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5 Things You Learn When Your Body Stops Working Right

6/23/2016

 
Sometime in late April, my body lost its ability to digest food.
 
As you might imagine, this was a bit alarming. We all pretty much expect our bodies to do its thing without much input from us, right? Breathe air; sleep when needed; digest food. I was pretty angry when my body stopped holding up its end of the bargain without so much as a courtesy call.
 
It’s been an ongoing problem since then, and I’ve learned a few things along the way. Here, I present to you the five things you’ll quickly realize when your body stops working right:
 
1. At first, you’ll rationalize it. As you might imagine, not being able to eat anything without immediately feeling nauseated and/or having to run to the bathroom was something I picked up on right away. Instead of being alarmed, I chalked it up to stress. I’m always under stress. I tend to take on too much, and I figured my body was just telling me to knock it off. Except then, when my stress load eased up a bit, it didn’t stop. And the pain got worse.
 
Did I go to the doctor at that point? Heck, no.
I stopped eating dairy. No change.

I stopped eating gluten. No change.
I stopped drinking caffeine. No change, except I was a cranky, miserable porcupine, and all joy was gone from my life.
 
2. You won’t want to tell anyone. But eventually, you’ll have to tell everyone. You may find this hard to believe, but it’s a bit embarrassing telling people you can’t meet them for lunch because you can’t be more than two feet away from a bathroom at any given time. Plus, the pain that now came with eating was kind of hard to mask—no matter how hard you try, sometimes it’s just plain impossible to keep from groaning while wincing in agony. So I had to tell some people—my family, of course. Some of my friends. I cancelled all social events and stopped going to the movies. And the store (grocery shopping held little joy at that point anyway—shelf after shelf of food I couldn’t eat). Pretty much anywhere except work or home.
 
Eventually, I had to start telling more people. I was avoiding everyone, and some of my friends were getting mad. I was falling behind on editing jobs because I couldn't balance my computer on my lap while in the bathroom. I was losing weight, and it showed. My mom looked scared. And everyone I told asked when I was going to go see someone about it. So I finally called the doctor.
 
3. Your doctor won’t care. My primary care physician got me in right away, but after she said things like “you need to see a specialist immediately” and “if you dehydrate any further, I’m putting you in the hospital,” the concern stopped. I called the specialist. Keep in mind that by this point, I’d been reduced to eating only broth and rice (and not always successfully) every day. I was nauseated all the time, and was running to the bathroom two to three times after every meal, broth or no.
 
The specialist gave me an appointment for two weeks out. TWO WEEKS. Fourteen more days of this hell, I thought. Then I’ll have answers.
 
Except I didn’t get answers. After those two weeks, I then had another ten days during which I went for a bunch of tests. All while still being unable to digest much of anything.
 
My specialist called to tell me she had the results from all those tests and procedures. Finally, an answer! She wanted me to come in to get the results and a plan of action. Twelve days from now.
 
I lost it. At this point, I’d had issues every day, every time I ate, for sixty days in a row. I cried. I begged them to tell me the results over the phone. I threatened to vomit and crap my pants while on the phone with them.
 
They moved the appointment up to three days later.
 
4. You’ll be terrified to get your results. There’s a word that nobody ever says, but always shows up in the WebMD symptom checker: cancer. I thought I was afraid of that. But as I was driving to the doctor’s office, I realized I was more scared of something else: what if they didn’t find anything wrong? 
 
The good news: they did find something, and what I have is treatable and curable (and NOT cancer). The bad news: it takes three months to cure. My copay for one month’s worth of medication is $1,287.55. My doctor, incidentally, does not care (see number 3 above). 
 
5. You’ll appreciate the little things much, much more. I had one evening—May 25, to be exact—when I was absolutely starving, and therefore ate an egg for dinner. One egg. And my body ... digested it appropriately.
 
I danced around the kitchen that night, singing made-up songs in honor of that egg. I called my mother. “I ate an EGG!” I announced, like I’d just won a Pulitzer. (She clapped.)
 
