There was no blog yesterday, the day before that, or even the day before that! I have a very good excuse. As I type today’s post, I cast my mind back to Sunday evening, some 72 hours earlier…
Guess what? I am back in hospital again! I had been experiencing leg pain for a few days. I told myself that I would call Orthopaedic Outpatients on Monday, to request an appointment for this (at the time) somewhat minor issue. My left leg had totally different ideas. It didn’t want to wait until Monday…
As I entered the bathroom, I heard a sickening noise, impossible to describe, coming from my leg. I then lost all balance, having to hold onto a stool, in order to avoid hitting the floor. Then came the pain..
I have had more than my fair share of health issues, during my 36 years on this planet. I’ve endured operations, gruelling treatments, as well as symptoms which I pretty much have to just put up with, on a daily basis.
While I had to deal with some horrific situations, nothing would come close on the pain scale I felt on Sunday.
Things must have been bad, because at that point, I had decided I wanted to go to hospital “RIGHT NOW!”.
The parametrics arrived. Luckily, I had managed to get some clothes on and therefore protect my modesty.
I then had to get from the bedroom, to the hospital. While this is only a short journey, geographically, given the stress and events involved, I felt as if I was in my own 1980’s roadtrip movie, alongside Steve Martin and John Candy.
The journey went as follows…
- Move from my chair onto their chair. Complete with screaming.
- Get tied into their chair. This is apparently not to prevent the screaming banshee, the paramedics had just captured, from escaping. The ties were to prevent me from falling out as…
- … the chair was carried down the stairs, with me in it. Reassuringly, I get told by paramedic, not to close my eyes for this manoeuvre, as I need to be on the lookout, to ensure my head doesn’t get bashed.
- Arrive at and get loaded onto ambulance. I feel like a flat-packed wardrobe on an Argos delivery lorry. I recall how Argos use Yodel as a courier. I also recall Yodel throwing a parcel over my garden gate. I am now terrified.
- Notice the curtains in a house opposite the ambulance are twitching. Get ready to wave at nosey neighbour and show them that they’ve been busted, while being friendly at the same time. Then remember my hands are tied – literally!
- Arrive at A&E. Never have I been more relieved – every turn and corner the ambulance took on the windy roads, felt as if my leg was being torn off.
I was delivered to A&E Majors (it would have been such a disappointment to end in Minors – it doesn’t sound nearly as serious), where I was placed in a bed and told to hold out in anticipation for the doctor. I was about to play The Waiting Game…
When I woke up, I nearly fell out of bed, due to shock. The surprise was caused by a familiar face staring into mine. It appeared to be John – one of the two best men at my wedding!
I quickly gathered my thoughts and realised, unsurprisingly, that it wasn’t John at all. The face staring into my sleepy eyes, belonged to the nurse on duty; who, coincidentally, shared many features with my best man.
One trait the nurse has, which John does not, is that he was extremely helpful (John – in the unlikely event that you’re reading this… I’m sorry!).
The very helpful nurse was disappointed to learn that I had no known bed sores. “Shame”, he exclaimed. “I was looking forward to seeing your bum”.
A doctor came to see me. I was told to provide a pain score, from 1 to 10 (10 being the worse). I always struggle with providing a suitable number. As my bone was shattered, my leg was naturally going to sting, a little.
If I was to provide a score of 9 – pretty excruciating – the example I would think of would be to cut open that bit of skin between your genitals and bum (apparently, the “perineum”), before spraying it with Lynx Africa.
A score of 10, can only be one possibility… Leg cramp. Luckily, I’ve never had this myself, but those Premier League footballers make that look unbearable. Especially when their team just happens to be winning 2-1 and want the game to end as quickly as possible.
To calm my pain, I was given morphine – straight into the veins. I was promised, sorry, “warned”, that this might make me feel a little odd. It helped ease the pain, but it was nothing like they made it out to be in Transpotting. You certainly wouldn’t catch me crawling into a disgusting Scottish public toilet for the stuff!
