Название: Maintaining and Repairing Old and Historic Buildings
Автор: John Cullinane J.
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Архитектура
isbn: 9781118332788
isbn:
‘What do you mean, by no feeling?’ he asked.
I leant over his desk and picked up a safety pin.
‘This is what I mean …’
I proceeded to stick the pin in my leg.
The GP rang a friend and registrar at the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases to make an appointment for me to go and see him later that week on the Thursday. On my birthday (19 June), Andrew drove us to Down House in Kent, where Charles Darwin had lived and worked for 40 years. It was where he devised his Theory of Evolution and wrote On the Origin of Species. According to the guide when Darwin published his work in 1859 the experience was akin to ‘confessing a murder’, which gives some indication of its impact. The impression you take away from the house is of a playful man, who loved digging for worms and ragging with his children. My admiration for him grew.
Andrew and I had dinner in a pub but neither of us knew what to say. We went for a walk in the woods. Drugged by the scent of wild garlic and bluebells, we walked hand-in-hand in silence. Despite the sunshine, I felt bitterly cold and didn’t take my coat off all day.
On my return to hospital I was immediately admitted upstairs for more tests. I was hooked up to IV steroids to prevent inflammation and further damage to the nerves. My face blew up and I had tomato-red cheeks but there was worse to come in the form of a myelogram, which is when dye is injected into the spine to show up the spinal nerves and spinal canal. I had a major reaction to the dye, which made me more ill than I already was.
Tired and now in immense pain as if suffering from chemically induced meningitis, I lay in the hot, overcrowded ward with a splitting headache. It hurt to breathe and I couldn’t pee so I had to have a catheter. With a cloth over my eyes and my head ready to explode, I lay there as the nurses’ hand-washing routine ground into my consciousness. It was in the days before disinfectant hand gel and every few minutes one of them would walk over to the sink beside my bed, turn on the squeaking tap, wash her hands and pull out a paper towel. Rustle, rustle … I’d then hear the click as she stamped on the bin and the thud of paper as the screwed-up towel landed inside. During this time, Andrew would come and go; he was mixing caring for me, his full-time work and dashing back home to look after Jet, traversing London all the time.
Mum came to visit and gave me two new nightdresses. One was crisp Broderie Anglaise, the other a comfy long T-shirt. She also brought books and magazines, sitting beside me to read. Company was what I needed as much as anything else.
Towards the end of my week on the ward, on one particularly hot afternoon I sensed someone sitting on the bed. I can’t emphasise enough how much I felt this presence. It was before the drugs took effect and I couldn’t open my eyes because of the pain; I remember a gorgeous smell of gardenias, as if a nurse wearing perfume was sitting right beside me. I must have said something.
‘Who are you talking to?’ asked the on-duty nurse.
‘The nurse sitting on my bed,’ I replied.
‘There’s no one here apart from me and I haven’t sat on your bed,’ she told me.
For me, this was proof of my faith and it brought immense comfort.
After seven days of waiting and six sleepless nights spent tossing and turning, I woke to learn that I would be seeing the consultant on that morning’s ward round (Andrew was at work and couldn’t be there with me).
I sat up in my bed. It was far too early, of course – you never know when they will arrive nor from which end of the ward they start. Up until then I had only dealt with the Registrar. This time I was to meet my consultant. As usual the entourage arrived: the line-up included the Charge Nurse (why do they always look so deferential and play up to the pomposity of consultants?), multiple medical students, house officers and the Registrar. The beds were so close together due to overcrowding that you could put your hand out and hold the hand of a fellow patient in a neighbouring bed. Even with the flimsy curtains closed, privacy was impossible.
I heard the Registrar tell the lady next door they were moving her to a hospice. She had an inoperable brain tumour, which put things into perspective.
Doing my best to ignore the banging in my head and the nausea, I tried to sit upright.
‘Good morning,’ said the Registrar. ‘Sally, do you mind if my medical student here does a brief examination?’
‘No,’ I insisted. ‘That’s fine.’
First, he got the student to look at me and asked me not to give any clues as to my condition. The student discovered the numbness ran in a spiral pattern down my back. Following this, the consultant then told the student, ‘That’s how you can assess how truthful a patient is being – they don’t know about the spiral effect.’
Great. Someone believes me, I thought.
Then the consultant – a portly, elderly gentleman in a bow tie and half-moon glasses – stepped forward. They all tried to crowd round him but there wasn’t enough room and so a couple of hapless students (the type who get into med school because they’re brilliant but don’t realise patients are people) tried to squeeze in around the curtain, leaving it gaping to the world.
I hadn’t realised I was being examined by the consultant until I suddenly found that he was addressing me.
‘… So, having ruled out various other diseases, sarcoidosis and tumours, what we’re looking at is Multiple Sclerosis, hopefully of the relapse-remitting kind.’
I looked up to a sea of faces.
‘We will discharge you for now but you will have a recall for an MRI scan that will give us final confirmation and see if you have had any other attacks in the past.’
That was it.
As a nurse I had half-expected the diagnosis yet it still came as a shock: the world slowed down. I wanted to ask a million questions but the consultant and doctors had already swept past and were onto the next bed. No information was given; there was no opportunity for discussion.
What are the implications? I silently screamed.
It was a harsh lesson and a taste of things to come. MS is an incurable disease: the medics don’t want to spend time discussing it with you. What’s there to talk about?
I was left alone and I can honestly say I’ve never felt so alone as I did then.
Everything I’d dreamt about – the travelling, excitement, the future together we had planned – ground to a halt. No dreaming of Shangri-La. Instead I faced a life stuck … with what? As I packed and prepared to leave the ward with Andrew, who had by now arrived, the nurses came up and gave me hugs. One stopped herself mid-sentence: ‘I hope you’ll get bet – … I hope things work out well for you.’
We drove home in silence. Everything looked so different: the colours were brighter. After a week’s internment in a grey hospital I had a new vision of life, its preciousness and brutality. I couldn’t halt the flood of anxieties. What if the MS hits my eyes and I can’t see or it affects my arms and I can’t hold a pen? Will I ever be able to СКАЧАТЬ