Blog

Showing posts with label scary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scary. Show all posts

Worst Fear Realized: Elevator Edition

Tuesday, July 8, 2025 | 0 Comment(s)

If there was one series on this blog that I would love NOT to extend - it is the worst fear realized series. Previous editions have included needles in my eye, dental picks, a volcanic stye, and being enrolled to teach a class at a university that had let me go 2 years prior! All major hoots. 

In terms of content warnings, if you are already scared of elevators, maybe this isn't the post for you. With that said . . .

A bit of parallel history that informs the upcoming situation. 

Sigmund Freud died in 1939. I use this fact as gentle support for the thesis that Psychology as a science started to take off in and around the late 30's and 40's. There was a big and increasingly relevant war that happened about the same time. Brutalist architecture became popular in the 1950s. Post war, in an effort to conserve materials, buildings "showcase[d] the bare building materials and structural elements over decorative design.[6][7] The style commonly makes use of exposed, unpainted concrete or brick, angular geometric shapes and a predominantly monochrome colour palette." (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brutalist_architecture#History). That's a fancy way of saying they erected plain grey block-shaped concrete monstrosities with little to no lasting visual appeal. 

Because of the co-evolution of Psychology and Brutalism's popularity, most university Psychology buildings can be identified by their blockiness, jail-like presence, and lack of access to windows that open (not sure why this last point is true - but I have found it to be so). Boston College's Psychology building is a bit more modern, hailing from 1968, and mercifully with the 60's came windows you can fully open and close. Posh. Still, that's a 50+ year old space. Without disclosing any college secrets, this building is a part of the group of edifices the university hopes to refurbish or replace in the not too too distant future. (I think that's vague enough). The last, very important, detail you should know is that the University replaced the two elevators in my building last summer, but this story comes from the Spring prior to their replacement. 

The Emergency Room

Thursday, March 5, 2020 | 0 Comment(s)

I ended up in the Emergency Room this past Friday, and I don't even have a good reason why.

That's obviously a partial lie. What I mean to say is I didn't get doored, or finally get into that road rage street brawl we all know is just a matter of time. That said, my Adam's apple did swell up to the size of a baseball/softball, and that's not good. Turns out, it's not "that bad" if the cause of said swelling can be located with imaging. So my PCP sent me for an ultrasound on Friday afternoon. Everyone was pretty sure that my thyroid was to blame, and thyroiditis is eminently treatable, and once you have the diagnosis . . . . all the worry really calms down. Allegedly.

The rare huge-throated Mattibird
At 2pm I head to "the big hospital" to get my ultrasound.

Time stands still in a hospital. Since every problem must be dealt with scientifically and methodically, the only interjections of time are when people are rushed in, when others are rushed to surgery, and the chilling starter's pistol of a patient coding. With life and death so brazenly on display, it's difficult to parse the dramatic change in pacing from the gut punch of watching a person's worst moment fly right past you down the hall.

Worst Fear Realized -- Academic Edition

Thursday, January 9, 2020 | 0 Comment(s)

Those of my loyal readers may remember not too too long ago, about 5 years back, I had my eye sewn shut. It was as bad as it sounds.

Additionally, a few tiny "mishaps" really upgraded my worst fear realized to a level where the only accurate way to describe the circumstances in retrospect is as traumatizing. I feel confident in this assessment in that when I think back to that time I still have a physical reaction of fear, vulnerability, and resentment. In truth, I'm not sure exactly who I resent (probably the doctors who treated the whole ordeal like I was getting my tooth pulled instead of a needle across each eyelid. Anyway, if you want to know more, you can find those "recaps" here, here and here.

Crash Test Dummies

Wednesday, March 9, 2016 | 0 Comment(s)

The pedestrian getting off the PVTA bus didn't even glance at the road before walking. Perhaps this adult sized person, bundled against the wind, was having a flashback to his or her days in elementary school when the vigilant bus driver would unfurl the flashing STOP sign in order to assure safe passage. Unfortunately for everyone, this a public bus, sans signage.

