Sunday Tribune

I can’t fly… therein lies the rib

Durban POISON

- Ben Trovato

AFEW weeks ago, I wrote about my father’s health travails and now it’s my turn. This is what happens when you get older.

I’m going to be one of those people who, upon being asked “how are you?” will pin you down, at gunpoint if necessary, and tell you in great detail.

I may even use sketches and photograph­s to ensure you get the full picture.

Fortunatel­y, I’m not given to long, lingering illnesses. Get in, get sick, get out. Truth is, I don’t suffer much from poor health at all.

I do, however, suffer from accidents. I have fallen into rivers and off mountains and have been hit by everything from cars to bouncers.

This is why I am not terribly surprised to find myself with three fractured ribs. Disappoint­ed, yes. Filled with self-loathing, absolutely. But not surprised.

Chest injuries were furthest from my mind when a friend called last Friday night and suggested I come around for dinner and other experiment­s.

He fancies himself as something of an amateur scientist. You know the type. Has to understand how everything works. Was always blowing up the school laboratory. Except in this case, it wasn’t his school. Also, it was 3am. And he’d just turned 45.

Dinner was an experiment drawing heavily on his dangerousl­y limited knowledge of plants, liquids and animals and how they react under certain conditions.

He always insists on full audience participat­ion and usually has his guests sign an indemnity form. He used my form to help start the braai.

The problem with home-grown scientists is that they don’t know when to stop. I had a bad feeling about the final experiment of the evening but he shouted me down.

“What can go wrong?” he gibbered. Oh, I don’t know, I could’ve said. One of us might end up with fractured ribs, perhaps?

The body’s hematic system is composed of blood and the vessels that carry it through the body.

On Friday night at approximat­ely 11.45pm, our bloodstrea­ms were made up of water, calcium, globulin, gin, glucose, tequila, potassium, beer, sodium and brandy.

The introducti­on of tetrahydro­cannabinol into hematic systems already heavily contaminat­ed with unstable toxicants was going to be a fascinatin­g experiment.

No, of course it wasn’t. It was an appalling idea from the start.

I don’t know at what point during my departure I decided to dispense with the stairs and simply glide effortless­ly down to my car.

Author Douglas Adams said: “The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.” I clearly have a lot of learning to do.

I woke up in the morning paralysed with pain and waited to die. That didn’t happen.

By Sunday, I was starting to get hungry. Since the hospital was next to the shops, it made sense to stop off there first.

I didn’t want to spend a fortune at Woolworths only to be told there’s a good chance I’d expire before the beef lasagne.

Sunday is a bad day to seek medical attention. Or anything, really. Everyone has the Sunday Fear and nobody is interested in your problems.

I staggered into casualty, clutching my chest and moaning with every step. This, in the eyes of the interested observer, would appear to be a man in cardiac arrest.

In the absence of interested observers, I was given a form to fill in and told to take a seat.

There was a lot of pain below the ribs, which worried me more than the actual chest pain.

Ribs are ridiculous bones. They can make a hell of a fuss, but if you ignore them they pull themselves together sooner or later.

There’s a reason God made women from a rib. I was more concerned about my liver. My best drinking days were still ahead of me and I couldn’t have another large, meaty organ falling into disuse.

I weed in a cup, had blood taken for a liver function test and got X-rays done. The doctor said I had a fracture on the 12th rib, promised to call me in an hour when the results were back and sprinted for her Mercedes.

The next day another doctor looked at the X-rays and said there were fractures on the third and fourth ribs, too. Also on my clavicle. “Is this sore?” she said, whacking me on the clavicle.

Now it is. I had to wee in another cup. Presumably one of the night staff mistook the first one for an energy drink.

Then it was off to radiology for an ultrasound. With my shirt off, I appeared to be in my third trimester.

I joked about my baby while the radiologis­t smeared jelly on my belly, but he did not seem to be in the mood.

 ??  ?? Ben offers himself up to the cause of science… and the medical fraternity has to unravel what went wrong.
Ben offers himself up to the cause of science… and the medical fraternity has to unravel what went wrong.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa