Saturday, April 1, 2023

No One Sees Me!


Back in September I had thumb surgery on my dominate hand---both hands actually but only one is bothering me now. It’s been bothering me since my first fall between Christmas and New Years and about the time I decided I needed to see my surgeon about it I fell the second time and all thoughts of my hand went by the wayside. Yes, heavy drugs and broken ribs trumped losing the pincer grip and fine motor skills in my thumb. I’ve dropped a few drinking glasses and I struggle to pick up mahjong titles or pills and buttoning clothing is a struggle. The bottom line my thumb is swollen and hot all the time and after viewing my x-rays the doctor says I have Skier’s Thumb also known as Gamer’s Thumb. "Oh goody," says the old woman who is sick of acquiring new aches and pains. My doctor described it as a “floating bone attached to a pulley (the ligment) that needs to go back on the other side of the joint.” See the x-ray up above..

Obviously you don’t have to ski or be a gamer to get this condition. It usually happens in a fall where you are griping a stick---hockey, bat, tennis rack or ski pole---when you go down. In my case during the first fall I tried to hold on a door jam and wrenched my thumb backward. If you're betting I’m headed back to surgery you could be right. My doctor takes the least evasive steps before putting you on his surgical table and in this case that means I’m doing a massive amount of Methylprednisone for a week---to get the swelling down---and I’m wearing a brace that goes half way up my lower arm. I’ll go back in a few weeks and we’ll decide what happens next. The success of this kind of surgery goes down if not performed in a “timely fashion” and I've passed that tipping point. Without surgery the condition will become chronic. "Oh goody," says again the old woman who wistfully wishes she could write a post about an old man who paid off a porn star and goes to jail. Could happen and that would make me as happy as a seagull with a French fry. (I wish I could take credit for that metaphor, but I can't.)

With the surgery my thumb will be immobilized for 5-6 weeks and I won’t get full use of my thumb for 3-4 months. If it was my non-dominate hand it wouldn't be a big deal to live with a thumb you can't trust and it seems petty to sweat such a small thing when others have bigger health issues on their plates. But we each have to play the cards we're dealt. One thing is for sure: I need to buy some plastic drinking glasses.

I also left the doctor’s office with a back brace. During my first fall I ended up with my left lower leg completely black and blue and now it swells occasionally and gives my artificial knee joint a feeling like restless leg syndrome in the evening when I first get off my feet. He took x-rays of my spine and neck and he’s saying the leg issue is my coming from the crushed vertebrates in my lower back. Got three there and one in my neck as well, C-6. We’ve known about them for a long time but he thinks the fall might have agitated them. I hate the looks of that brace but the first time I wore it that night I didn’t get any of the craziness in my leg nor the bedtime needles and pins feeling in my feet that I’ve had for several years. Finger crossed that's repeated in coming nights.

Yesterday afternoon after leaving the doctor’s office I decided to bite the bullet and go down to lunch here on the continuum care campus wearing my wrist and back braces. The back brace goes from under my bra to my waist in front and dips a couple inches below in the back…hard not to notice. Or so I thought. All total I passed by six people in the lobby and we greeted each other and I sat with four others during lunch and not one mentioned the braces! I didn’t even see any eyes wandering over my “accessories.” No one really sees me! The hand brace I could understand no one noticing that because last year between the two trigger thumb surgeries I was in a smaller wrist brace for quite a while. But I’ve never worn a back brace. 

Is everyone just so used to me wearing weirdly out of date clothing that they don’t bother looking below my neck? I was wearing gray pants and a gray top and I tried to decide if others could have thought I was just wearing a too-ugly-to-mention new outfit with a wide black belt. That lovely thing has the feel of a cartoon character’s jet pack strapped to my body only without the cord to pull to take off flying. The hard plastic part has a pocket in it for an ice or heated pad.... "or snacks," says the old woman who went to Traders Joe's today and came home with a bag full of dietary sin.

The Velcro on the wrist brace keeps getting stuck to the side of the back brace and it makes the ripping sound when I pull my arm loose. Tomorrow I'm thinking about going down to lunch to test if others can hear me. It's either that or I'm leaving the back brace in the apartment and just wearing it when I'm at home because it's truly an ugly accessory and my natural body is fat enough.

I'll end this post with a tip on how to get lint out of the hooked side of Velcro. (My Velcro quickly filled up with pink bathrobe fuzz.) Their website says to use an old tooth brush and it works well but I feel like I need to slap a label on it, to explain to my nieces why they'll find a tooth brush on my computer desk after I die. It's the handiest place to delint the Velcro on my braces during the "find my muse time" when I'm trying to write a blog. ©


32 comments:

  1. Yuck! I'm so sorry! 😣 Best wishes and fingers crossed.
    ---Cheerful Monk

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    1. The only way to look at is I way lucky I didn't break an arm or leg or my hip.

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  2. A fine-toothed comb brushed in short, hard strokes works better to clean the Velcro for me. We have a Great Pyr mix who is blowing her coat for the summer, and I went through several methods via YouTube videos before I found something that would work. In my old lady version, it's degenerative scoliosis and advanced degenerative disc disease that so many of us have that's causing me problems. It hurts my image of myself as someone who deals with pain well to know that many people have the same thing and experience no pain. What indignities we go through to deal with it, though, right? One of my daughters had Scheuerman's disease as a young teen--true hunchback or kyphosis. In those days, she was put in a total back breast from collar bone, then via metal rods down front and back and a hard plastic molded-to-sort-of-fit her ribcage and hips brace. She found those years that if she just acted as if it was normal to be wearing that monstrosity, people forgot she was wearing it. When I get to feeling too sorry for myself, I remember her experience. She was a competitive gymnast and had to wear the brace night and day except when showering and in gymnastic six days a week. (At meets, other horrified parents would see her take off her brace and line up with teammates to come onto the mats and seek me out, asking if she'd "done that" in gymnastics. Her orthopedic surgeon thought that doing all those tumbling runs was the best bone building exercise he could prescribe. Now, she works out every day to keep her back muscles strong so that they support her bones and she doesn't have pain any longer. I don't think her remedy will work for either of us, though, will it? Tumbling runs are beyond both of us. You call your thumb a little thing, but you're reminded of it every time you do anything. Plus, you, like so many of us, must be just done with doctors and surgeries and braces and the whole thing. So sorry you're going through all this.

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  3. I see that I again commented about my daughter's experience as "Anonymous."

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    1. Your daughter is amazing to go through all that and not let it slow her down from doing what she loved. And to grow up and be able to keep the pain away speaks of her dedication to a life style that makes that possible. Not everyone could do that. She must make you very proud.

      I read about lice combs working well on Velcro, too. Velcro is great but it does loss it's power if it gets too full of crap which I'm sure you've known far longer than me.

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  4. I'm glad you've found an apparatus that will help you. Perhaps your lunch and dinner companions feel the same and are also well-mannered enough not to mention your braces. They probably know how you've been feeling lately and don't want to add to your angst.

    My 92-year old mother constantly says that getting old isn't for sissies (her repetition is mostly due to her Alzheimer's, LOL), and it definitely isn't. But I think I'd rather have my body wear out before my mind, if I had the choice.

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    1. You could be right about why no one mentioned the braces. I've been down to a meal since I wrote this but I left the back brace in the apartment and a couple did mention the hand brace.

      "Growing old is not for sissies" is similar to what I used to say often about taking care of my husband." Caregiving is not for sissies." Every so often someone here will say growing old is not for sissies. It's a version of what Bette Davis is credited with saying, "Old age ain't no place for sissies!"

      What would you rather lose first your mind or your body has been debated here a few times. You can usually tell by the activities each of us chooses which way we'd answer. There are a couple of people here who literally do all the exercise classes, every day and others like me who prefer the mind expanding and mental exercising activities.

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  5. After reading your post I'm sitting here, trying to imagine not having full use of my dominant thumb. I know it is temporary (fingers crossed-no pun intended), but I honestly can't imagine. On the other hand, it sounds like your doctor has a plan. I don't relish going to the doctor, but I am so thankful for them--especially when they know what they're doing.

    Back pain is rough, too. I am glad you have a back brace, especially since it is helping you to sleep better. When you said no one said anything about your braces, I was sort of surprised, but as someone has already mentioned, your friends and neighbors at the ccc might want to let you be the first one to talk about them. If that's the case, then I'm impressed with their sensitivity to give each other time and space.

    Jean, I sure do hope that the days, weeks and months will bring healing to you. Heck, you've got stuff to do!!!!

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    1. I've been trying to do as much stuff with my non-dominate hand as I can but it's hard to break a life long habit. Certain things like grocery shopping I absolutely have to wear the brace. Forgetting just once not to grab for a milk carton or can could end up stressing the joint even more and dropping what I tried to pick up.

      The back brace (or something else) is helping me sleep better and longer! I'm happy about that.

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  6. I'm so sorry you have more medical issues to deal with. My Aunt's expression was, "the golden years are tarnished!"
    So the back brace can't go under your top? I wear lots of sweatshirts and loose t-shirts so that's what made me wonder.

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    1. I got it under a few things but it makes me look like a barrow, so I'd rather wear it outside.

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  7. Well, I wish I'd known about that toothbrush thing a year or so ago when my breathing vest velcro got gunky and I had to keep closing it tighter and tighter (which didn't make it fit right). Otherwise, it kept popping open. Anyway, now I have a new and improved vest with no velcro, so it's OK but it would have been nice to know.

    On the main front -- I'm so sorry to hear about your hand -- and dominant, too. Looks like we'll make a leftie out of you yet. Time to start painting abstracts with a watercolor pan so you don't have to open tubes. That sounds awful and terribly uncomfortable, but then so does the back. Can you wear the back brace under your clothes -- at least under a baggy top, even if the bottom part in back sticks out? It might be worth it because you spend a lot of time out of your apartment! Hang in there, friend. You've got this....

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    1. Can you imagine all the perfectly good shoes, coats and braces etc that got replaced when they didn't need to be. I'm surprise the Velcro cleaning tip isn't more well known. The more stuff you get in them the less they work.

      I'm already a leftie so I'm practicing being right-handed. Funny you should mention abstracts. That's exactly what I was thinking. Although the swelling is down enough that I could probably hold a brush.

      I tried the back brace under clothing and I decided I just won't wear that in public. Next time I go back to the bone doctor I'll ask what's the maximum and minimum number of hours a day that I should wear it. I'm home more hours than I'm out so I'm hoping it's enough to do its job. Just finished the prescription so it's too early to tell if I'm don't better because of that or the brace.

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    2. Did you sign up for Sketchbook Revival this year? There were a couple of very interesting abstract workshops. It's not my thing, yet I found myself enjoying those a lot and helping me out of my comfort zone. The workshops are online till April 20.

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    3. No I didn't and it's a good thing I didn't this year because I lost so much time with the fall and aftermath. I've watched them make those abstracts where they pour paint and swirl the canvas. Fascinating but I couldn't live with them on my wall. We had a discussion about them here just a few days ago where someone swore the shapes all had meanings like angels and creatures and were intentional.

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  8. Yikes. So sorry to hear about all this! I wasn't aware that you'd had a previous fall before this one. Couldn't find mention of it in your posts from that time. Stay vertical, girl! Sending best wishes...