I also started being much more finicky about what I put in my body. I know there's going to be pain involved with anything I eat. I want to make it worth it. Gone are the days of dry chicken breast with a side of green beans. Hello, chocolate mousse cake for dinner.
 
Along the way, I also discovered one food that never gave me an issue: jelly beans. I can’t explain it. I don’t need to know why. Here’s what I do know: if you do find something like this on your journey, go for broke. Jelly Bellies, I salute you.
 
I’m happy to say I will soon be on the road to recovery. (I’m still fighting with the doctor to get a different medication that won’t cost more than my mortgage. They're ignoring my phone calls; see #3 above.) But here’s what I know now: don’t take anything for granted. If your body starts to malfunction, go to the doctor sooner rather than later. And thank God for the little things, like that wonderful, wonderful egg. And a supportive family. And understanding friends.

And bubblegum-flavored Jelly Bellies. Those are the best.
Picture
I don't think I can emphasize enough how much I loved that egg.

For Sale: House of Horrors

6/16/2016

 
​I found out this week that the "Amityville Horror House" is on the market (read the article here). Now, before I decided to snap up this lakefront bargain at $850k, I wanted to do a little investigating. Was this house of legend really haunted?
​
I decided to take a virtual tour on realtor.com. After all, demonic possessions have to keep up with modern technology, too, and I figured if the place were haunted, the poltergeists would be able to make themselves known over the internet. Here’s what I found:
 
1. In the book The Amityville Horror by Jay Anson, former residents George and Kathy Lutz claimed that flies often swarmed the house. Scrolling through the pictures online, I came across this shot:
Picture
Probably the average house-purchaser wouldn’t spot the problem immediately, but my expert eye (after all, I'd been house-hunting for a full four minutes by this time) caught a glimpse of one very notable point. If you look very, very closely in the lower right-hand part of the picture, there’s a giant Brundlefly hanging out in the Amityville house’s front yard.
​
Conclusion: If you’re living next door to a Brundlefly, then of course you’re going to have issues with houseflies. This doesn’t mean your house is haunted. It means you have a famous neighbor. Congratulations!

​2. In the aforementioned book, the Lutz’s daughter (whose name I am admittedly too lazy to look up) claimed that she often saw a glowing, demonic pig head outside her window when she lived at the Amityville house. Scary, right? But a closer look at the pictures revealed the truth:
Picture
Conclusion: I don’t see the problem here. The little Lutz girl made a mistake, that's all.  That’s clearly not a glowing, demonic pig head. That’s glowing, demonic bacon. And who doesn’t love bacon?

At this point, I’ll admit I was a bit disappointed. I’d seen no evidence of scary hauntings at 112 Ocean Avenue so far. But then . . . this happened.
 
3. Back in the day, the Lutzes were getting upset over the Brundleflies and bacon, though I can’t imagine why. Instead of embracing their famous neighbor and lifetime supply of smoked pork yumminess, they asked a priest to come by and bless the house. While in the home, the priest heard a masculine voice distinctly say, “Get out.”
​
Here’s where it gets spooky: as I was scrolling through the photos, I heard a distinctly masculine voice say, “Get back to work.” (It was so creepy, I got goose bumps all over again typing this just now.) The voice had a New York accent, just like my boss. Here’s the thing: Amityville is in New York.
​
Conclusion: Clearly, this house is haunted. My advice: buy this home at your own risk. 

