The first recorded mention of diabetes is from 1550 BC, on a sheet of Egyptian papyrus that mentions something called "honey urine." (A common symptom of diabetes is dark, thick piss, though I've never experienced that.) Until the1920s, when insulin was discovered, diabetics were doomed to short, uncomfortable lives. Insulin, from the Latin word for island, was derived from pigs and cattle until 1978, when medical firm Eli Lilly developed human-based insulin. I was seven years old at the time. Six years later I started giving myself injections of this miraculous substance, and have done so ever day since.
I take two different types of insulin. Lantus is long-acting, I take it twice a day. Humalog is short-acting and I take it every time I eat. I’m down to my last vial of long-acting, and I only have two vials of short-acting left, so I go to the pharmacy in the back of Safeway to get them refilled.
I don’t hear back from them, so after a few days I stop in after work. The usual pharmacist is working, a surly young hobbit whose beard looks like it’s attached with spirit gum. I give him my date of birth and name and he stares at the computer for a long time. I look at the Labubu dolls in medical scrubs, huddled on an high shelf along with a crowd other stuffed toys, including a plush box of Xanax that sports a sign that reads “NOT FOR SALE.”
Eventually he says, “I have your Humalog ready but the insurance company is contesting the Lantus.”
“What do you mean, contesting it? I’ve been taking this shit for decades.”
“They’re doing this all the time now. Refusing to cover all kinds of medications with no explanation.”
“But it’s not like I can choose not to take it. These aren’t boner pills.”
“We’ve contacted your doctor. They’ll need to talk to the provider and fill out a consent form.”
I pay for my Humalog and once I’m home I immediately write an email to my doctor, just to make sure he has actually been informed of all this. I don’t trust that hobbit.
“So how long you gonna be on that thing, anyways?” asks the bus driver whose door was smashed last week.
“I wish I knew,” I say.
“Did you have surgery or something?” she asks. I know that for the most part people are just trying to be nice, but I’m tired of explaining my situation to strangers. Sometimes I cheerily tell them I had my toes chopped off, which tends to bring the conversation to an abrupt halt. Usually I just do what I do now and say it’s diabetes-related, which usually leads to an outpouring of pity and/or stories of a family member who lost a foot or a leg. The driver just tells me she hopes I heal up soon.
upstairs. Jenny leads me to room two. All week I’ve been feeling especially lonely and desperate for human interaction, so I’m chipper and chatty with both her and Bridget, who says she just got back from Hawaii.
“That’s funny, my folks are flying back from there as we speak. Did that storm hit you?”
“It wasn’t much of a storm. They shut everything down and nothing happened,” she says. “Lot of turbulence coming back though. Worst flight I’ve ever been on. A couple of times it really felt like we were going down.”
Jenny is ecstatic when she unwraps my foot. “Wow. Drainage is small, in fact the whole thing looks smaller. No maceration, no undermining. This looks amazing.” Her cheeriness is infectious, and even though I know better, I catch a glimpse of hope like the tip of an early crocus.
“Hey, let me ask you something,” says Bridget. “Have you heard of a drink supplement called Juven?”
I laugh. “Is this something you’re selling to raise money for the high school band?”
“No. But we had the rep in today talking about it. It’s got collagen and amino acids in it and is really good for wound healing.”
“Sounds suspicious. Is this a pyramid scheme? Did they give you samples to get people hooked?”
“As a matter of fact… do you want to try some now?”
“Sure, what the hell,” I say. She disappears and reemerges with a cup of orange liquid. “It only has a few carbs in it so it’s approved by the American Diabetes Association. If you don’t like it you can just chug it.”
I take a sip. “It’s actually not bad. Tastes like Tang. Do they still make Tang?”
“The astronaut drink? I don’t know. But here are some samples and coupons.”
“Wow, twenty dollars off? This shit must be expensive.”
“It’s a little spendy. But believe me, it’s really good.”
“We had a couple who used to come here who worked for Amway,” says Jenny. “Every once in a while they would start dropping hints about how much money we could make.”
“you should’ve gone for it. Use the money to spruce up the office. buy decent chairs. doors for the rooms.”
Dr. Thompson is also in a cheery mood, and she chatters away merrily as she slices away at the callus.
“This looks good. Bleeding a lot. Maybe a good time to try out that hyfrecator?”
“Oh yes!” says Bridget. “Let’s try the hyfrecator!”
“We need to see how it works!” says Jenny.
“Let’s do it!” I say. “Also, what’s a hyfrecator?”
“It’s this device to suck up extra blood,” says Jenny. “Shelley found one sitting around and none of us has used one before.”
“Are we doing the hyfrecator?” calls Vicki from behind the curtain.
“I cleaned the dust off it,” calls Shelley.
“Let’s go take a look,” the doctor says, and Jenny follows her out.
“Are they really going to use that thing?” I ask excitedly.
“Do you really want them to?” asks Bridget.
“Look, it’s the same thing week after week here. I’ll do anything to break the monotony. What does this thing look like, anyway?”
“It’s like a pen,” she says.
“Oh,” I say.
“I thought they were coming right back,” she says, and leaves to find them. The office is very quiet. I take out my phone and discover that the hyfrecator (short for high-frequency eradicator) “emits low-power high-frequency AC electrical impulses via an electrode mounted on a handpiece.” Bridget returns and says they’re all just standing back there looking at the mysterious contraption. “Looks like your bleeding has completely stopped anyways,” she says.
“I can get it to start it back up again,” I say.
Eventually they all return and Vicki sits at the computer while Bridget prepares the cast. Karen shows me footage of the dachshund birthday party she took Dolly to. “The one with the dress is the birthday girl,” she explains. “Isn’t she precious?” All the dogs have black, beady eyes like a crab. “We have a club now. We call ourselves Wien PDX.”
“That sounds filthy,” I say.
“You’re, uh, gonna want to wrap that more,” she says to Bridget.
“My brain’s like mush,” Bridget says. Her undercast certainly is a sloppy mess. “I don’t remember how to do anything. I think I was on vacation too long.” With Karen’s gentle guidance, she finishes up and prepares the water.
“Not too cold now. She froze her fingers last week,” I say.
“It’s silly but my one superpower is getting the water temperature right,” she says.
Sure enough, Dr. Richmond reaches in for the first roll of casting and says, “Perfect. Absolutely perfect.” She’s wearing the same cap as last week, and I notice that the lyrics to “You Are my Sunshine” are interwoven with the hearts.
I ask her how she feels about Juven. “It’s great,” she says. “I took it myself after I had surgery. Really speeds up the healing process.”
As she’s working, she talks to Bridget about Hawaii.
“You were on the Big Island?” she asks. “I was stationed there in the Air Force. God I loved to fly. You know, I’ve loved every job I’ve had.” As she’s winding the wet Fiberglas, she tells us about pilot training. “You had to swim a mile and a half either in open water or a pool, wearing your flight gear. I chose the pool and got kicked so hard by another swimmer I passed out and nearly drowned. Got water in my lungs. They told me I could finish it later but I said, no way, I wanted that shit over with. I was in incredible pain but I finished it right then and there.”
She tells us about a device called the Dilbert Dunker that simulates what it’s like to have your plane crash into the ocean. “You know, like in An Officer and a Gentleman?” The Dunker is a metal framework like a cockpit that plunges into a pool and spins you around. It was invented during World War II, just a few years after the hyfrecator. “They tell you to follow the bubbles,” she says. “That’s the only way you can find what direction the surface is in. It’s completely disorienting.”
She says they also make you fly a plane with the front windows blacked out, to teach you to rely completely on your navigation devices.
“Isn’t that dangerous?” I ask.
“You have a copilot in the seat behind you,” she says, as she rubs and rubs and rubs the cast.
It’s still sunny and mild when I get out. The haggard woman gets on the bus with me again. She looks worse than ever. I wonder if she’s sick. I want to give her a hug.
I stop by Safeway, expecting the worst, and sure enough, the doctor wrote me a new script and the insurance company rejected it. I ask how much it will cost without insurance. “$71 a vial,” the woman behind the counter says. It’s not horrible, but it’s not great, especially when you take into account that each vial costs Eli Lilly a single dollar to make. That’s a seven thousand percent markup. The net worth of their CEO is $710 million.
“Seventy-one bucks to keep from dying for another month? That is a fucking bargain,” I tell her. She says she will set a vial aside for me in case I can’t get in touch with my doctor. The toothy Labubus leer down at me from their shelf as I wheel away.
When I get home I call the endocrinology office but they’re closed for the night and don’t have voicemail. While I’m eating supper, the woman from the pharmacy calls to say my doctor just sent them a script for a generic brand that insurance will cover. I finish my meal and lie
down next to the kitty, who meows at me until I rub her tummy. Maybe everything I’m going through is just a simulation to prepare me for when the real disaster strikes, for when my plane finally plunges into the black, icy waters. Maybe this is all just teaching me how to weather the storm, to keep my head through the approaching chaos. Reminding me to follow the bubbles.