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[personal profile] raybear
On Monday I left work a little early, feeling chipper and ready for a fun social evening. While waiting for Madness Librarian to show up for dinner, I felt a stranger tinkering in my body -- my bones started to ache and tiredness spread to the skin, and I knew I was going to get sick. Like, soon. Sure enough, by the end of dinner, I was ready to lie down. Luckily someone was generous enough to stop by with vitamin!water supplies and took care of Sophie so I could stay in bed. I was tucked in and shortly fell asleep. At 4:30 am I woke up, feeling no better. So I went ahead and called in sick to work, turned off the alarm and fell back asleep until approximately 10 am when my visiting nurse came by again.

By the afternoon I started to feel more human but still winded.
By the evening I was ready to go crazy. I was so bored. Thing is, when I'm feeling lazy, it's extremely easy to fill several days with naps and movies and television and magazines and books and videogames. Trouble is, when I'm sick I'm not always feeling simultaneously lazy. So I wanted to meet people for drinks or go to sex workshops or something but I also knew if I did anything too active I might get re-sick. So I took a bath.

This morning I went to the doctor for a blood draw and an injection. One might think I would mention my recent/still slightly current illness to a doctor, but not I. Why bother? I'm sure it's just a virus and/or being ambushed with allergies due to recent weather changes. I had to wait and wait and wait for the doctor to come in my room and stand in my face and ask "how ya doin' buddy?!" and then pat me on the head and send me on my way. All this because I was having blood drawn. If it was just an injection, I could have escaped the office without seeing him. My student doctor was the friendly-enough blonde straight woman, who was coming off as rather prissy today. I really wish I got Dreamboat Student Doc, aka Mark, who [livejournal.com profile] dommeyourass had last week. He walked in while I was sitting in the waiting room. From outside the door I caught his eye and he did the half-smile, eyebrow raise while my stomach got unexpectedly tingly. He came in and said hellohow'sitgoing? and I returned the sentiment. I hoped and hoped and hoped I'd have him, but no such luck. Instead the brief encounter provided nice fodder for the train ride into work, involving my velvety pillow and him blindfolded and in my leather cuffs. Funny, I didn't have a crush on him before, but today I was thinking nothing but dirty thoughts, even while sitting in the exam room on those strange massage-table looking patient benches. The lack of walls didn't deter any of my office-visit fantasies either.

At this point maybe I should mention that all this came after the testosterone was injected into my arm. Probably not a coincidence.

I should probably go to this conference call now.

Date: 2003-05-14 12:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kaileo.livejournal.com
Damn it, why does everyone else get the dreamy [male] doctors? Of all the docs I see in the VA system (GPs, endos, same-day clinics, dental, psych), not a single one of them is daydream material. They're all either matronly, geezerish, or (in two instances) Asian men who are probably intimacy-challenged in the way that many of we Asians are. Feh.

I personally think you're just a hot guy magnet, in general.

Date: 2003-05-14 01:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raybear.livejournal.com
At my last hospital, I was generally the youngest person in the waiting room by at least 40 years, and the doctors weren't too much younger than the patients.

But now I go to this new-agey type clinic that uses lots of med students on rotation, so there will constantly be fresh meat rotating every few months -- highly recommended.

I suddenly feel so dirty. Oh well. I'll chalk it up to patient-empowerment. It's hard to feel intimidated by a medical professional after you've already bent them over in your head.

Date: 2003-05-14 01:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kaileo.livejournal.com
Your experience at your last hospital pretty much sounds like my endo waiting room experience -- it's VA, so there's lots of really creaky old vets there. Most are of the WWII or Korean War era, so I stick out like a sore thumb. They look at me curiously, but it's because I'm a young-looking guy with big hardware in my ears (i.e., it's not about me passing). Occasionally there will be an MTF vet in there, who renders me thankfully invisible.

May 2010

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