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    1. I didn't write about the first fall. I was able to get back up on my own and I took a wait and see approach to my leg and thumb injury which both seemed minor at the time. Trust me, I'm learning to walk slower and wait a few minutes after standing up before I take off and quit turning sharply. This summer I plan to use the walker when I'm outside since 3-4 people have fallen here on the sidewalks and got seriously hurt.

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  9. Your thoughts about not being seen go along with conversations I've been having with different people, both younger and older. A young grocery clerk and I had a conversation about my very red hair and her mother's very burgundy hair. When I explained it was one way for old people to be noticed, she laughed and said that was right. Her mother, not as old as me, also gets lots of compliments on her hair, "and she likes that so she keeps coloring her hair." Yes, me, too.

    An older friend was lamenting "disappearing" as she got older, even with a walker. She has let her hair grow white and no longer wears brightly colored clothing. The walker, I fear, makes people look away.

    I'm glad your back brace is helping you feel better, and if no one notices it, maybe they just don't want to know what's going on so they say nothing.

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    1. We do seem to disappear when we get a certain age. We have a couple of red heads here and them seem to be more 'aggressive' about dying their hair than others. I suppose if your hair was the one thing people always noticed you for that makes sense.

      I laughed at your last line. Not asking could be a blessing in that you don't have to keep repeating the same story over and over.

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  10. Or it could be they're noticing the braces and answering their own questions: 'Hmm, Jean must have hurt her back' or 'Guess the thumbs are giving her fits again'. Not many of us get to our 70's without one body part or another causing problems.

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    1. You're probably right. I was just kind of shocked at first because I was so self-conscious of how awful the back brace looked but, really, when I think about it the other ladies who wear them here have good days and bad days and don't wear them all the time.

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  11. Amazing how quickly have the brace helps! Both braces. I had to switch my Dansk dinnerware to Corel ... so light and easier for little boys to handle. Maybe they make tumblers? Or tea bowls to drink from? (I have an aversion to drinking from plastic)

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    1. I bought one at the dollar store that is very narrow at the bottom and gradually tapers up to wide at the time. Harder to slip through my hand I think. If I drop that I'll just drink from cups.

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  12. Tim has surgery on his thumb later this week in order to get movement and function back in it I often wear a shoulder brace

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    1. Hope he has a good prognosis. There sure are a lot of different kinds of braces out there. Have not seen a shoulder brace.

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  13. I do hope that everything Heals satisfactorily, nobody likes the Word "Chronic" to apply to anything Negative.

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  14. I LOVE that no one sees me anymore. Very freeing. Hope you get back to your normal state of health soon, Jean! This has been going on far too long and the good weather is coming!

    Deb

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    1. Interesting point of view on being invisible. I get that when I'm in people watching mode. I think if I'd spent more time pisrocessing after I went to the doctor and before I went out in public around here it wouldn't bother me as much that nobody asked about the braces.

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  15. Ah, I am sorry to hear you are having so many painful injuries! I agree with the others that people probably didn’t want to be nosy? At any rate, I hope the longer days and better weather are cheering for you and you continue to heal. A back brace sounds annoying, but I am sure it beats pain.
    We have had a long winter, or so it seems to me.
    Hope Springs

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    1. I'm pretty much over it now. I was just feeling sorry for myself when I wrote that post. Spring is coming, isn't it. Still wearing my winter coat but at least its trying to warm up.

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  16. My mom had the experience of putting a doorknob between her thumb and forefinger; she was falling, and reached out to steady herself. That worked, but it sure did a number on her thumb. She was in a sling and a brace for some time -- can't remember how long -- but when the ortho asked her what her goal was, she said, "To be able to knit again." I'll be darned if she didn't meet that goal. It surprised her docs a bit, but she was a determined sort. It seems to be that holding a paintbrush might be a somewhat easier goal than knitting -- here's to a fast recovery!

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    1. I'm actually surprised how much more of a gripping power I've got back since the swelling went down. I don't want to lose my ability to hold a sewing needle. I got another quilt in me wanting to come out.

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