Friday, June 28, 2013
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Monday, June 24, 2013
Friday, June 21, 2013
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Hospital Stay
Last week I underwent a minor medical procedure which carries a slight risk of infection. Sure enough, I, who couldn’t win a coin toss in a hundred tries, was the lucky 1 in 10,000 recipient.
I got to spend Father’s Day enjoying fever, chills and, because we were at a brunch buffet, complete loss of appetite. When this didn’t improve the next day, I went back to the hospital for some tests, and won a 3 day, all expense paid vacation in room 7E10.
On the morning of day 2, the IV device that drips saline and antibiotics into my bloodstream started beeping. I know truly sophisticated hospital guests learn to ignore these inconveniences, but with the device tethered 3 feet from my ear by a plastic tube, I found it somewhat distracting. I’m no expert in medical equipment, but I’m guessing the “air-in-line” message that kept scrolling across the screen meant the device thought there was air in the line. I used the “Alert” button to notify the nurse’s station at least 3 times, but no one came to silence the beeping for over half an hour. At once per second, I reckon I endured some 1800 to 2000 beeps. They’re not soothing.
I tried wheeling the IV out and standing in the hall with it, so the whole staff could enjoy the rhythmic signal. People hurried past with complex electronic equipment and trays of food and bags for dirty laundry, but not one person gave the errant IV a second glance.
Maybe I should have ordered some food. Whenever food arrives, a whole procession of hospital personnel mysteriously appears at my door wanting to take some blood, check my urine, give me medications, change my bed, bring me fresh linens, or just generally know how I’m feeling. The timing is too close to be a coincidence. The stampede shows up whenever I’m about to eat or when I’m talking to the outside world by phone. It’s like they’re being alerted by the NSA.
In general, though, the care has been excellent. Apart from a few minor annoyances, the only real drawback is the sheer monotony of hanging around all day in women’s clothing. (No offense intended to anyone who might enjoy that.) Plus, I’ve now mastered the skill of peeing into a bottle while holding a jonny rolled up and tucked under my chin. There must be other uses for that, though I can’t think of any offhand.
I got to spend Father’s Day enjoying fever, chills and, because we were at a brunch buffet, complete loss of appetite. When this didn’t improve the next day, I went back to the hospital for some tests, and won a 3 day, all expense paid vacation in room 7E10.
On the morning of day 2, the IV device that drips saline and antibiotics into my bloodstream started beeping. I know truly sophisticated hospital guests learn to ignore these inconveniences, but with the device tethered 3 feet from my ear by a plastic tube, I found it somewhat distracting. I’m no expert in medical equipment, but I’m guessing the “air-in-line” message that kept scrolling across the screen meant the device thought there was air in the line. I used the “Alert” button to notify the nurse’s station at least 3 times, but no one came to silence the beeping for over half an hour. At once per second, I reckon I endured some 1800 to 2000 beeps. They’re not soothing.
I tried wheeling the IV out and standing in the hall with it, so the whole staff could enjoy the rhythmic signal. People hurried past with complex electronic equipment and trays of food and bags for dirty laundry, but not one person gave the errant IV a second glance.
Maybe I should have ordered some food. Whenever food arrives, a whole procession of hospital personnel mysteriously appears at my door wanting to take some blood, check my urine, give me medications, change my bed, bring me fresh linens, or just generally know how I’m feeling. The timing is too close to be a coincidence. The stampede shows up whenever I’m about to eat or when I’m talking to the outside world by phone. It’s like they’re being alerted by the NSA.
In general, though, the care has been excellent. Apart from a few minor annoyances, the only real drawback is the sheer monotony of hanging around all day in women’s clothing. (No offense intended to anyone who might enjoy that.) Plus, I’ve now mastered the skill of peeing into a bottle while holding a jonny rolled up and tucked under my chin. There must be other uses for that, though I can’t think of any offhand.
Monday, June 17, 2013
NSA Operators Are Standing By
Labels:
ad,
commercial,
funny,
haha,
humor,
popeil,
radical,
self-radicalization,
terrorism
Friday, June 14, 2013
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Not Ready for Season Four
Labels:
arrested development,
cartoon,
comics,
funny,
government,
haha,
humor,
nsa,
security,
snoop
Monday, June 10, 2013
Friday, June 7, 2013
The All-Powerful Bike Lobby
Labels:
all-powerful bike lobby,
bicycle,
bike,
cartoon,
comics,
funny,
haha,
humor,
rabinowitz
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Monday, June 3, 2013
The Fall TV Line-Up
The new fall TV line-up has been announced. ABC introduces new shows, Totally Nude Supermodels (Partly Obstructed Views), and Incredibly Good Looking People (Who Are Not Models) Doing Stupid Stuff, as well as the returning favorites Nearly Naked Models, Hot Babes in Skimpy Outfits, and Nightline.
In the game category, ABC will add People Who Have No Business Dancing.
CBS follows up the successes of CSI and NCIS with premieres of new crime-fighting procedurals INCS, CINS, SNIC and NCISSISSIPPI. New situation comedies include Two Incredibly Lame-Brained Idiots and Immature Men (Isn’t That Redundant?)
NBC will be rolling out new episodes of Old Actors Trying Desperately to Revive Their Careers, as well as the newly retitled You’re Fired. (Research indicates the audience had trouble with the words “celebrity” and “apprentice.”)
MSNBC will extend it’s line-up with a new prime time commentary show, Cherry Picked News with Innuendo, while Fox renews its long-running faux-reality show, Fox News.
Of course, Fox’s real attention-getter is Seth MacFarlane's new prime time animated series, &@$# You!
In the game category, ABC will add People Who Have No Business Dancing.
CBS follows up the successes of CSI and NCIS with premieres of new crime-fighting procedurals INCS, CINS, SNIC and NCISSISSIPPI. New situation comedies include Two Incredibly Lame-Brained Idiots and Immature Men (Isn’t That Redundant?)
NBC will be rolling out new episodes of Old Actors Trying Desperately to Revive Their Careers, as well as the newly retitled You’re Fired. (Research indicates the audience had trouble with the words “celebrity” and “apprentice.”)
MSNBC will extend it’s line-up with a new prime time commentary show, Cherry Picked News with Innuendo, while Fox renews its long-running faux-reality show, Fox News.
Of course, Fox’s real attention-getter is Seth MacFarlane's new prime time animated series, &@$# You!
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