Additionally, the bus was pulled over into a designated bus stop outlet, which allowed traffic to freely flow in both directions. So, when this passenger exited the bus and immediately began to hustle across the street, cars flowed in both directions. This pedestrian acted immune to the consistent smushability of the human body.

The saving grace for our capricious Frogger was that he or she dashed into traffic within the confines of a crosswalk. In Massachusetts, crosswalks are a Big Deal. Capital B, capital D. If you fail to stop for a pedestrian in a crosswalk, no matter what happens, it will be considered completely your fault. Unless otherwise dictated by a traffic signal, crosswalks are considered the Holy Land of pedestrian safety. Inside their boarders, no harm shall be done. And so it was written.

And while, legally speaking, crosswalks may serve to protect pedestrians from vehicular manslaughter, those thick white lines are not, literally speaking, a forcefield.  Which is to say that if a speeding piece of rolling metal were to come in contact with the delicate musculature of a human spine, even while basking in the holy light of the hallowed crosswalk, you dead. Dee Eey Dee, Ded. Maybe you'll get an extra shiny halo in heaven, but not in the morgue.

Slow Fisting the News: Drinking Water Edition

Monday, August 4, 2014 | 0 Comment(s)

I love these news reports more than all others.  I actually light up when I see headlines such as the one that lined the top of my nbcnews.com screen today:  "Drink Up? Toledo Mayor Says Water Now Safe After Scare"

Check it out.

This news report makes my insides go "yesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyes."

Why you ask?  Because this is the absolute ultimate "put your money where your mouth is" situation for a public figure.  More accurately, it is the perfect "put your mouth where your rhetoric is" situation.

"Hey mister Toledo Mayor.  How you doin? Cool cool. What's that? The water which you recently called toxic and asked just under a half-million people to avoid drinking or bathing in is now, like, totally safe.  That's cool. That's cool.  Here's the thing though Mr. Mayor.  I'm still freaked the fuck out.  You know, about the toxic, potentially poisonous, water that recently had our whole county in a clusterfuck to visit relatives.  Soooooooo, if you wouldn't mind . . . hows about stopping by the house this Wednesday and just downing a glass or two from my tap.  You know, just to be sure.  What's that? Not enough time to come to everybody's house.  Understandable, understandable.  How about we pick one lower-middle class household at random, and you can do a mini-press conference there, showing everybody how safe the water is now by chugging a liter of it on camera for all Toledoans to see! It will be a public relations coup!  Unless that is . . . you're reluctant to drink up?  You're not scared to drink the water you just declared safe right? Cause . . . that would be pretty screwed up.  A public relations nightmare."

"Looks like it's time to put your mouth where your mouth is and drink up or shut up."

Good Morning Baltimore: Please Don't Hurt Me

Wednesday, January 29, 2014 | 0 Comment(s)

Me and seven other bartenders from Massachusetts drove down to Louisville, KY this past weekend, to learn up, purchase, and taste a bunch of Kentucky's Finest Bourbon.  It was a whirlwind trip.  We left Sunday midday for Baltimore, where we planned to visit a "sister" bar for the night before waking up the next morning for a straight shot through West Virginia to bluegrass country.

After the 8 or 9 hour drive into Baltimore, we quickly dumped our gear at the hotel, and walked the two blocks up the street to Alewife: The Bar.  Here is a quick bartender tip.  After being trapped in a dude flavored van for any lengthy period of time, beer tastes amazing.  I would go so far as to say transcendent. Something about the beer not tasting like a combination of Doritos and boy-fart really wets the palate.   Down four beers and you can drown that palate into a submissive ecstasy.  Still fresh at the beginning of our journey, all of us walked toward that light of ecstasy. 

