![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
Do Not Eat Scrambled Eggs Before Reading This Post
Posted by Stephen Green · 4 March 2003
Here’s what the Happy Fun Virus is like. You wake up one morning, and. . . scratch that. At no point during this Hell Bout are you ever fully awake. Instead, you feel as though every bit of cotton you’ve ever pulled from every bottle of aspirin you’ve ever opened has been re-packaged inside your mouth and nose and throat and lungs and brain. Let’s try this again. At some point, later than you feel is decent but earlier than you know is right, you'll stumble out of bed. Literally, stumble. Your legs aren’t as long as they once were, or maybe Evil Silent Contractors came in during the night and lowered the floor. They also made it uneven. And itchier. Put on a pair of socks or slippers before venturing anywhere, assuming you remembered to take them off your feet before getting into bed the night before. You’ll find you’re forgetting all sorts of stuff. One morning last week, I woke up with a toothbrush in my mouth. And wearing pants. Once you have your feet properly protected from the Awfully Itchy Carpet Fibers of Doom (Or At Least of Mild Yet Maddening Discomfort), make your way to the kitchen and pour yourself a large glass of orange juice. Don’t worry about the brand, or even if it’s properly chilled. These things won't matter, since everything you put in your mouth will seem to have the same flavor, texture, and temperature as warm bowl of phlegm. The OJ pulp may disgust you, but let me tell you right now: Don’t even think about scrambled eggs. Besides, the pulp might just convince your body that you’re giving it solid food more recently than a week ago Sunday. Head downstairs to the office, where your supply of Dayquil, Benadryl, codeine cough syrup, Vitamin C Pills for Sickly Larger Breeds of Horses and Smaller Trained Elephants, Kleenex, baby wipes (flu-ridden Arafat only), warm Gatorade, emergency backup Kleenex, and Tylenol are – all the modern accouterments for the very modern flu. I hope you’ve remembered to put on your robe, because it’s a very long trip back up the stairs. At some point after drinking your OJ, you’ll have to pee. Your urine will be of the exact same color, consistency, temperature and odor as last night’s chicken soup. Only more so. Do not be alarmed – but do turn on the fan and open the window. After taking all your pills, you may be tempted to step outside to light a small cigar, just to see if you can taste something, anything at all. Don't. Please don't. First, you’ll get a chill so bad your entire body will actually convulse, since you lack the fine motor skills necessary for shivering. Second, it is strangely possible for the merest whiff of smoke to taste and feel like a mouthful of overheated phlegm. You’ll also trigger a coughing fit so violent as to be a tsunami risk in coastal areas, or cause avalanches if you live in the mountains. Pray with me for the skiers trapped under cubic hectares of snow in Aspen last week. Now, go back to your office and sit down. Stare at the monitor for a bit, trying to make sense of the funny dancing words on your screen. At the precise moment you think you’ve reached that blissful time when you’ve put forth enough effort to give up being involved in the world and saved up enough energy to make it to the sofa, that’s when the real coughing will begin. The really very quite real coughing. It starts low in your body, far lower than your lungs reach. It might, in fact, be so low that’s starting in the toes of any downstairs neighbor you might have. At the very least, Satan is pounding on his ceiling with the end of a broomstick, shouting for you to please turn down that racket. Is it a coincidence that “racket” and “racking” have the same root? Hardly. Your coughs will seem to have the same, pleasing, predictable rhythm as simultaneous concerts of Wagner and the Sex Pistols, using the same music hall, and each using amplifiers provided by Spinal Tap’s road manager. This, my friend, is a racking cough. During a pause – probably sometime no sooner than a week from Monday – lift up that t-shirt you’ve been wearing all week, and examine the line between your belly and ribs. You’ll discover a line of eggplant-colored bruises there. Feel the burn? But that’s nothing compared to what’s going on in your mouth. All that coughing has to bring up something, after all, and all those yummy somethings are going to end up in that most sensitive of organs called your mouth. Warm somethings. Wet somethings. Fibrous somethings. Warm, wet, fibrous somethings the size of Junior Mints. If you’ve reached Day Three of the Hell Cold, you’ll have given up being polite and spitting into a Kleenex. You’ve used up three boxes so far, anyway, and making nice little packages of moistness just won’t seem worth the bother or expense. Instead, lean over and spit right into the trashcan – a trashcan which you’ve turned into a colony of warm, wet, fibrous somethings so alive and teeming that it makes Dr. Frankenstein’s fifth