Friday, May 27, 2011

Some days you're the dog, some days you're the hydrant

And other days (well, for me it's everyday) you're the flamingo.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Fun with photoshop

Ahh, the stupid things I do to amuse myself...


Since I have so much time on my hands these days after work, I will try to post a few more new pictures in the weeks to come.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Everyone's crow is the blackest

I work with a woman who doles out cliches and mixes sayings into her regular dialogue as easily as she breathes air. I've started to jot these down, as most have never rolled over my ears before and most probably never will again. My favorite? One time during a meeting, she referenced how certain people suggest outlandish ideas that will never come to fruition by saying "sometimes it seems like they're trying to boil the ocean." Brilliant! While I have yet to reuse such saying in any of my conversations, I am about to borrow another one of her gems.

Today was cast day for me. I got the pesky plaster splint removed from my leg for my first post-operative appointment. It was SO liberating to have that thing torn off after trying to sleep through many an uncomfortable night with it digging into the tender sides of my ankle. The battle wounds on my ankle 10 days post-surgery weren't pretty. MAN, were they UGLY and GROSS. I don't much care for them. I will spare you from the pictures I took since I don't think anyone wants to see a crusty, bruised, stitched up CANKLE.

I'll let you create your own mental image of the gore and instead show you what it looked like just before they paper mache'd  my cast on. The tape is covering where they removed my stitches. Kinda hard to tell from this angle, but I've got serious cankle action going on. Also have to mention that my calf muscle in that leg is already a bunch of mush.


My orthopedic surgeon sent me home with a few pages of glossy photos of the inside of my ankle which are pretty cool. I wish he had labeled them for me so I could explain what everything was to my lucky family members who get to listen to me drone on about the topic. Basically, he told me that the insides of my ankle were far more littered with shrapnel "floating bodies" than the MRI had shown. They removed pieces of cartilage floating around everywhere. They re-threaded the ligaments on the outside and then sewed in an allograft (cadaver) tendon to reinforce the ankle that is woven through a hole they drilled in my bones and secured. They cleaned up the bone lesions that resulted from bones grinding where the cartilage was no more and drilled a cavern where new cartilage would regrow.

I will spare you from my moans and groans about how frustrating it can be to deal with crutches, how bruised my hands and sides are from the crutches themselves, how even the simplest activities have now become herculean efforts. The first shower I took a few short days after surgery was an epic fail. I had to jump over the lip of the tub and over the sliding glass door tracks and into the wet shower on one leg. Dangerous and not advised. Luckily, I only sustained one shin bruise and didn't fall. I also didn't have my vinyl shower cast protector yet so was standing with one leg out and one leg in. I didn't get all of the shampoo or conditioner washed out of my hair and was later drying soap suds off my body.

I could go on and on, and focus on how bad things are for me. But, everyone's crow is the blackest. There's someone else out there with far greater, more permanent challenges.

Instead I will try to focus on how fortunate I am. I was lucky to wean off all of my pain medicine 48 hours after the procedure and have my parents close by to tend to my every need. I am blessed to have such a great mother who, despite being under the weather, went above and beyond to make sure I was comfortable. I am blessed to have great friends who sent encouraging texts and emails, paid visits, cooked meals, and chauffeured me to places. I am lucky to have insurance that is covering the full cost of surgery. AND, my luck continued as they had just one black cast kit left at the hospital today. Not everyone's cast is the blackest! I chose from green, blue, white, pink, red and purple. Part of me now wishes I got purple, but purple doesn't match my outfits as well as black does.


My leg's new home for the next six weeks. I can't put any weight on it until it comes off the last week of June. I can't wait till it gets warmer and I start to sweat...oh boy. I told my surgeon I was worried I'd start losing friends if the cast doesn't stay fresh. I guess I'll find out!

Friday, May 6, 2011

A week full of goodbyes

This was a hard week on my heart. While some of the things weren't as sad as others, it has certainly been a week!

  • The Caps got soundly swept in the second round of the playoffs :-(
  • Gary Williams announced his retirement from coaching Terps basketball :-(!
  • I underwent ankle reconstruction surgery bidding adieu to my bum ankle :-|
  • Osama my house mouse was trapped and killed :-)
  • Osama bin Laden was trapped and killed :-)
  • I canceled my sparingly-used gym membership :-)
The first two items still have me bitter, reeling, sad and angry. I think I also might be in shock/denial. How dare the Caps put us fans in through the same scenario as last year?! Hrmph....DC sports teams. Then there's Gary. Garrrry. GARY! He's the face of Maryland basketball! He's the reason most people come to watch the team. I will miss his croud-rousing fist pump, his profuse sweating, his angry rants, his pacing, and his knee-splitting squat. Oh, yeah, and of course I'll never forget how he resurrected the Maryland program into prominence. The 2001/2001 basketball season when we won the national championship was probably the sports highlight of my lifetime.

Now for my ankle. Here's what she looked like pre-surgery. Pretty normal-ish on the oustide. Beat up on the inside! This is my first experience with surgery, casts and immobility. As an extremely impatient person, the next two months as a gimp will be trying.


And this is me with my glorious splint. I won't get my hard cast for another ten days or so.


My poor leg won't see the light of day until the last week of June! So far, the nerve block they put in my leg to numb my sciatic nerve hasn't worn off yet (and might not till tomorrow) so I haven't felt a full course of pain yet. Here's to my soon-to-be-new best friends Oxycontin and Percocet!

So, goodbye Caps; goodbye Gary Williams; goodbye Osamas and good riddance; goodbye ankle and good riddance; goodbye Fitness First...sorry we didn't get to see each other much. And here's to some new beginnings!