pequeña víspera de Navidad

It’s been 9 years and a week since the accident.  On a bike trip in the hill country of Chile on little Christmas eve, a rocky hill presented to be negotiated, little dogs accompanying the locals who came to see the crazy gringos.  When one of those pups ran across my path near the bottom, I hit the brakes and hurdled over the handlebars into the ditch as the bike stayed behind.  That would change my life for at least 6 months, and in some ways longer.  Even when fully recovered, I could not mount a bike without fear and had to cast aside that once treasured pastime (1).  Although my right arm was worthless for 6 months, I never missed a day of work and don’t think I killed anybody.

After I was home for a month or so, Donna, my chief’s secretary, asked if might write a recollection of the experience for RheUMination, our Division’s quarterly magazine.  Even though I chose to respond in verse, she still published it (2).  A certain reader out there has been chiding me about my poetry chops, so this is for her.

There were a couple last lines that didn’t make it in.  I’ve lost the original. But I think it went like this, including the first 2 lines:

“So 3 months into this venture

The numb dumb hand

Still can’t do much

But others have. It’s grand!”

Not an experience I’d care to repeat, for sure.  But nothing makes for a better doctor than becoming a patient, and boy was I. I lost track of how many, but my doc count was well beyond double digits.  Kathy sometimes said I should have declared disability and taken the 6 months off.  I would have gone nuts.  Figuring out the daily challenges of clinical medicine is what used to drive me.  Add the challenges of a chronic injury, and I had my plate full, in an interesting way.  Thank God, it’s all in the past.  But the experience shall forever be with me, and I’ll never look at a weiner dog the same again.

Felice Navidad!

References

  1. Ike B.  Bye, bye, bikes?  WordPress 3/16/20.  https://theviewfromharbal.com/2020/03/16/bye-bye-bikes/
  2. Ike B. Reflections on a cycling excursion in Chile. RheUMinations Spring 2015.

Published by rike52

I retired from the Rheumatology division of Michigan Medicine end of June '19 after 36 years there. Upon hitting Ann Arbor for the second time (I went to school here) it took me almost 8 months to meet Kathy, 17 months to buy her a house (on Harbal, where we still live), and 37 months to marry her. Kids never came, but we've been blessed with a crowd of colleagues, friends, neighbors and family that continues to grow. Lots of them are going to show up in this log eventually. Stay tuned.

One thought on “pequeña víspera de Navidad

  1. I’ve been over my handle bars 4 times that I can recall. It’s a bad fish-out-of-water feeling. Once I did a head plant, trifurcated my helmet and had shooting paresthesias down arms. Another time I pulled my left hip out of place, which eventually led to xrays and a THR. A third was at Tahoe. Jammed my ribs with the handle bars so hard I thought my ribs were fractured, but xrays showed nothing. The fourth time was injury free.

    Anyways….my sympathies. The center of gravity for us taller guys is ridiculously high.

    D

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