Annoyances

6/9/2016

 
This week, I wrote down everything that irritated me during the course of the day. This list was longer than I’d expected. Apparently, I’m a bit of a crankypants. Here goes:
  • Radio commercials that include sirens or ringing phones. I’m trying to drive, not pull over for phantom ambulances or hitting my Bluetooth and shouting “Hello? Hello?” to dead air.
  • Ditto commercials with shouting kids. I keep slamming my brakes and threatening to turn the car around right now, and I don’t even have children.
  • People who post and share ridiculous stories without doing their research (it’s called Google, folks). Let me set the record straight on some of the COMPLETELY AND UTTERLY FALSE STORIES I saw posted on Facebook this week:
    • President Obama DID NOT apologize to Japan for dropping the bomb on Hiroshima.
    • Kim Kardashian IS NOT replacing Tarji Henson as Cookie on Empire.
    • Bottled water being distributed in Flint, Michigan DOES NOT contain toxic levels of lead.
This doesn’t even cover the preposterous presidential campaign garbage that’s been circulating (to sum up: Hillary Clinton is not being indicted on racketeering charges, and Donald Trump’s son never said Hispanics fear his father will send them back to Asia). Here’s what I’m really starting to despise: people blindly sharing the most ridiculous nonsense without taking two seconds to verify if it’s accurate. (However, this rumor was happily true: William Golding, the author of Lord of the Flies, once said women are “far superior [to men] and always have been.”)
  • People who think they can do my job because they’ve spotted the occasional typo in books, or because they’ve selected stories for an anthology. Let me make this clear: neither of these things in any way qualifies you as a copyeditor. To do my job, you need to be well versed in both the Chicago Manual of Style and the AP Stylebook, and have a working knowledge of MLA and APA. By well versed, I mean you should be able to tell me, without looking it up, how each one feels about superscripting ordinals, and how they each lay out em dashes, and how each actually treats the word “copyeditor.” You should know which prefers which dictionary. You should be able to tell on sight when reading a piece which style guide was used. Most importantly, as a copyeditor, you know that you should question everything and never assume that you know why something is wrong. And if you’re going to claim that you’re a content editor, and don’t need to know about copyediting, you’re an idiot. That would be like saying “I took a CPR class. So essentially, I’m a paramedic.” You don’t know the first thing about how to do the job right.
  • People who take pictures of their meals and post them online. Besides the fact that half the time what you think looks delicious often looks like something the cat ate, vomited back up, ate again, and pooped out, some of us are having issues right now with eating any kind of food, and I hate you.
  • The movie Black Swan. I just don’t get the appeal.
  • PMS jokes. They’re never funny. Period.
 In an effort to be fair, I also tried to keep a list of things that made me happy this week. Here's how far I got:
  • ​  Coffee.
Picture
Black Swan: "Hated it!"

That Sounds Familiar

6/2/2016

 
I find myself short of blog material this week, due mostly to poor planning on my part. Since what I was going to post is only half written, and I'm going to be at Scare-a-Con this weekend and unable to finish it, I offer you instead a story. It originally appeared on TheStoryside.com, and it's about a writer struggling with the same old tropes. See how many classic novels and movies you recognize . . .
That Sounds Familiar
by Stacey Longo
“It’s all been done before!” the great writer, Sherlock Frankenstein, lamented. He tamped his pipe and slammed down his notebook and pen. He pushed his wheelchair away from the window, where he’d been observing the tenants in the apartment building across the street through dusty binoculars. “How can I call myself a writer? I don’t have a single idea in me that someone hasn’t done already!”
He wheeled into the hallway. “Where’s my dinner?” he called to Aibileen, his maid. Perhaps a hot meal would help him come up with a story idea.
“Sorry it’s late, sir. Here you go.” Aibileen set forth a platter of eggs and ham. The ham was fatty and the eggs looked slightly discolored.
“Green eggs and ham? I thought we were having rabbit stew?” Sherlock roared.
“We were, but the stew was burned.”
“Burned? By whom?”
“The butler did it,” Aibileen said with a shrug, and left Sherlock to his gangrenous meal.
Sherlock had been orphaned as a baby. Shortly after he’d given a hungry hobo his leftover gruel one day outside of the orphanage, a mysterious benefactor stepped forth and paid a full scholarship for Sherlock to attend Hogwarts University. He’d been happy there, and when war broke out, he’d made a few dollars on the side as a blockade runner. Eventually, though, as he watched men both older and younger than he join the armed forces without hesitation, he felt guilty enough to enlist. His southern girlfriend, Scarlett, had been quite upset when he’d planted a sloppy kiss on her and left her abandoned on a bridge—he’d never known a woman with such a fiery temper! A bullet in battle had put him in a wheelchair, and he’d fallen in love with the nurse who’d attended his wound. Catherine Barkley had been blond, beautiful, and spirited, and Sherlock had forgotten all about his Southern belle. After an evening during which Sherlock had consumed an entire bowl of rack punch singlehandedly, he’d proposed to Catherine. He’d sent her on to Ithaca ahead of him to prepare the house before he arrived, and his subsequent journey home to her had been quite an odyssey. He’d traveled far and seen amazing things, including a magic school bus, a celebrated jumping frog, and even a talking pig named Napoleon, before he finally made it back to her side. 
They’d had quite the love story until she’d died of cancer.
Now it was just Sherlock and his daughter, Harriet, a boisterous girl who loved to spy on the neighbors as much as he did. She was always out mucking around the neighborhood, though lately she’d complained to her father that a murderous alien clown was living in the storm drains, trying to kill her and all of her friends.
Clearly Harriet was insane. He’d have her put away in a sanatorium if he didn’t feel so damn sorry for her.
Sherlock finished his meal with a sigh, and rolled himself over to his desk. His computer was on, and he started to type a few words, paused, and read aloud what he’d just written.
“‘The knife came down, missed him by inches, and he took off.’ God, what was I thinking?” He turned the desktop off without saving his work, and rubbed his eyes. Aibileen came in to take his dinner plate away.
“Oh, I’m done for, Aibileen. Every idea I have has already been written by someone else, and better than I could ever hope to. What am I to do?”
“Well, sir, not that I know much about novel-writing, but I know I always enjoy a good murder mystery,” Aibileen offered as she pulled out a rag and began dusting his Maltese falcon.
“No, no. The murderer always turns out to be the wife’s lover, or the grown son nobody knew the victim even had, or an orangutan. No, I need something different.”
“What about a romance? Maybe it could be about you, and that nanny you hired to watch over Harriet last year,” Aibileen said. Her deft feather duster cleared away the cobwebs, the letters SOME PIG disappearing with a swipe.
“Maria? That would never have worked out—she was always flitting about and singing. Or did you mean Mary Poppins? I’m not even sure what happened there; she left so suddenly.” Sherlock sighed at the memory. “I’m afraid I’m not much in the mood to write a romance.”
“A ghost story, then,” Aibileen said sternly, then disappeared in a puff of smoke.
“Guess I should’ve seen that coming,” Sherlock muttered.
Harriet rushed into his room in a tizzy, and climbed onto Sherlock’s lap. “Father, did you hear? They’re going to hold a lottery on the green, and everyone in town’s required to be there! Isn’t it exciting?”
“Let me guess. Everyone will be entered, and if your name’s called, you’ll be stoned alive?”
“Oh, Father, that’s so 1948. No, if you’re selected, you have to fight 23 other kids to the death for no apparent reason. Isn’t that wonderful? If I’m not picked, I think I’ll volunteer.”
“You would,” Sherlock sighed. He’d thought Harriet had only been slightly crazy, but now it was evident that she’d completely flown over the cuckoo’s nest. He’d have to have her committed. Tomorrow, perhaps. After all, tomorrow was another day.
“Come on, Father. I told Pippi, Piggy, and Huck we’d meet them on the bridge to Terabithia before the lottery.”
“That’s it. I can’t stand it one moment longer!” Sherlock shoved Harriet off of his lap, and found that he could suddenly stand on his own.
“Oh, it’s a miracle, Father!” Harriet shouted.
“It’s an overused literary trope, Harriet!” Sherlock spat back. “I’ve had it. My whole life has been one cliché after another. When will this madness end?”
Suddenly, they were all eaten by a T-Rex.
Picture
Sherlock, right before the Great T-Rex Incident.

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