What’s Wrong With This Picture?

Thank you to everyone for their kind comments and e-mails about my last post. I really appreciate all the supportive feedback (even if inside, you all are saying “YUCK!!! Dana L. is GROSS!”) Trust me, I wouldn’t blame you for thinking that, and that makes me even more grateful for the nice words! xoxo!

Anyway… tomorrow I am heading to Vancouver for the MADONNA concert, but sadly, all I can think about right now is “are all of the credit card donations ready to process on Friday morning when I get back?”

I haven’t packed. I haven’t primped. I haven’t even decided what I am going to wear tomorrow night (since I am so fashionable and image-conscious… a girl’s gotta plan these things well in advance, you know).  I am utterly disorganized and wholly unprepared. (And we all know I’ll end up going in jeans and a t-shirt. Ten bucks says…)

Something is wrong with my universe when I am consumed with credit card numbers, one-time vs. monthly payments, and capturing export files… instead of Madonna. Yep. Instead of focusing on a concert I paid far too much money on not to care, I’m already thinking ahead to what I need to do at work when I come back from said concert.

Geeky history notwithstanding, when did I become such a loser?

(It’s not that I don’t care about the concert. I just think it will take me sitting down in BC Place to actually remember that there are other things going on in my life besides work. Like Madonna.)

This Day In History, Part Three of Three

Be prepared: the final installment of my three-part series is also the most graphic and disturbing. Some might even call it disgusting– I know how grossed out I was at the time. This post will not be for the faint of heart or weak of stomach, so if you can’t handle the truth (a la Jack Nicholson), please come back in a few days (or possibly only one day) for the return of regular blog programming (aka unicorns and puppies).

If you missed the first two parts of this riveting series, you can find them here and here.

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It had been nearly a week and a half since I was told I was going to miscarry, and nothing had happened yet. No bleeding, no spotting, no cramping, no nothing. Despite being reassured that these things (i.e. miscarriages) normally happen within 48 hours or so after finding no fetal heartbeat, many days had passed and I was still no closer to ‘passing any tissue’, as the nurses liked to call it. Ahem. (Inside voice: Gross!)

Being scared in general about miscarrying and worried more specifically that something was wrong with the hormones and other chemical messengers in my body, I phoned my doctor after 5 days had gone by. ‘Why doesn’t my body know the pregnancy isn’t viable yet?’, I asked, trying to toss in as many neutral-sounding medical words as I could. ‘Are my hormones all screwed up or are they just taking their sweet time delivering this all-too-important message to my uterus?’

Being the gentle, reassuring soul my doctor normally is, he warned me that this process seemed to be taking too long and that the decaying tissue inside my uterus, at this point, was putting me at risk for septic shock and/or death. (!!!!) In a nutshell, he told me that the inside of my uterus was rotting and that something needed to be done– quickly– to get that rot right the hell out. Fantastic.

La la la.... unrelated picture... take a break from the nastiness! And notice the scarflette, courtesy of While Tangerine Dreams. So soft!

La la la.... unrelated picture... take a break from the nastiness! And notice the scarflette, courtesy of While Tangerine Dreams. So soft! You should buy one!

It would be a bit of an understatement to say that I was panicked. Maybe my miscarriage messengers weren’t quite up to speed in my body, but my fight-or-flight hormones were definitely in tact. With a vengeance. I quickly whipped myself into a foamy lather of fright and impending doom. ‘I’m going to die!’, I screamed to Marty, who (poor soul) must have been pretty impressed with my doctor’s tact and discretion right at that moment.

‘You’re not going to die’, he reassured me (tossing steely eye daggers in the general direction of my doctor’s office). ‘Think of how many women got pregnant and had miscarriages naturally and unexpectedly before ultrasounds were invented. You’re only afraid right now because your body isn’t living up to the unrealistic statistical experience that the ultrasound predicted you should have. But everybody’s different, and your body will know when it’s time for you to miscarry. Naturally!’.

He had a point. Had I not seen that ultrasound with no fetal heartbeat, and had I not been told by my doctor’s substitute that these things ‘normally’ are over and done with in 48 hours, the alarm bells would not be ringing so loudly in my mind. However… I also wanted to remind Marty that, in addition to all of the spontaneous (and safe) miscarriages that many ultrasound-less pioneer women had experienced before me, many other women at that time got pregnant and died in childbirth or from septic infections before there were ultrasounds around to warn them that something was amiss. In my mind, there was still just cause to be concerned. After all, septic shock and/or death are not usually issues to be taken lightly or dismissed outright.

My doctor booked me into the Early Pregnancy Loss Clinic in Calgary right away so I could discuss my options. The hustle and bustle of it all was quite stressful and did nothing to ease any concerns I had about festering tissues and the like. When I arrived at my appointment (about an hour after I talked to my doctor on the phone), I was told by a very warm and supportive nurse that my options at this stage were as follows:

1. I could ‘wait and see’ what might happen for just a little bit longer– I could let my body take its time and miscarry naturally and on its own.

2. I could induce a miscarriage chemically, by having medicinal tablets inserted to stimulate uterine contractions. I would have the tablets put in at the clinic one morning, miscarry that day at home, and then go back to the clinic the following morning for a check-up and more follow-up if needed.

3. I could schedule a procedure to have the pregnancy tissue surgically removed. This would require the use of a general anesthetic and a lot more recovery time. (This option scared the crap out of me and was always my last resort; the ‘only-if-I-had-to’ route. Besides, I learned that the surgeon on duty for my scheduled day, if I chose to go that route, was this ultra-sketchy doctor who made his millions (or hundreds of thousands) of dollars performing vaginal and labial cosmetic surgery and/or cosmetic endometrial ablations to rid young, professional women of the ‘inconvenience’ and ‘mess’ of their periods. Yes, I have a deep-seated bone with this doctor, and there was NO WAY I would let him anywhere near my uterus!! So Choice #3 was not really a choice at all for me.)

In spite of Marty’s continual reassurance that everything was OK in the hormonal wonderlands of my body and uterus, I was afraid that I was too far down on the scale of chemical normality to emerge from this experience without contracting septic shock and/or dying. Hence, I tentatively opted to induce a miscarriage chemically, even though the idea of PILLS inside my PRIVATE PARTS was terrifying to me. (I have a hard enough time with Advil… in my MOUTH… if that is any indication.)

Alas, because my first appointment at the Early Pregnancy Loss Clinic was on a Friday morning and because the chemical miscarriage required follow-up the next morning, I could not actually have the suppositories inserted until Monday morning, because the clinic (of course) was closed on weekends. I penciled my name in for Monday morning and started putting my winter jacket back on. ‘I can do this’, I thought to myself through gritted teeth. ‘Don’t be a scaredy cat. Don’t be a loser. Everything will be fine.’ (I don’t even need to mention at this point that my entire soul was screaming “OMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” Of course I was still afraid.)

(fingers plugging ears) La la la, I don't hear a word you are saying!

Before we left the clinic, the nurse felt it prudent to discuss with us what should be done in the event that my body didn’t wait until Monday morning to be induced into miscarriage. She gave me a very large brown paper bag that was filled with all sorts of oddities and sat me down again to explain what everything inside the bag was for. (Warning: things start getting really gross right about now, at least to me, though for reference, I can barely watch CSI without covering my eyes and/or feeling queasy. You can judge for yourselves.)

The nurse pulled out a white plastic tray that instantly reminded me of a bedpan. “This tray is meant to sit over your toilet seat. If you start cramping and feel an urgent need to use the washroom, please make sure this tray is on your toilet seat before you go, so you can catch any tissue that passes before it lands in the toilet bowl.”

I was mildly horrified at the thought of this but had no idea just how bad the instructions would get so soon in comparison…

She gestured next to a large plastic jar with a bright orange lid (about 4 or 5 times the size of a jar used to give a urine sample). “This jar is to be used to collect anything that might be pregnancy tissue for clinical examination.” (Memories of being laughed at for my last collection of possible pregnancy tissue flashed before me.) “If you do miscarry over the weekend, we need you to bring everything back in this jar so we can examine the tissues and make sure that you have expelled all of them.”

OK… was I hearing this correctly? This nurse wanted me to catch all of my waste in a tray and then transfer it into a jar to bring back into the clinic? Was she insane??!

Finally, the nurse pulled out a handful of disposable plastic gloves. “These gloves are for you to use when you sort through everything that has been caught in your tray. We don’t need you to collect any blood or urine in the jar– just pick out anything bigger that might be a tissue of some sort.”

I. Was. MORTIFIED.

She couldn’t be serious, right? I wasn’t actually expected to sift through my own waste and to pick out anything that might be pregnancy tissue?!! And to collect it in a jar?!! And then to show it all to somebody for clinical examination??!