grade Petri dish Science Fair experiment seem positively wholesome in comparison – and that’s just the feeling emanating from in there. Under no circumstance at all, not even if Gestapo interrogators armed with staple guns beg you to, are you to look into the trashcan. Spend the rest of the day napping, coughing, spitting, wiping, blowing, napping again, and spitting, so that you might save up enough energy to be truly miserable at night when you’re trying to sleep in your actual bed. Repeat this process each day until you’re feeling a bit better, like the first touch of spring is in the air, as if there’s a soft Bossa Nova playing somewhere (maybe "Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars"), something light in the feet and in your heart, a bit of the carefree energy of youth and promise, and that joy of simply living and breathing and doing – then get ready for three more days of abject misery. Comments
Hey, Thanks for sharing the details. Posted by: Vince at March 4, 2003 12:07 PMOog. Feel better, soon. Posted by: Eric the .5b at March 4, 2003 12:09 PMBeautiful. I've been there and had that. Did you see a doctor? Sounds like it was halfway to pneumonia - or over halfway. Hope the coughing is going away. Posted by: Alice at March 4, 2003 12:13 PMIf your affliction is anything like mine you'll be coughing up those lung cookies for at least another week. But that's okay as long as you're free from those Carpet Fibers of Doom. Get well. Posted by: Bill at March 4, 2003 12:36 PMSounds like "walking pneumonia", although anyone who has it is NOT capable of walking. It's more like the chain-gang type of shuffling. And the coughing is second only to 3 weeks of the whooping cough, which MB remembers ALL TOO WELL, even though it was 60 years ago!! Hopefully you have enough sense to ease back into the living; overdoing is the first mistake everyone makes after going through a bout like that. Do take care to be good to your poor old body; it just got out of the 'near-death camp'. Wondefully disgusting! I threw up for joy! Posted by: John Cross at March 4, 2003 02:00 PMDamn, man. If you're still suffering this, see a doctor already. Sounds bad. Posted by: Michael J. Totten at March 4, 2003 02:33 PMI'm ashamed to say I laughed until my belly hurt while reading this. Hopefully you've now put this mild sniffle to bed and can get on with things. Posted by: Ian at March 4, 2003 06:31 PMHope you're feeling better, Steve. I had those same symptoms, but for about 2 straight months. After countless courses of antibiotics and steroids, several pneumonia diagnoses and enough radiation in the form of x-rays and CT scans to make me glad I've already reproduced, I was finally diagnosed with blastomycosis, which is a fancy way of saying a fungal colony decided to set up shop in my lungs. 6 months of anti-fungals and I can breathe normally again. Of course, considering the original "final" diagnosis was lung cancer (you're 35, never smoked - life sucks. Kiss your little kids goodbye), I'm grateful for only being sick for 8 months... Stay away from the cigars and feel better soon! Posted by: Brian Erst at March 4, 2003 08:55 PMHow Dostoevsky. Posted by: Ed. at March 4, 2003 11:49 PMMmm. Fibrous lung ejections. The real fun is when they turn from green to brownish-orange. Currently on day five, myself. Middle of the dry, lung-tingling cough yet blissfully past the where-the-hell-did-my-voice-go phase. If I see another lemon tea bag, I'm going to go postal. Posted by: Mr. Lion at March 5, 2003 12:05 AMI hope you feel better, but man, I read you during my lunch break! Blech! Posted by: md at March 5, 2003 11:02 AMnice work w/ the descriptive prose. it was Honest and Real. and oh-so-nice. disturbing, yes. but nice. Posted by: mcinnes at March 5, 2003 01:57 PMI believe those fibrous somethings are described in medical literature as "land oysters". Posted by: tim blair at March 5, 2003 09:24 PMBeen there, am doing this now with "walking pnuemonia." Supposed to have my arse at home, but went to go see the doctor, and HE'S out. Dude, you sound like you need, a hospital, a bed, some IV, some Demerol, and anything except chicken soup! Hope that you get over this because, this crap sounds truly NASTY!! I KNEW I'd find a way to tolerate this job until friday! I can now waste time reading about globules of your muscous! Well, now I'm offically turned off! Thanks Steve! Posted by: Legs at February 4, 2004 02:30 PMI should also invest some time in learning how to type/spell properly Posted by: Legs at February 4, 2004 02:31 PM |
MDS - Give Until It Hurts Terror War Scorecard Watching America 50 Things American Cancer Ablation Center Buy VodkaPundit Stuff
"...Steve Green is to blogging what John Holmes was to enormous penises."
Ann Althouse
Across the Atlantic
American Realpolitik
Albion's Seedlings
Justene Adamec
The Argument Clinic
Todd A
Moe Freedman
Allah Is In the House
Body in Mind
Ben Domenech
Duck Season
Banana Counting Monkey
Ted Barlow
Eric Alterman
American Times
|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |