I seriously cannot take much more of this sedentary life.
On one hand, I have a solid fear of not healing properly and needing additional surgery. Last night I woke up convinced that I'd heard or felt something crack in my collarbone. It took me until I got up this morning to feel reassured that it was just a dream, and that it's OK....probably.
On the other hand, I'm watching my weight go up, the few muscles I have are decaying, and my clothes don't fit right anymore. Plus my digestion and sleep are out of whack too, and I know all of this relates to lack of activity.
I see the doc Monday. I assume there will be new x-rays, and I sure hope they are better than the last set. Hopefully the stitches will come out, the big bandage will come off, and I'll be in better shape to start doing things like walking the neighborhood or using the stationary bike.
Much more of this sitting around, and I'm afraid my butt cheeks are gonna fuse into one mass that's permanently bonded to this damn chair. It's time to get moving again.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Friday, February 18, 2011
Pain & Suffering: Would Captain Kirk Sue?
(These are the voyages of the lawsuit Enterprise...)
I was involved in an accident on 1/14/2011 that left me with 5 broken ribs, a broken collarbone, and a bunch of scrapes and bruises. Even now, I have a hard time writing that I was the victim in the accident, even though the other guy caused it. I was riding my bike, and a driver made a sudden, unsafe, and illegal turn across the bike lane immediately in front of me. I impacted the side of his truck and was thrown over the hood and into the street. His choice, and his action, triggered the accident.
But I don't like to think of myself as a victim - it's just not my nature. Maybe I'm too stubborn. Maybe I watched too much of John Wayne and Captain Kirk when I was growing up. It's hard to imagine The Duke hiring a lawyer to settle his problems, or envision Kirk launching a civil suit against the Klingons for damaging his ship. So why should I sit back, call myself the injured party, and hire a mouthpiece to settle the score for me? I mean, yeah, I was pretty badly injured, and as I write this 5 weeks later, I'm recovering from surgery to try to correct problems with the collarbone.But I'm focused on healing, and that means regaining my identity as an active, forward-looking person, which my instincts tell me stands in direct contrast with defining myself as a victim, as damaged.
And therein lies the problem with pain and suffering in the legal sense. I've always felt like people who seek damages for pain and suffering are usually out for a quick payday, and often exaggerate the nature of their problems. But maybe that's also a conditioned response that I have to movie portrayals or a small percentage of sensationalized cases in the media or in the advertising of unscrupulous ambulance chasers. So what is the nature of my pain and suffering, and how does one seek restitution for these things?
There are the obvious damages; lost wages, medical and legal expenses, the damaged bike, etc. There are other subtle expenses that come from the lifestyle modification one undergoes during rehab; buying clothes that are compatible with wearing a sling 24/7, renting a reclining chair to sleep in since I haven't been able to use my bed since the accident, and so on. But suffering? That's a bit more elusive.
Initially, I rejected the concept entirely. But I hit a low point a few nights after the accident and it made me reconsider. It was in the darkest hours of the night - 2 or 3a.m. - and, unable to sleep much due to the physical pain, I woke up in a dark room, stuck in the chair that would be my home for much of the next 2 months, and felt very alone. I though of people I'd loved who in other times would have been there to help, but this time I was on my own, and the weight of that fell hard on me. I broke down and cried, but with 5 broken ribs, crying is a damn painful thing to do, so I tried to sob more softly. As soon as I realized the adjustment I was making, I couldn't but laugh at the absurdity of it. I wanted to cry over the very situation that made it hard to cry. It was an almost comically fucked-up situation...but can you be compensated for that?