I might have thrown up in my mouth a little bit just then. Seriously, that was disgusting. And archaic. And frightening! And honestly, was this experience not emotional and traumatic enough, without having to do everything she was describing? Did they not have any other way to confirm at the clinic that I had miscarried (if I miscarried before Monday)? Would my solemn word and descriptive language not be enough?

Robertine has absolutely nothing to do with this post... but isn't she cute?

Robertine has absolutely nothing to do with this post... but isn't she cute?

For somebody who was secretly hoping to be able to miscarry without feeling and/or seeing anything (especially without seeing anything), this whole ‘collecting and sorting’ business didn’t seem like it would be possible. And for somebody who has as weak a stomach as I do, I couldn’t fathom having to do anything that even remotely resembled what she was describing to me. Thanks, but no thanks. I told the nurse that I would just wait until Monday and have everything come out magically and painlessly on that day after the tablets had been inserted…

She gave me a look of full-on sympathy that I normally reserve for puppies at the SPCA. I was gently told that, unless I opted to have the tissue surgically removed (by evil Dr. Vaginal Tightening, no less), I was going to have to see everything myself and I was going to have to collect all of the tissues, regardless of whether the miscarriage happened naturally or was induced by suppositories. There was no other reliable way for the doctors to confirm that everything was out afterwards… and if everything hadn’t passed on its own (judging from the tissues in my collection) then there would really be a risk of septic shock and/or death by then.

So basically… a) I could have surgery from Dr. Your Labia Are A Little Lopsided, Let Me Fix Those For You, or b) I could suck it up and collect whatever came out of my body in my little plastic jar, regardless of whether those things came out on their own or because of chemical tablets.

Incredibly, I thanked her for the brown paper bag of supplies, tucked it under my arm, and went home to wait some more. (This goes to show how deeply my fear of surgery and my distrust of that particular doctor ran. I couldn’t believe I was agreeing to collect my own waste in a jar. And then to show it to somebody.)

Friday afternoon was nondescript. We ran some errands and changed some artwork around at various cafes and coffee shops. Then, walking back to our van after one of the stops, my uterus suddenly felt like an anvil that was being pulled out of my body with all of the forces of gravity. Nothing hurt, but I did feel an incredible urge to either close my legs, practice superhuman-strength Kegel exercies, or lie down. Or all three. It really felt like my uterus would slip out of my body if I gave gravity even the slightest chance to tug at it. So I lied down in our van and tried to think happy thoughts. Puppies, unicorns, rainbows, and lipstick! Puppies, unicorns, rainbows, and lipstick!

We sped back ‘home’ (confession time: we were staying at the place of some friends while they were in Europe) and that’s when the cramping started. Very suddenly. I couldn’t even sit up, the cramping was so intense. Unfortunately, the bathroom and all of my brown bag supplies were upstairs, 2 whole stories higher than the front door. Determined to do things by the book (i.e., The Book of Traumatic Grossness), I dragged myself to the upstairs washroom on my elbows, like a solider whose legs had been shot off. I passed our friends’ cat on my way upstairs. She shot me a look that was clearly the feline version of ‘WTF?’.

‘Don’t ask’, I mumbled back to her, evidently delirious with pain.

Once upstairs and in the master bathroom, I took an Advil (a necessary evil!!) to help numb the intense pain that was radiating throughout my body. (Advil was the strongest drug we had on hand, as we never got around to filling our prescription for codeine beforehand.) I had been told that the cramping would feel like a heavy period. This felt more like what I imagined giving birth would be like– so. tremendously. intense.

I was crying at this point, partly because of the pain, but mostly because I was afraid. I knew what was happening, and I knew what needed to be done, but I just wanted to fast forward a little bit and have it all be over and done with. Puppies, unicorns, rainbows, and lipstick! Everything was scary to me, and I wasn’t entirely confident in my ability to make it through this experience in tact and alright.

Without going into too much of the details now (I know– how gracious of me!), I bled a lot over the next few hours and passed many pieces of tissue, too. I was surprised to feel an overwhelming wave of relief with each bit of tissue that came out. I had expected there to be more pain, but it actually felt really good every time my body got rid of something that no longer belonged inside. (Don’t get me wrong– everything was still incredibly painful, not to mention GROSS, but the pain was broken up every now and then with a little wave of relief.)

It was nauseating to put on my disposable gloves after every trip to the toilet. Some other part of me– a side I never even knew existed– numbly would sift through the tray on the toilet seat and pull out anything that wasn’t liquid to put in my jar. Just to reiterate: this is something I would not be able to do under normal circumstances, but I was so overwhelmed with pain and emotion and whatever hormones were raging through my body at that time that I just did it. I couldn’t believe it, but I did it. My collection of unmentionables grew throughout the night…

I continued to pass tissue throughout the night and the next day (Saturday), too. Our friends were coming back from Europe on Sunday (i.e. the very next day), so Saturday was spent vacuuming and packing up in between my trips to the washroom. How surreal…

Two of my favourite things to help break up one of my not-so-favourite things...

Two of my favourite things to help break up one of my not-so-favourite things...

When our friends came back on Sunday, we never told them what had transpired in their very bathroom just hours before their return. (How do you weave that into conversation, exactly?)

I also never told my extended family or most of my friends that I had ever been pregnant or that I had miscarried. I just couldn’t imagine how to bring it up naturally… (e.g. “So, how have you been lately?” Me: “Well…. great! Cough.”)

It was only after I knew for certain that I was ‘officially’ miscarrying that I mustered up enough courage to phone my family and tell them that I had even been pregnant in the first place. We all cried together. Marty phoned his parents and tried to explain with his Grade 3-level Czech what was going on. “Dana is not pregnant”, he managed in broken and vague Czech. (He knew no Czech equivalent for medical words like ‘Dana has just passed the pregnancy tissue through her cervix.’) My in-laws, who have never kept their desires for grandchildren secret, were devastated of course. The sadness was overwhelming and confusing to me.

On Monday morning, when I was scheduled to have the chemical suppositories inserted into my body to induce miscarriage, I dutifully brought my jar of tissue instead to the nurse at the Early Pregnancy Loss Clinic. She emptied the jar’s contents onto a light table (right in front of me!) and soon after confirmed that I had, indeed, expelled all of the tissue during my harrowed weekend. Thank goodness. We were free to leave.

With that experience behind us and with the nurse’s confirmation in mind, Marty and I wanted nothing more than to just disappear and escape. Hence, on Tuesday morning, with me still spotting but no longer at risk for septic shock and/or death, we packed up our van and weathered terrible highway conditions to make it to our new home: Victoria. Just like that, it seemed, we had a new home, new friends, new jobs– new identities. And we could forget about everything that had happened until a much later date…

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Afterword:

It has taken me this long (2 years) to be able to talk more openly about my experience and to admit that it even happened. I’m not exactly sure why I had such a hard time telling people I was pregnant or that I had miscarried at the time… perhaps it was because so few people seemed to understand why a young, quasi-fertile, married couple like Marty and I would take issue with being pregnant in the first place. There was an overriding assumption that love + marriage + babies in baby carriages = so what’s your problem…? It was a time of feeling extremely out of sorts and out of place, and despite any evidence to the contrary on this blog, I wasn’t usually one to broadcast my abnormalities or oddities to strangers. So I just kept silent.

I know that my experience is just one example out of hundreds of thousands of miscarriages. (Current stats estimate that one in five pregnancies end in miscarriage.) Not everyone who miscarries will have the same, or even a similar, experience to mine. Not everyone will share my feelings, fears, or beliefs. Some women won’t be paraded around in flimsy hospital gowns from ultrasound machine to ultrasound machine before they miscarry– they might not even know they were pregnant until they miscarry. Most importantly: many of the women who miscarry will start from a completely different vantage point than mine– one of wanting to be pregnant. Nevertheless, I think it’s important to share my story and to fill my own particulars in the gaping blanks that were left whenever I tried to ask questions of my doctors and the uber-helpful and caring nurses at the ER in my local hospital.

If anybody feels they would like to talk about their own experiences with me privately (or publicly in the comments– whatever works), please feel free to e-mail me. Personally, I have found it very helpful to connect with other women who have experienced pregnancy loss, so I would be happy to pay that support forward to anyone who feels they could benefit from it.

If you have made it this far: Thank you for listening. You have no idea how much that means to me. xoxoxo

Six Things You’ve Always Wanted to Know About Dana L. But Were Too Afraid To Ask

Hooray for memes! I’ve been tagged by Kathy to tell you all six quirky yet boring and/or unspectacular details about myself. I think we can all agree that ‘boring’, ‘unspectacular’, and ‘yours truly’ do not belong in the same sentence together. However, quirky and I have been friends for a while. Hence, scrounging up six kind of quirky things about myself shouldn’t be too difficult a task. At all. Cough.