Things got jovial.  We ended up partying with a few bar owners, the staff, and a hammered beer importer. There were smiles flashing across the bar room and a cavalcade of delicious alcoholic beverages being passed around for tasting.  But, as the hours passed into the AM, the reality of the next morning's drive began to settle in. In order to be some form of human being in the van the next day, my friend Tom and I decided to walk home from the bar together about 45 minutes before the rest of our party.

Now here is where I tell you that I don't know Baltimore worth a damn.  I haven't even seen The Wire.  But from its reputation alone, I have heard many a tale of tough-streets, high crime, and if I were pressed to define the denizens of Baltimore into one stereotypical adjective, I would go with 'gritty'.  

As a rule, I generally believe all of these reputation-based judgements about a city to be completely full of donkey poop.  You can't reliably summarize an entire race, religion, or ethnicity, so it follows that you can't capture the essence of a cosmopolitan community with a compilation of news reports.  So, while I left the bar that night with a friend, I was not initiating any volitional buddy system.  But as we exited the bar and our feet hit the pavement, I was grateful Tom was there.  We were greeted by a flurry of blue and white lights stationed between us and our beds for the night.

I won't say the smattering of police cars and various other emergency vehicles sobered me up . . . but they certainly drew my focus back toward that line.  Tom and I took our first steps toward the hotel as we grappled to make sense of the conflagration in front of us.  There was a stretcher in the street.  That much was obvious.  Whoever was on that stretcher was not in good shape.  We scanned the area around the stretcher and blood spatterings were apparent all over the pavement around the medics.

As we inched closer, a young black couple came out of the building to our left.  While they aren't in a moving vehicle, they were most certainly and unabashedly rubber-necking.  "We heard gun shots!," the young lady proclaims.  They remark that despite Baltimore's tough reputation, this kinda thing doesn't happen that often.


That's what they all say.

Our lighthearted banter regarding the tragedy unfolding around us was interrupted by the yelling of young black man admonishing the police to do their jobs.  He screams, "That guy is shot, man.  Do your jobs.  Do your fucking jobs."  The man was so upset that he threw his cell phone to the pavement with full baseball-like force.  It shattered.  He screamed one last time as the white police men told him "I don't care about that.  I don't care about that."  The screaming man picked up the main piece of his cell phone and spiked it a second time on the pavement.

I definitely can't figure out exactly what's what and whose to blame.  I'm getting fragments of a conversation in the aftermath of a situation I wasn't present for.  While their words could be taken straight out of a bad cops TV show dealing with race relations, I'm far too removed, and terrified, to attempt to place blame in the moment.  

The problem we're having is that this crime scene is so expansive, that there really isn't any way for us to go around it.  I gather up all of my sense of white entitlement and walk toward the cops who are both in the middle of the street, and simultaneous a distance away from both the red pavement and the police interactions with the none to pleased public they are serving.  In what amounts to a 13-year-old Japanese girl version of my own English voice I ask the cop, "Excuse me officer, but which is the best way for my friend and I to proceed across the street."

I'm not sure the cop even looked at me.  That's not true.  The cop didn't look at me.  To him I was a piece of the backdrop, like any other building, parked car, or empty bag of potato chips on the sidewalk; Except I could talk.  "Over there," he quipped out the side of his mouth, pointing to the nearest opposite corner.  In honesty, I knew that was where we were headed, but I wanted to be damn sure I got the verbal go ahead before any sudden movements.

Mentally scarred, Tom and I arrived back at the hotel.  I sent a quick text off to the rest of our party to alert them to the fracas outside the bar.  Forty-five minutes later, the rest of our party comes walking down from a parallel street, which is crime scene adjacent.  We all meet in front of the hotel lobby and begin to exchange the details of what we just saw.   As we are convening, a woman from down by the street calls up to us to get our attention.  When we turn she yells, "Did you see that! Did you see that! That was my cousin.  My cousin.  He got shot 7 times! 7 times!"  She doesn't say by who and she doesn't even wait for a formal response.  She just keeps cruising down the street, obviously distressed.