Since then there have been other scenarios that hit me in similar ways. A few days before the accident I'd had a seemingly great first date. She and I talked and laughed easily and I looked forward to seeing here again that Sunday, but on Friday afternoon a truck redirected my plans. She seemed a good sport when i told her what happened, and we agreed to get together again as soon as I was able, but after just one date it's hard to expect someone you barely know to put their life on hold and wait for you. She didn't, and met someone else. Amazingly, the same thing happened a month later. I'd had an even better first date, despite the fact that I was in a sling and still fighting through the pain of the healing ribs. But a few days later I found out the collarbone wasn't healing right and would need immediate surgery. Again, she was supportive and we talked about getting together as soon as possible as I healed, but again, she met someone else. The chain of events leading back to the accident had cost me opportunities for two different relationships. It's easy to philosophize that if either had been the right person for me they'd have waited, but had it not been for the accident that would never have been an issue. Instead, I am left to wonder what could have been. Either might have ended after 3 dates, or either one might have become a life-changing relationship, but I was denied the chance to find out.
I was also denied the chance to know how my training might have paid off. At the time of the crash, I was on a training ride for the Counting Coup mountain bike event, which I've ridden for the past couple years. I had a good base of mileage and climbing, and was about to start some speed work to try to make better time on the event's long climbs. I've invented a tremendous amount of time, effort, and money into this event over the past few years and was really looking forward to a big improvement this year. Instead, I've had to sell my elusive and coveted event registration, and now just hope to be able to volunteer and cheer on my friends who will be riding. With a return to school coming, this was probably my last chance at the event for the next couple of years. Now I'll never know.
Some of this may seem trivial, yet these are each significant elements in my life, and they reflect and influence my sense of self. So now I sit, contemplating these twists and turns, considering the way I live my life and the person that I am and will be in the future. My home is re-arranged to make things easier to manage, and is far less clean and organized than normal. It's been 5 weeks since I felt like I presented the "normal" me to anyone, and it will be at least that many more again until I am not a damaged person in the eyes of others. I don't know yet how long it will be until I can get through a day without feeling impaired or frail.
I guess I could be in a pretty dark place, but I'm not. It's a difficult place, with different challenges and feelings every day, and there are dark moments, but most of the time it's not a dark place. I think the differences have to do with the facts that I see most of this as a process to go through, that there's a solution to be worked out, and that I've had support from friends & family. But still, there are days and nights that just plain suck, and those have had me thinking these concepts of pain and suffering.
I know that a lot of this is nothing compared to what many people go through. But it wasn't my fault, and I am going through my share. If that makes me a victim, then I guess that's a component to my personality and identity that I'll have to adjust to. And our system does allow for some forms of restitution, and I've begun that process. Even using the phrase "my lawyer" sounds utterly foreign to me, but I've retained one to help me through this. It will be interesting to see how it all works out.
I just hope the Klingons are well-insured.
I was involved in an accident on 1/14/2011 that left me with 5 broken ribs, a broken collarbone, and a bunch of scrapes and bruises. Even now, I have a hard time writing that I was the victim in the accident, even though the other guy caused it. I was riding my bike, and a driver made a sudden, unsafe, and illegal turn across the bike lane immediately in front of me. I impacted the side of his truck and was thrown over the hood and into the street. His choice, and his action, triggered the accident.
But I don't like to think of myself as a victim - it's just not my nature. Maybe I'm too stubborn. Maybe I watched too much of John Wayne and Captain Kirk when I was growing up. It's hard to imagine The Duke hiring a lawyer to settle his problems, or envision Kirk launching a civil suit against the Klingons for damaging his ship. So why should I sit back, call myself the injured party, and hire a mouthpiece to settle the score for me? I mean, yeah, I was pretty badly injured, and as I write this 5 weeks later, I'm recovering from surgery to try to correct problems with the collarbone.But I'm focused on healing, and that means regaining my identity as an active, forward-looking person, which my instincts tell me stands in direct contrast with defining myself as a victim, as damaged.
And therein lies the problem with pain and suffering in the legal sense. I've always felt like people who seek damages for pain and suffering are usually out for a quick payday, and often exaggerate the nature of their problems. But maybe that's also a conditioned response that I have to movie portrayals or a small percentage of sensationalized cases in the media or in the advertising of unscrupulous ambulance chasers. So what is the nature of my pain and suffering, and how does one seek restitution for these things?