Q: Dear Dana L.: I am a modern woman who will be getting married next summer (!!! OMG! Can’t wait!!!). I still don’t know whether I should keep my maiden name or take my partner’s… what did you do? Signed — Forward Thinking in Florida

A: Dear Forward Thinking:

Being a modern woman myself, I had a hard time deciding whether to adopt Marty’s last name or to keep my own last name when we got married 3 years ago. I’ll spare you the painful (and pathetic) details of my personal mental debate: in the end, I kept my own last name (L.) but sometimes hyphenated it to L-M to be playful or just plain difficult (depending on who I was signing my name for). And then, just this March– after 2.5 years of being married– I legally adopted Marty’s last name, so I am now actually *officially* Dana M. Just because. (You’ll notice I still refer to myself as Dana L. in many places, though– it’s just my unspectacular way of having the best of both Eastern European worlds.)

Q. Dear Dana L., Do you have any quirky but mostly boring allergies? Signed — Sensitive

A. Dear Sensitive:

Like many people in this industrial world, I have a wide assortment of allergies and sensitivities. I’m allergic to cashews and that wretched nickel coating on many popular fashion accessories. I am lactose intolerant and I’ve recently discovered allergies to mould and some as-yet-unknown tropical plants that flourish in late May to mid-Julyish. These boring allergies aside, I’d also like to mention another chemical sensitivity that has helped make me into the woman I am today.

During my junior high and high school years, I developed an intense allergic reaction to whatever crap chemicals they put in/on disposable menstrual pads and pantyliners. At first, I was misdiagnosed with a plethora of bacterial and yeast infections until somebody finally realized that my poor crotch was not actually infected with anything– it was simply (but frantically!) trying to ward off the evil disposables from its general vicinity. My gynecologist eventually diagnosed me with the serious-sounding “Labial Dystrophy” (I am not making that up) and warned me not to wear disposable anythings in my underwear ever, ever again.

It was not a lot of fun to be seventeen and to have all sorts of unmentionable rashes and itches, but it was also a bit unnerving to make the switch away from my then-beloved Kotexes to all-natural, reusable cotton or flannel menstrual pads. I’ll admit that I was mighty hesitant about them at first (and confirm that I was probably the only female in my entire high school who wasn’t using either a tampon OR a disposable pad during my period), but the story has a happy ending: Lunapads saved my life! I highly recommend them.

Q: Dear Dana L.: I’ve often wondered… do you have a middle name? Signed — John Jonathan Smith

A: Dear John:

Yes I have a middle name. And even the government sometimes gets confused about it and thinks that my young parents naively named me after a coin with a beaver on it… It’s a long and mostly boring story.

Q: Dear Dana L.: Help! I will be attending yet another gala event for whining artists in the near future and don’t know how to really ‘wow’ everyone at the event with my hairstyle and makeup. Do you have any beauty tips or suggestions? Signed — Plain Jane

A: Dear Plain Jane,

I know what you mean about artists and gala events! I go to one with Marty at least every two weeks… and then we come home and complain about all of the free stuff we artists get! LOL!!

Anyway, back to your question: I used to love wearing makeup. When I was eleven. My favourite things were nail polish, eye shadow, and mascara. And now… I honestly can’t remember the last time I wore any makeup at all besides a natural beeswax lip balm. (This is some serious amnesia, coming from the woman who can remember all of her friends’ phone numbers since Grade 1.) Secretly, I don’t even own any makeup anymore, so even if I wanted to jazz myself up for the staff Christmas party or something, I would need to invest in all of the tools myself or book an appointment at the M.A.C. counter.

And my hair: I used to rock the short haircut, which necessitated the use of hair product. (You simply cannot have short hair and not use some sort of product.) However, now that my hair flows long and free like the ambrosia of the gods and goddesses, the most product my hair gets is shampoo. And conditioner… only occasionally. (So lazy and low-maintenance!) Alas, you are best off seeking beauty tips from somebody who actually has some sort of appearance regime. But good luck at the gala!!

Q: Dear Dana L.: I’ve heard you can tell a lot about a woman by the type of shoes she wears. Can you show us a picture of your shoe collection and give us an insight into the type of person you are? Signed — Shoes’ Clues

A: Dear Shoes:

Ah crap. First of all, I can’t show you a picture of my shoe collection because half of them have been in storage for 2 or 3 years now and the other half are stuffed into a wee little closet where a camera probably wouldn’t fit. And secondly, I can assure you that they don’t necessarily paint a very feminine or fashionable picture of myself.

To summarize the basic features of my collection:

1. I don’t own anything with high(er) heels. Flats only. (The truth is, it is physically impossible for me to walk in high heels with any sort of grace. My legs are wired so that my knees bend and jut out as soon as my heels are on a different plane than my toes.)

