ReZ O. Lution: the rebel inside

who am i anyways?

Thursday, April 27, 2006

It's baaaaaack!

Hello vertigo! So nice of you to drop by again. Why not stay a while and have a cup of coffee? Some cake? Sure, I'll stay home from work and keep you company all week!

It's back with a vengence, folks. And this time, I'm finally doing something about it. Well, ok, this time, I was finally convinced by a caring friend and a worrying mother to do something about it.

After three days of spinning rooms, vomitting, meals consisting of toast and jelly, and literally going blind for a long second and almost passing out in the park, I went to a doctor. Truth be told, I spent 3 hours on Tuesday at Arlington Urgent Care just for them to tell me that I have a stomach bug. If I truly had a stomach bug, wouldn't I be vomitting after I eat and not at random points during the day and night, when there's nothing in my stomach to expel? Minus 5 points for Arlington Urgent Care.

Roz recommended her doctor, and an extra 10 points to them for taking a new patient on the same day. After detailing to the doc everything that had happened to me in February and this week, she asked me a few questions:

Doctor: Did the good doctors at the GW emergency room conduct any tests, such at a CT scan, MRI, or blood work?

Me: No. They just had me lie there until I felt better and sent me home with a prescription.

Doctor: There's no way they could have diagnosed you with loose calcium stones or anything of the sort without it.

Me: Minus 10 points for GW.

Doctor: Did you follow up with any doctor afterwards?

Me: Yes, but they told me there's nothing I could do and that it would pass after a few weeks.

Doctor: No follow-up tests, blood work, etc?

Me: No. Minus 10 points for the old doc.

You see where this is going.

So, after 10 minutes of discussing my symptoms, she checked my ears, my balance, my coordination, and is sending me to get an MRI to check if there are any growths or tumors on my brain causing the imbalance and vertigo. We talked more about the functions of the inner ear, and I learned that this could either be either a tumor, a virus, or just benign positional vertigo, which there is not much that can be done about it. After going over the MRI results and blood work, we'll re-evaluate my options.

Still the overarching question is how to go about my daily routine without letting this get in the way, at least until I have an answer. It's really not so much fun waking up in the middle of the night with the room spinning so fast all around me and then having to wait up to an hour and a half for relief after I throw up. It's not pretty, but I actually feel better afterwards. It's just getting to the point where my body is ready to throw up that takes so long.

So that's my story. With the promise and beauty of spring all around, I'm cooped up in my apartment for fear that I'll get sick outside and not be able to make it back home. Gotta get over that. Just don't yet know how.

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Scary

I've always believed the science behind global warming and really just can't understand why there are so many people out there (including the president of this country) who just cover their ears like little children because they just don't want to hear it.

Al Gore's been talking about this to anyone who will listen. As others have reported, he seems very comfortable in this role and has actually taken this upon himself to educate and make a difference in this area. But if you're actually listening to what he's saying, it's pretty damn scary. If you ask me, we should be waging a global war against global warming, because in the long term, this will end up devastating us in more ways than what we'd like to imagine.

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