I am in a hospital waiting room. My wife is having cataract surgery right now. For the last four hours I’ve been in this crowded holding pen of optical patients where we have been exposed to dangerous quantities of daytime television.
Currently, there is a TV mounted overhead with volume set to “deafen.” We are prisoners, all forced to watch “Live with Kelly and Mark,” where the banter between co-hosts goes like this:
“I’m so glad it’s June.”
“Me too. Does June have 31 or 32 days?”
“It only has 28.”
My wife was nervous about getting surgery this morning. I could tell by the way she was chewing her fingernails when we arrived at the hospital.
My wife is a feisty individual who, aside from being a dedicated fingernail chewer, is not afraid to use strong language during appropriate situations, such as, traffic, national championship games, Bible study, etc.
So when the male nurse, for example, inserted a needle into my wife’s arm, she implied loudly that he had been born to unmarried parents.
After that, we waited for several hours while medical staffers took her vitals, made sure her heart worked properly, examined her blood pressure, and asked vitally important medical history questions, such as, “Will this be a co-pay?”
Then they wheeled her back. I waved goodbye to her.
And now here I am. Waiting alongside other eye surgery candidates. All of whom wear looks of dread on their faces.
I don’t know how anyone could be anything but nervous. So far, we have watched dozens of patients get wheeled into the mysterious back room, then re-emerge after a few hours with bandages, eye patches, groggy looks on their faces, and wearing butt-revealing gowns.
These surgery patients are usually accompanied by escorts who roll them along in wheelchairs. And you can tell the patients are still loopy from medication by the way they affectionately grope their escorts, even if their escort happens to be their spouse.
I do not like hospitals. My current healthcare plan is to remain 2,500 feet away from all medical-care facilities. Because in my experience, whenever you go near a hospital, including to deliver the U.S. Mail, they give you a catheter the size of a fire hose.
A few years ago, I had a minor surgery and I was administered a catheter by a disgruntled nurse named Wilma who had hands like Virginia hams. Wilma was apparently angry with the entire male species, because before she inserted my catheter, she began talking about her ex-husband.
“You wanna know what that FOOL said to me?” said Wilma, as she performed her duties. “Do you KNOW WHAT THAT FOOL SAID TO ME?”
Sadly, I never learned what the “fool said” because I was too busy screaming the Lord’s Prayer.
Although, right now, I’d rather have a catheter installed by Wilma than watch “Live with Kelly and Mark.”
Finally, my wife emerges from the OR. She’s wheeled through the hallway in a chair. She looks tired, and she wears a patch over her eye.
And I’m thinking here of a time, long ago, when they took my wife to the operating room to cut her open because they thought she had cancer. I’m thinking of the way I cried when they took her away from me. I’m thinking of last year, when I had the same sort of biopsy performed on me. I’m thinking of how short life is.
When you’re young, you think life is going to last a lot longer than it actually does.
I hug my wife. I’m just enjoying the essence of her shampoo, and her wonderful smell. And I don’t mean to strive for melodrama, but I love this woman so much it hurts.
“How’d it go?” I ask, squeezing her tightly.
“Ouch!” she says. “Don’t hug me so hard!”
Then she shoves me away and implies that I was born to unmarried parents.
Ah, amor.
Sean, Your love of writing and sharing stories is one of your passions! But it doesn’t hold the smallest candle to your love and devotion to your wife, Jamie! “Gusto” is my word this year……continue to hold on and love her with much GUSTO!!! A happy connected marriage is one of God’s greatest blessings! But you already know that…..
Sean, you did it again. I laughed so much about your comments about hospitals and waiting rooms. BUT, I love the fact that Jamie is you’re person, your one true love. I love that she is such a wonderful, feisty, beautiful, loving and caring woman. God bless you Jamie. I pray you have a speedy recovery ❤️🩹.
❤️💕❤️💕❤️
That’s amore!