Having become more settled in bed and with the pain easing, thanks to the morphine, I started to notice how long that I was waiting to go anywhere. I did get to watch a man win the award for Rudest Person 2019 (despite it only being January). Kudos to the idiot in the bed opposite mine, who was acting seriously drunk and nasty to staff. He moaned how he had work in the morning and if A&E were not going to let him leave right away, the staff would have to pay his wages. That’s unbelievable… this man actually has a job?
I eventually arrived at the ward, where I was Nil By Mouth. I had not eaten an evening meal at that point. Lucky for me, that I had eaten that huge Sunday roast earlier… that huge Sunday roast, consisting of a cheese and onion crisp sandwich.
I remained “NBM” on Monday, due to the continued possibility of an operation being carried out that day. Contray to speculation, this was not a means of torture, by the hospital trying to get me to reveal national secrets, like a Guantanamo Bay prisoner.
The fact I was not allowed to eat, kept being rubbed in my face – staff would shout out the day’s menu, so patient’s could pick their choice of meal… “Quiche? Chicken pasta? Braised quail eggs, served with a succulent mandarin and cranberry dew?”. That was the menu, as I remember it two days later. I may not have recalled it entirety correctly.
Fast-forward to Wednesday. I’m still here. Remember the heatwave we had in the summer? I was in hospital for that, too. Want to hear something funny? The ward temperature feels just as hot today, as it did in July. This is despite it being winter and snow forecast, over the course of next week. The reason for this bizarre climate, is the ward’s heating system. This evening, they seem to have cranked the heating up to the maximum setting. Either that, or they’re trying to sweat secrets from out of me, with those Guantanamo tactics.
Earlier in the week, nurses kept having to encourage me to drink, and would quiz me on how much I had drank. Today, I’ve been drinking so much, becauae of the temperature, they’ve given up – I take far too long reading off the huge list of beverages to have passed my lips. A fellow patient appeared to get confused when asked to state everything he had drank – “Do I have to pay for these drinks?”.
As for me, we will see what Thursday brings. One thing’s for sure, I won’t be going home tomorrow. If you’re lucky, I might blog for you.
It’s never a dull moment at Leeds United…
Guess what? I know the culprit…
One of the best things about stories like this, is the way the internet reacts to the news.
Here are some of the best tweets on Twitter, from amused Leeds supporters, bitter Derby fans and an excellent cartoonist…
Have you ever Googled your own name? I don’t make a regular habit of it. This isn’t because I am scared or worried about what I might find. I’ve always had a rule when using the internet, not to post or write anything that you would not want your boss or parents to read. Therefore, there shouldn’t be any skeletons in my online closet.
Yesterday, due to a mix of curiosity and boredom, I did search online for my name. Almost every result related to my Flickr account. I also discovered that I have a namesake, associated with Team Bath – the sports family at Bath University. The connection to Team Bath is very ironic. My ‘Football Fwends’ will understand the irony. If you are not one of my FFs, but want to read up on my “relationship” with Team Bath, have a look at my blog posts from around 2007-2009. Suffice to say, it wasn’t an amicable period, for the two of us.
You’ll be pleased to learn that, while crawling Google, I did find some strange material, relating to my past. I would class my discovery as moderate to severe on the embarrassment scale. I have posted my findings below. They are ‘safe for work’, which should be a relief for most of you, but a disappointment to some of my more peculiar readers.
Here are two emails, which I sent to Leeds United – probably around 2005. Both emails appeared on the football club’s official website, which is why my name is plastered all over the internet.
My emails read like a child’s letter to Phillip Schofield and Gordon the Gopher, in the Broom Cupboard (a reference only those over 30 will get).
Look at the confidence I have in my team. I actually believed Leeds would get promoted! How naive. Little did I know, that almost 15 years later, they would still be stagnating in the doldrums of the Football League. For those of you who wonder why I am so pessimistic about Leeds this season, this failure is the reason!
Over the years, my football club have successfully managed to beat every piece of optimism and hope, I ever had, out of me. Thank you, Leeds United.
“Rio and Robbo” – Oh my God! I was a chav.
“Blackie” (eugh). That ended well…
“gaffer” – pass me a sick bucket.
Modern football is rubbish.
Rubbish for lots of reasons. Far too many to list here.
One of the things which makes modern football rubbish, is those now infamous half-and-half scarves.
