I take a long weekend off and fly down with the Widder to Ashland to see some shows at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. I take my scooter, and manage to get around the small but hilly town without much trouble.
I fly back Monday afternoon, a few hours before my weekly wound care appointment.
Curtain parts to reveal the WOUND CARE CLINIC. Seann wheels over to a chair and TIM takes his scooter away. Nurses can be seen bustling about in the background.
NURSES:
This is wound care,
where we care for all the wounds that will not heal,
the holes that won’t close, the ulcers that won’t seal,
we stop the sores from becoming more,
give you bandages and casts,
stop infection in its tracks,
and if by chance it hits the bone, don’t be blue…
we’ll put you in the hyperbaric tube!
TIM: Let’s see how the wound looks today!
I’ll just fire up the saw and cut this cast off
S: I’m not sure what the wound is gonna look like
I went away this weekend and I kind of walked a lot
TIM: Well you’ve got to live your life. I mean, it’s not
(Saw drowns out the rest)
This looks good. This looks good.
There’s hardly any drainage.
S: Would you say scant?
TIM: I’d say small. But it isn’t bad at all.
(Takes out measuring tape)
The wound has shrunk from eight by three
to five by one.
S: That’s fine by me.
TIM: The doctor will be glad to see.
You really should be
…haaappppyyyyy
Doctor Taggert appears, wielding her number three knife, and starts to sing The Callus Song, accompanied by a steel drum ensemble.
TAGGERT: Callus!
I love to cut callus. I don’t feel any malice
unless of course it’s towards a
cantankerous callus.
I’m a queen with a scalpel in a wound care palace!
I feel like Alice
in Wonderland, trimming the rim
of a rabbit hole.
Off with her head?
That’s not what I said!
Listen to me. I said:
off with that callus!
S: Hey, I keep forgetting to ask, how was Panama?
TAGGERT: How was Panama? How was Panama? I’ll tell you how Panama was!
The people live in huts!
They don’t have any furniture!
They don’t even sleep on mats!
S: They sleep on the dirt?
TAGGERT: On the dirt! Look, here’s our waiting room. (She shows me her phone. On the wall flashes a photo of a women sitting on folding chairs under a tree)
And here’s our ICU (flashes a photo of a man in a hammock)
S: So you won’t be moving to Panama?
TAGGERT: To be honest, I don’t have the stanima!
We went with a group called Floating Doctors
Who treat poor people on islands in the tropics
We ate plantains and we slept in hammocks
Removed their parasites and barraged them with shots
I took my son. He’s an EMT and dyslexic.
S: So a TME
T: Don’t be smart alexic.
NURSES:
There’s so little you can do
But you can do something.
There’s almost nothing anyone can do
But you can’t just do nothing.
You know that no one there has to live with diabetes?
S: Really? Why not?
TAGGERT: Because it kills them instantly!
S: That really puts the die in diabetes.
NURSES:
There’s so little you can do
But you can do something.
There’s almost nothing anyone can do
But you can’t just do nothing.
The canal’s hundred thousand dollar transit fees
have made so many investment bankers wealthy
while a short boat ride from Panama City
countless lives are lost to flesh-eating larvae
S: Investment bankers, eh? I’d rather take my chances
with the flesh-eating larvae.
It’s difficult not to look at these pictures and not feel a little sheepish. After all, here I am in this clean, sterile room, receiving… well, maybe not the best medical treatment money can buy. But I’m not sitting in a folding chair underneath a roof made of banana leaves, either.
Taggert finishes my cast and says, “Remember, it’s Memorial Day next week. When did they reschedule you for again?”
“They didn’t,” I say. “Wasn’t Dede supposed to call?”
Taggert looks annoyed.
“Because she didn’t call,” I say.
“You’re coming in Tuesday,” says Shelley. “Is that okay?”
“That’s fine,” I say. “Hey, did your kitchen ever get finished?”
Shelley is lit by a single spot as she sings a mournful song about torn-up floors and new cupboards that keep getting delayed. When she finishes, the audience gives her a standing ovation.
S: So that’s wound care. It may not be the fanciest department in the hospital –I mean, they probably won’t be making a hit TV show out of it anytime soon- but there are some mighty fine folks working here, fine folks who really know a lot about taking care of wounds. They make you feel like you’re in good hands. More than that, they make you feel like family.
Curtain