There are the obvious damages; lost wages, medical and legal expenses, the damaged bike, etc. There are other subtle expenses that come from the lifestyle modification one undergoes during rehab; buying clothes that are compatible with wearing a sling 24/7, renting a reclining chair to sleep in since I haven't been able to use my bed since the accident, and so on. But suffering? That's a bit more elusive.
Initially, I rejected the concept entirely. But I hit a low point a few nights after the accident and it made me reconsider. It was in the darkest hours of the night - 2 or 3a.m. - and, unable to sleep much due to the physical pain, I woke up in a dark room, stuck in the chair that would be my home for much of the next 2 months, and felt very alone. I though of people I'd loved who in other times would have been there to help, but this time I was on my own, and the weight of that fell hard on me. I broke down and cried, but with 5 broken ribs, crying is a damn painful thing to do, so I tried to sob more softly. As soon as I realized the adjustment I was making, I couldn't but laugh at the absurdity of it. I wanted to cry over the very situation that made it hard to cry. It was an almost comically fucked-up situation...but can you be compensated for that?
Since then there have been other scenarios that hit me in similar ways. A few days before the accident I'd had a seemingly great first date. She and I talked and laughed easily and I looked forward to seeing here again that Sunday, but on Friday afternoon a truck redirected my plans. She seemed a good sport when i told her what happened, and we agreed to get together again as soon as I was able, but after just one date it's hard to expect someone you barely know to put their life on hold and wait for you. She didn't, and met someone else. Amazingly, the same thing happened a month later. I'd had an even better first date, despite the fact that I was in a sling and still fighting through the pain of the healing ribs. But a few days later I found out the collarbone wasn't healing right and would need immediate surgery. Again, she was supportive and we talked about getting together as soon as possible as I healed, but again, she met someone else. The chain of events leading back to the accident had cost me opportunities for two different relationships. It's easy to philosophize that if either had been the right person for me they'd have waited, but had it not been for the accident that would never have been an issue. Instead, I am left to wonder what could have been. Either might have ended after 3 dates, or either one might have become a life-changing relationship, but I was denied the chance to find out.
I was also denied the chance to know how my training might have paid off. At the time of the crash, I was on a training ride for the Counting Coup mountain bike event, which I've ridden for the past couple years. I had a good base of mileage and climbing, and was about to start some speed work to try to make better time on the event's long climbs. I've invented a tremendous amount of time, effort, and money into this event over the past few years and was really looking forward to a big improvement this year. Instead, I've had to sell my elusive and coveted event registration, and now just hope to be able to volunteer and cheer on my friends who will be riding. With a return to school coming, this was probably my last chance at the event for the next couple of years. Now I'll never know.
Some of this may seem trivial, yet these are each significant elements in my life, and they reflect and influence my sense of self. So now I sit, contemplating these twists and turns, considering the way I live my life and the person that I am and will be in the future. My home is re-arranged to make things easier to manage, and is far less clean and organized than normal. It's been 5 weeks since I felt like I presented the "normal" me to anyone, and it will be at least that many more again until I am not a damaged person in the eyes of others. I don't know yet how long it will be until I can get through a day without feeling impaired or frail.
I guess I could be in a pretty dark place, but I'm not. It's a difficult place, with different challenges and feelings every day, and there are dark moments, but most of the time it's not a dark place. I think the differences have to do with the facts that I see most of this as a process to go through, that there's a solution to be worked out, and that I've had support from friends & family. But still, there are days and nights that just plain suck, and those have had me thinking these concepts of pain and suffering.
I know that a lot of this is nothing compared to what many people go through. But it wasn't my fault, and I am going through my share. If that makes me a victim, then I guess that's a component to my personality and identity that I'll have to adjust to. And our system does allow for some forms of restitution, and I've begun that process. Even using the phrase "my lawyer" sounds utterly foreign to me, but I've retained one to help me through this. It will be interesting to see how it all works out.
I just hope the Klingons are well-insured.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)