Real football fans don’t buy such crap. Why would you wear an item of clothing, bearing the name and logo of a rival club – albeit on only half of the scarf?
The scarves generally seem to be worn by football tourists, who generally don’t give a shoot about the team they claim to support.
Just imagine if these scarves existed during the 1940s. One half would depict the Union Jack and the crudely stitched face of Sir Winston Churchill. The other half, predictably, would be made from black, red and yellow wool (or a much cheaper alternative), with the mug of Adolf Hitler. Classy.
You know the one thing worse than a half and half scarf? A half and half house…
While I stand firmly by my prediction that Leeds United will bottle their season – despite currently sitting top of the league – there is the tiny chance that they may get promoted.
If this totally unlikely event was to take place, a situation would develop where my team, Leeds, would face Claire’s side, Liverpool.
Does this mean we would decorate our home in our teams’ colours, for the residents of Weston to admire and ridicule?
NO FECKING WAY!
Those Neighbours From Hell documentaries are good, aren’t they? The stories involving crazy individuals, sharing the same street, while fighting like cats and dogs, can be a little frighting at times.
If you have never watched these shows before, they are a little bit like this…
Mr Smith’s new fence blocks out his neighbour, Mr Green’s sunlight. Mr Green burns down the fence.
Mrs Wallis allows her dog, Pebbles, to do his business in Mr Walker’s garden. Mr Walker shoots the dog.
Miss Evans has had a new baby. It cries at night and disturbs her neighbour, Mr Mitchell. I think you know what happened next.
What are these people like? How we laughed!
I have my own troublesome neighbour story. You won’t see me on Channel 5 anytime soon, though. Thankfully, I have been raised to believe that it is wrong to burn down fences and kill family pets.
If I was to have a rivalry with a neighbour, it would be on more of a Homer Simpson and Ned Flanders level. When I say that, I’m on about pre-Season 4 Simpsons; where “heck” was considered swearing and Bart cheating on an IQ Test, was thought to be pushing the boundaries of television decency.
The rivalry started some time ago, when we took in an Amazon delivery for our neighbour. Expecting them to collect their parcel, we left it at the bottom of our stairs for days.
After an entire week, the package was still uncollected and by this point, was starting to gather dust. We decided to do the neighbourly thing, don our courier uniform and deliver the unclaimed box to them. Upon taking it from us, they sheepishly muttered a few words of gratitude.
We let the Amazon issue go and moved on with our lives. However, I was drawn to blog by another act of heinous cheek…
Nobody knows when their rubbish and recycling boxes are going to be collected. It’s the same every January. As the bin men are given Christmas and New Year off, they have to play catch-up, until what feels like Easter.
Monday was bin day. The night before, Claire, Roman and I were happily watching some nitwit blow £93,000 on Who Wants to be a Millionaire, when we heard a noise outside. While Roman and me – the two men of the household – stayed indoors, safe and warm, my brave wife went outside to investigate…
Somebody had placed one of their rubbish bags in our bin! Based upon previous incidents, along with the fact “Flanders” had his front room lights on, the Mulder and Scully in us determined the bin bag fairy was our favourite neighbour!
For almost two years, the people of Bath have been limited to just one wheely bin a fortnight, to dispose of their rubbish. While this decision caused outrage and lots of angry letters to the local newspaper, Claire and I didn’t have a problem.
Being a pair of goody-two-shoes, we recycle almost anything that is possible to recycle. Therefore, one wheely bin is generally enough for us – although, admittedly, Claire did take a few bags to the local tip, due to the extended period we faced over Christmas, with no collection.
Like us, all our other neighbours found a way to deal with their Christmas rubbish. So why is Ned Flanders an exception to the rule?
I don’t want to sound like Victor Meldrew – although I know that writing a massive blog on the subject, doesn’t look good for me. I appreciate that people do run out of space in their bin. So why don’t they fecking ask?
Had Flanders shown us some common courtesy, rang our doorbell and asked if he could use our bin, we honestly would have allowed him to (although I cannot guarantee that I wouldn’t have blogged about it).
Maybe next time we will leave a mad fox in the bin – a nice surprise for any unsuspecting Bin Bag Fairy. Or maybe we’ll just completely fill the bin with our rubbish.