The eight of us all looked at each other, those who were smoking dutifully extinguished their cigarettes, and we all quietly walked inside to the relative safety of our hotel.  And, after just 12 hours in the city, if pressed I'd still have to say that Baltimore was . . . gritty.  
___________________
Here is the extremely vague news report about the shooting. They say that one bullet grazed the back of a guy's head.  They don't, however,  mention where the other bullets ended up.

Eyemagedon: How I became a Cyclops -- Part I

Tuesday, May 14, 2013 | 2 Comment(s)

I can't, in good conscience, tell you to read this post.  This post, still unwritten, is the ghost pepper of modern literature.  For those of you who don't know what a ghost-pepper is, I will enlighten you.  A ghost-pepper is the hottest mother-f'n hot pepper there is (though I am sure that by now there is a new, even hotter pepper that someone will inform me of in the comments).  When I even look in the general direction of a ghost pepper, I begin sweating.  Furthermore, on my recent trip to Seattle, I voluntarily sampled what I would describe as "one-pixel" worth of a ghost pepper.  I almost, despite my lactose intolerance, chugged straight from a gallon of milk.  Ghost Peppers: One Pixel Packs a Punch.

Why am I telling you all this?  Well, there are two types of people in the world: The sane ones, who can't for the life of them imagine why we would waste the energy to both grow and harvest these death peppers, and the damaged ones, who essentially play taste-bud limbo, eating increasingly hotter foods in an attempt to sear their inner child.  And these people really do seeeeeeeeeem to enjoy it (I don't trust them.  I think anyone who acts like they are enjoying ghost peppers are actually part of an elaborate plan to make me try more of that wildfire).  "Flavorful," they say.  That's like enjoying the taste of "campfire," but whatever.

If you are a sane one, this post may be too much for you.  Everything will be 100% true, and I will obviously attempt to make you laugh at my pain, but nonetheless, some fairly horrid shit went down in the region of my eye these past few Monday's, and I don't want anyone biting down on this ghost pepper without fair warning.

If you are damaged, say like a surgeon or EMT or someone in another potentially life-saving occupation, prepare to enjoy a thoroughly unclinical look into the mind of a thoroughly abused human headlight.
_____________________
Monday, April 29, 2013

I have an appointment with my optometrist, who specializes in corneas.  My vision in my right eye has been blurry for some time now, but about a week ago a huge sty began growing on my lower inner right lid, so I was fairly certain that a great big eye zit couldn't be helping my vision situation.

I never wait very long in the waiting room.  I'm not sure if this is because I seem to be the only non-octogenerian that goes to this particular office, or because my father is a local oncologist, and no one but no one wants to get on an oncologist's bad side.  You'll have to trust me on this.  There is a good healthy fear in the medical community toward oncologists.  Nobody wants to have to cash in that particular favor, but they all seem acutely aware that they or someone they love might have to some day.  I often wonder if it is only because of my particular vantage point of "oncologist's son," that I see this behavior.  Regardless, it's still not worth the lifelong fear of tumors growing everywhere on your body.

When the doctor's assistant brings me into what I've come to know as the "first room," I am not completely emotionally prepared for the upcoming moment which will change the course of my coming  weeks.   I cover my right eye.  I read the bottom line.  Then I read the line two below the original string of letters.  I'm impressive.  The assistant is a little impressed.  "20-15," she says.  "Nice," I reply.

Now cover your left eye.  I grimace internally.  She moves the lines of letters back to their original position.  In my head, I know what the string of letters I am expected to read are: A J K E M.  But any impulse to recite these letters by memory is thwarted by the fact that I can't even see that there are letters on the board.  There are just a few blurry lines.  She clicks the letters in the opposite direction.  I know, intellectually, that they are now getting bigger.  I squint.  "Still nothing."  She keeps clicking.