2. I wish I had at least one pair of knee-high black boots (flat ones!), but I have never been able to squeeze my ample calves into those cursed things. I end up with a muffin top… over boots! Not cool at all.

3. I used to collect a rainbow of retro-looking sneakers (New Balance, Puma, Adidas), but now I am down to just one crusty pair of pink and red New Balances. How sad.

4. The only pair of sandals I had (notice past tense) was a sporty pair that Marty stretched out after constantly sliding them on and off to run outside to our little garden or inside to the laundry room. They are much too small for his feet still, but they are now much too big for me to ever wear again. Blast!!

5. In short, I own an old pair of runners, one pair of hiking boots, two sad pairs of flat dress shoes that I keep at work to be ‘professional-looking’, one pair of Keen shoes (which I love!), and a messed-up pair of sandals. Exactly what does this say about me as a woman?

Q: Dear Dana L., What are your pet peeves? Signed — Always Annoyed in Alberta

A: Dear Annoyed:

Here is an annotated list of things (aka just two things) that bother me:

1. Having to wash cutting boards that have tomato juices and seeds crusted on to them. I can handle pretty much any other vegetable remnants stuck to a cutting board, but those damn tomato seeds are killer and bother me to no end.

2. Girls who sing to themselves in school hallways or on the street. (I really can’t explain why I get so furious hearing an angelic voice humming something to themselves. Does it bother me so much when men sing to themselves? No. Do I sometimes sing to myself when I’m walking to work or whatever? Yes. This one remains a mystery.)

Of course there are more things that bother me in this world, but there are also plenty of things that don’t bother me, like chocolate, puppies, and Fridays!

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And on that positive note, I choose String Theory, The Natural Bardo, Yarn Over Here, and Knitting Grammy to share six quirky but boring and unspectacular things about themselves with the rest of the internet! Go!!

How I Spent My “Summer Vacation”

Well, it’s Monday evening and I haven’t been to work since last Wednesday morning. I’ve been brutally sick with some nasty chest cold/flu-type thing all week (as opposed to those not so nasty chest colds). I didn’t mind staying home sick from work for the first few days, but when the weekend came and I was starting to feel worse instead of better, my patience for my Resident Evil germs ran a little thin. (Weekends are supposed to be fun!) Plus, having to phone in sick again this morning made me feel a tad guilty. I know I’d rather recuperate fully than infect other people at work with whatever it is I have, but still… I know I’m needed back at work STAT!!!

I could tell I was really, truly, honest-to-goodness ill because I only managed to accomplish the following things in 6 whole days of being at home:

1. Less than 600 garter stitches on the knitted patchwork blanket that never ends. (A mere 28 rows of a strip that measures only 21 stitches wide.)

2. Less than 10 pages of reading. My eyes couldn’t focus on such a tiny font for any extended period of time.

3. One shower. Yes, only one.

4. Growing my eyebrows out to their full bushy glory, circa 1988. (I’ve had to cancel my threading appointments twice now because of being sick… Now I have to make it until Thursday before I’ll actually be able to do something about my ever-thickening eyebrows. Yikes. In the meantime, I’m totally 80′s chic.)

5. Downing approximately 36 litres of various fluids, including 2 whole litres of ginger ale, which I never ever drink unless I’m sick. Really sick.

6. Losing my senses of smell and taste for 24 hours or so. Eating hot curry and dousing myself in Eucalyptus oil without sensing either, even remotely. (Meanwhile, Marty’s sinuses became perfectly clear due to the intensity of those scents and flavours…)

7. Watching a few movies, only a handful of them decent. (Decent in the ‘crap vs. excellence’ sense, not in the ‘moral vs. smutty’ sense). Take it from me: don’t ever feel you have to resort to watching movies on Peachtree TV, even when you’re immobilized on the couch and running through Kleenex like nobody’s business… Spanglish was not a good movie, even to my sinus-pressurized mind.

8. No laundry. No cleaning. No cooking. No going outside. No tasks or errands whatsoever.

Anyway, I’m happy to report that I should be back to my regular self by tomorrow (meaning that I should be back at work. Whether or not I’ll be fully functioning at work is something yet to be determined…) I know a few other people in Victoria have caught whatever nasty bug this is, so hopefully those of you not living on the island will be completely immune to its nastiness! (Take it from me, we can’t all grow our eyebrows out to 1980′s levels at once, without blowing some crucial fuse in the world’s breaker box!)