty much just lay there and tried to rest and not think about dire things.  I briefly thought about calling someone to see if they wanted to come down and keep me company, but didn’t think I wanted anyone seeing me crying every time I moved and it hurt and besides, no phone charge, LOL.   I think this is the first day in months I’ve gone off in the morning with no music and I lay there wishing I had some to work on memorizing.  They finally wheeled me over to the catscan rooms. BRRR.  After a while, I heard them wheel another guy over to wait, and he said rather loudly, “God DAMN it is cold over here…Fuck!!!”  I couldn’t see him, but said, “I =know=, right?!?!”  He laughed.  When I finally got into the room (I had to wait and wait and wait…) I asked the guy if it was because of the machines that it had to be so cold and he said yes.  Just about the minute I got on the table I had to pee again. Ugh.  Oh, LOL, also, he was helping me get on the table and was reaching for my left hand and I said, “No!!  We have to be careful—I’ve already blown 2 iv lines! If I come back with this one messed up, those nurses are gonna kill me!”  He thought that was very funny.  He was also very nice and was amused when I was asking him something and interrupted myself with, “wait…is that a =fly= on the ceiling?!”  It actually was!!  I have no idea where it came from.  He said, “Did you feel like someone was watching you??” Heh…The actual test didn’t last long at all.  I was thinking it would be really funny if the fly flew down and got in one of the pictures.  I think that was the morphine…So, I was trying to be all still, but was wanting to shiver from the cold and shake from the laughter and was trying not to pee.  Then he put in the dye and it didn’t take long for it to go in and I had no adverse reaction, except it makes you feel warm all over.  (ALL over…I said I feel warm, and he said, “that’s ok—and you might feel like you’re urinating on yourself.” I lay there thinking about how badly I had to go and was worried it was more than the dye’s reaction and then he ran me through the machine once more after that. I said to him, “that’s =it=?!”  He said, “see? You were nervous for absolutely nothing…”  I said, “yeah, that’s usually the way it is, isn’t it…”  Then I told him I =really= needed the bathroom and he opened the door and I did a lurch-sprint and the guy who’d sworn about the cold had just opened the restroom door to go himself, but saw me and let me go first and I thanked him.  “whew…”

They wheeled me back to the ER and then I had to wait and wait for the results, so I sat and watched people come and go and watched the doctor and nurses at their station.  I went to the bathroom again (a longer walk, as they’d put someone else in the other room while I was getting the catscan), and the doctor watched me walk and asked me some more about the pain and sort of frowned and came over and poked at me again.  He went away and I lay there thinking what I =thought= were really deep thoughts but I suspect the pain killers were influencing that.  However, I did think that the most impt. piece of technology, to use the word loosely, in the entire ER is the =wheel=.  Gurneys, wheelchairs, the chairs at the nurse’s station, carts with  bedsheets, carts with other equipment—I saw a portable x-ray machine being wheeled around, and the first sonogram I had was from a little machine on a wheeled cart.  The cleaning guy who I’d seen several times and who was doing his best to make me smile every time he passed had a garbage can with wheels at one point.  That whole place would be VERY different if wheels didn’t exist!!!

Finally the doctor came over to tell me that my catscan showed everything (bowels, uterus, kidneys, lower bits of lungs, heart) was fine, too (I have a tiny bit of diverticulosis, which is the little pouching through which the diverticulitis can happen, so I need to be sure to eat a lot of fiber…), and that it looked like what was wrong is a really strained groin muscle.  I thanked him for everything he did and told him that while I’m really glad that nothing’s seriously wrong with me, it was sort of embarrassing after all those tests to find out it really is a pulled muscle. He said he was glad it wasn’t anything more serious. Nurse E to me when I said this to her, “What?!  Pain is pain—you have nothing to be embarrassed about!”  I said that I had no idea how I was going to get home and she started to tell me where the subway was and I laughed and said, no, I knew that but I was probably going to take a cab.  She gave me my prescriptions and discharge papers and a copy of my labs (figured would be useful), and told me there was a Duane Reade drugstore at the corner.  I said, “Oh, good, I can get a cane.”  She said, “a Cane?!”  And I said, “did you =see= me only barely making it to the bathroom over there?!  I’m =really= not walking very well…”  She understood finally what I meant when I said I had no idea how I could get home and she said, “oh we have lots of those!” and went and got me one.  Oh, it was slow going, but so much nicer and a bit less painful to remain upright using that than lurching to the left and worrying about falling over!!!!!

The pharmacy at the Duane Reade was closed--oh, the poor counter girl…I had sort of “had it” by that point and as I said, “oh the nurse at the hospital said it was 24 hours!!” and just started crying of fatigue, hunger and frustration… she apologized and said the store was 24 hours, but the pharmacy closes at 9.  I apologized for crying and she said her mom recently went through something and she hoped I got home safely and got what I needed.  I had a brief moment of, omg, I’m so not old enough to be compared to your mom! Instead I thanked her and paid for my water and gatorade (I’m supposed to drink a lot today) and as I was leaving, she called, “YOU CAN DO IT!!”  I laughed and said, “Thanks!”  I then hailed a cab and had him drop me at the Walgreen’s up near me, which I thought had a 24 hour pharmacy.  I was right and I got my Rx’s and a sandwich from the deli across the street (had had nothing to eat since 10am when I had 3 slices of bacon and a can of coke—I hadn’t eaten my 2 hard boiled eggs (the rest of my breakfast) and had them with me all day, but they didn’t want me to have them at the ER in case something was wrong and they needed to rush me to surgery. They weren’t enough though, hence the sandwich…) and then I took another cab for the short ride to the apt. (ZOMG, I =know=--3 cabs in one day!! Oy.) and, well… that’s that.