You know, back in the old days, they used to have those charts with capital E's facing different directions.  You would tell the doc which direction the E opened.  Was it backwards, on its front like a table, or laying it's back?  On the top of said E chart there sat a big ol' jumbo E.  Almost always, it was huge and bold and sitting in the classical frontward E position.  The medical assistant turned that projectors crank until alone sat one big giant bold jumbo E.

I squinted.  And through my squint I could reasonable enough make out that that was an "E."  I told her so, but she saw me squint.  She saw that this was not a no-brainer of an E, but rather the beginning of my visual field.  She was the opposite of impressed.  "That one's 20-2400."  I wish she hadn't said that. Considering that legally blind is having 20/200 vision in your best seeing eye, telling a person their vision is 20-2400 is stating the obvious that your eye is busted.  While the lights may be on (so, not what I'm come to understand as "blind blind"--which until recently seemed incredibly redundant to me), you'll never be able to tell whose at the door.

She then took me to the second room.  This was the room where you saw the doctor.  That said, the mood had unmistakably changed. The witty tête-à-tête that we had been exchanging right around the words "20-15," had disappeared in the wake of much larger numbers.  The vibe was unmistakably more "bad-newsy."  Like that moment in a TV show when the surgeon comes out to the waiting room and hasn't said anything yet, but the family kinda knows it isn't going to be good news.  It was a stinky fart vibe.  She knew it stunk, and therefore stopped making as much direct eye-contact with me.

The doctor came in and asked how I was doing.  I told him that I had this stye and I had been putting warm compress on it, but that the process of compressing seemed to be further irritating the rest of the eye.  A Catch-22 of eye health.  He nodded and said, "Well, we'll be able to help relieve that stye here today . . . but more importantly it really looks like your vision isn't coming back in that right eye.  I think I'm going to recommend a tarsorrhaphy be performed."

He said tarsorrhaphy the way I say, "I'm going to get FroYo."  I felt the same way I did when my friends in Public Health reference far off cities and then are stunned to find out I don't know that Sikasso is the second largest city in Mali. The difference in my current situation, of course, was that the tarsorrhaphy was going to be happening to my face.  Thus my follow up question to the doc, "Um . . . what is a tarsorrhaphy?"  I would love to tell you that I said something cooler like "what the hell is a tarsorrhaphy?" or "Tarsorrhaphy, I hardly know Ye!"  But that was not the mood in the room.  Fear, actual fear, an emotion I spend very little time with (fear is different from anxiety), was beginning to seep out of my gut, headed northward.

Tarsorrhaphy (n.): Tarsorrhaphy is a rare procedure in which the eyelid is partially sewn together to narrow the opening.

He said, "they're going to sew the outside of your eyelid together."

The fear inside me drank a Red Bull. It got wings.  It took off up my throat.

"But for today (he changes the subject as quickly as possible), let's try to help that stye."

He asks the nurse for a syringe filled with some liquid which forces the stye to pop and expel its grotesquery, relieving the pressure in the eye.  For a moment my attention is redirected, and I begin wondering why he hasn't done this procedure to my previous eye zits.  The nurse with the needle enters the room.

"No no," says the doctor, "I need a needle half that size.  I don't want to put it into his brain."

Ha mother-fucking ha.

Great, I think, another needle headed towards my eye.  (Previous experiences can be read here and here.) A new chapter of "Worst Fear Realized except now we are about to enter the front of the tunnel marked "Worse than Your Worst Fear's Nightmare."  This tunnel, incidentally, is a week long -- and instead of light at the end of it, my eye gets sewn shut.  Foreshadowing.

I'm sitting on the prototypical eye doctor chair.  It has a separate head piece which connects to the body of the chair via a flat metal bar.   The doctor tells me to lay my head back on the headrest and remain very still.  (NO SHIT! There is a needle coming at my face.  The "remain still" command is the picture of redundancy.)

I feel the needle enter my eyelid and the pain is sharp but not extreme.  It is not a searing pain, but like a large pinprick.  He holds it there.

Then, the headrest comes loose and falls back about 3 inches.

I'll write that again so you can soak in the terror of those words.

Then, with the needle still in my eyelid, the headrest comes loose and falls backward 3 inches.

I can't say what my expression looked like, but inside my body went to full-Defcon 1, red-alert, fight-or-flight, kill-or-be-killed panic-mode.  The doctor and nurse's faces, however, seemed incredibly nonplused.

WHY!?!?

"That wasn't you, that was the headrest," says the doc.  "No shit," I think, adding (to myself) "Might wanna get that thing checked out!"

Unfortunately, he hadn't relieved the stye yet.  The needle has to go back in.  "Here we go again," he says, as I now focus every cell in my body into both remaining absolutely motionless while putting the minimal amount of pressure possible on the head"rest."

While the relief of a stye feels incredible, it is messy.  It is a statement to my mental space at that point, that the resulting money-shot across my eyeball was the least disturbing part of this particular visit to the optometrist.

The stye alleviated, I quickly turned my attention back toward the surgical appointment that seemed to be getting scheduled in the back rooms while all this happening.  The procedure, he tells me is minimally invasive and the necessary next step to trying to get clarity back to my cornea.

"Unfortunately," he continues, "the clarity of the cornea is no longer the only issue we are dealing with. at the moment."

I can't believe he just started another sentence with "unfortunately."  I am currently existing in a state of total misfortune, and the idea that there is more bad news is pushing me towards either comatose or panic attack.

"It seems that your cornea, along with being occluded, is also no longer the correct shape."  He explains to me that the outside walls have thinned (as a mutual result of lasik eye correction years ago and rubbing more recently), and the current shape resembles more of a nipple instead of a crescent.  (The word nipple has never sounded less sexy before).  My next doctor would describe this same corneal issue as the cornea misshaping like in a Dali painting.  I prefer the nipple analogy.

"Well, what do we do about that," I heard myself say.

The reply was not the usual doctoral 'you get this malady, so you do this remedy' reply.  It was more wistful, full of wiggle-room.  He made clear that he won't know exactly what's to be done until he can see what my cornea looks like when its intact, post eyelid closure.  That said, there were a few potential procedures to be done.   One he mentioned, is not yet FDA approved in the United States, but is approved in Europe.  It involves bombarding the damaged cornea with UV rays to cause it to defend itself by regenerating.  Pretty futuristic stuff.  Like all futurist stuff, there is a guy who does the procedure in Connecticut.

The procedure we are trying to avoid, he tells me matter-of-factly, is a corneal transplant.  He does say that on some level, while a worst case scenario, with a new cornea my vision would be immediately better.

This doesn't feel comforting.  In the past 15 minutes I have had a needle in my eyelid twice and was told they will be sewing my eye shut (partially--but still).  The fact that the idea of removing an entire component of my eye and replacing it is on the list of potential solutions makes me more sad than comforted.

As I left the office, all of the questions which I'm sure you must have right now had not yet entered my consciousness.  I was in shock, both from the experience that had just occurred and the news I had been given.  "Could I just wear a patch?" "How long would they sew my eye closed for?" "What are the other potential Step 2's?"

All of those questions did their laps in my mind later that night, while I pretended to sleep.  What was first and foremost in my own mind was that there was no way to get around the fact that I was blind in my right eye.

When you are having vision problems, there is always an optimism that when you wake up the next morning you'll be able to see a bit more, a bit clearer.  And this feeling that it would get better had stretched itself over the course of at least a month at this point, holding myself at arm's length from the disillusionment of my own weakness.  My denial simply could no longer exist in the face (pun) of the upcoming surgery.

Additionally, in admitting my blindness to myself, it also meant that I had to tell my wife and family the extent of visual degeneration.   As asking for help is generally something I need help doing, admitting weakness to those I love was one of the more humbling and rewarding pieces to this whole eyemagedon.

And to think, it had just begun.