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Author Topic: Bob's Blog 8-2-14: Change the World, Just Don't Change My Chair  (Read 2371 times)
BobN
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« on: August 02, 2014, 02:03:10 AM »

Bob Here.

A while back, when I was still doing in-center hemodialysis treatments, I asked my attendant to shift the angle of my chair.

She gave me a look that was one-part confusion and two parts annoyance.  It wasn't that busy in the center, but since she couldn't see any obvious reason why I needed to change the angle of my chair, she probably assumed that this was part of yet another of my thoughtless, imprudent, ill-advised, reckless, rash, irresponsible, ludicrous capers that I was known to use to pass the time on one of these seemingly interminable sessions.

Not that it wasn't logical, or even expected, of her to think this way.  The previous week, I got in one of those moods and intentionally dragged her into a mind-numbing exchange that went something like this:

Me:  "Do you think my time would go faster if I played some music on my guitar?"

Her:  [Vacant stare] "You have to keep your right arm immobile so how are you going to do that?"

Me:  "Yeah, you're probably right.  Maybe my harmonica would be better."

Her:  [Slight pause] "Do you play your guitar often at home?"

Me:  "No.  I don't have a guitar."

Her:  [Rolls eyes, turns to walk away.  Stops, turns around]  "Do you have a harmonica?"

Me:  "Well...no."

Anyway, she apparently decided that she didn't have time for any of my nonsense and just came over to accede to my request.  She undid the wheel locks and asked which way I wanted it turned.

"Just a little bit to the right," I said.

So, she started moving my chair.

"Little more, little more, ah, little too much, go back a little, yeah.  There we are.  Perfect.  Thanks."

She rolled her eyes, re-did my locks, and made a beeline to get away from me.  But, when she reached the nurse's station about ten feet away, she stopped cold, and looked back.  Of course, I had gone back to reading my book and was acting like nothing had happened.

She came storming back over.

"Okay, I'm probably going to regret this, but I have to ask.  Why did you need the angle of your chair changed??"

Now I adopted the confused look.  "Huh?" I said.

She stomped her feet a little.  "You never watch TV, the light isn't any better now.  And I know you don't want to socialize with anyone.  So, why?  Why the chair shift?"

"Oh," I said.  "Well, my chair was angling a little too far to the left.  I usually get it exactly right before I sit down.  But, I must have messed up today."  Then I casually went back to reading.

"That's it?" she asked.  Then she did a passable imitation of me.  "'My chair was angling a little too far to the left.'  Nothing else?"

"Nope.  That's it."

She turned to walk away again.  I said, "Seriously.  I need my chair to be at just the correct angle.  The light, the air, my view of the other patients.  And staff.  And the entrance.  It has to be just so, or I can't function.  If my chair was off, I'd probably have to step outside."

She snorted a little.  "So you're saying you're a hopeless creature of habit?"

I considered that for a moment.  Then I said, "Yeah.  I guess that's what I'm saying."

Now, it didn't occur to me at the time, but I was really speaking for the great majority of dialysis patients.  We are creatures of habit.  We almost have to be.

Dialysis is so incredibly routinized and repetitive that even if it wasn't our nature in our pre-kidney failure lives, being on dialysis transforms us into such creatures of habit that anything disrupting our normal procedure is enough to make us take a nose dive off the deep end of the sanity spectrum.

And, in-center patients really get their routines drilled home.  You have to be there at a very specific time three times per week.  No ifs, ands, or buts, your butt has to be there.  Now, of course, you can try the mostly futile attempt to change your schedule, but centers these days are generally booked solid, so changing isn't always possible.

Bad weather?  Tough, be there on time.

Good weather that you might want to...you know...enjoy?  Hah.  Be there on time.

Got family coming in that you want to greet on arrival?  Nertz to you.  Be there on time.

You probably get the picture.

And, trust me, this habitualism can get so psycho that your chair being at the wrong angle can indeed send you into a complete tailspin.

Now, a psychiatrist would probably say that following set schedules is healthy, that we learn from our routines.  If you walk into a closed door and bang your head, next time, you'll know to open it first.  And, of course, in the case of dialysis, messing up and missing treatments can have dire consequences.

But, since the chair-angle incident, I've had the opportunity to observe this trait in other patients.

One time, a long-time patient came in on the third shift, and there was someone else in his normal chair.

(Honest, this was years before Sheldon on The Big Bang Theory.)

This guy actually went up to the patient and said, "You're in my chair."

The guy, who I think was visiting from out of town, just looked totally confused, and the best he could utter was a "What?  Whattayamean??"

Then the nurse came running over to steer the established patient to another station before a brawl broke out, ensuring him that he would have his normal chair back the next time.

He reluctantly sat down, muttering the whole time and flashing the intruder with the occasional dirty look.

At some point in our dialysis regimen, we get to where we patients want our setups, needle sticks, taping, checking of vitals, treatment environment, personnel, and other seemingly minute details all done a very specific way.

I was sitting in-center peacefully one day.  Everything was going fine, all the other patients had been put on and the center was quiet.

All of a sudden, the guy across from me started yelling.

"Oh crap...OH CRAP..."

Of course, when you hear this in a dialysis center, you always fear the worst.  The nurses, attendants, social worker, dietician, and everybody shy of the dentist whose office was next door went running over.

"What's wrong??" asked the nurse in a bit of a panic.

"She forgot to tape the arterial line to my arm!!"

At that point, it was like looking at a staff photograph of everyone working in the center.  They were all standing completely still, staring at the guy in disbelief.

Now, you have to understand, his needles were in no danger of coming out, they had been taped thoroughly.  But he was used to having his arterial line taped to his arm and for whatever reason, it hadn't been done.

"That's what you were yelling about?" asked the nurse.

"Heck yes," he said.  "Whatever happened to the standards here?  This place is like an insane asylum run by the Mickey Mouse Company."

Most of the staff slowly went back to whatever they were doing a little shell-shocked.  Meanwhile, the nurse quickly slapped another piece of tape on the guy and walked away shaking her head.

Another guy only wanted the Charge Nurse dealing with his needles and treatment.

Now, everybody on the Big D knows how busy these charge nurses are.  In addition to being responsible for every patient in the center, they have to deal with an ever-increasing mountain of paperwork as part of their jobs.

But when an attendant came over to put this guy on, he said something like, "I'd rather set my underwear on fire while I'm still in it than let you put those needles in my arm."

He insisted on having the charge nurse, a woman named Teri (who was, by the way, a gift from God), start, maintain, and finish his entire session.

So, Teri came out, calmly explained why it wasn't possible for her to give him the kind of one-on-one attention he desired.  Then she put his needles in and started his treatment.  She asked if he understood her position and, seemingly placated, the guy said, "Yes.  I understand.  Thank you very much."

Of course, a few minutes later his machine alarm went off, startling him.

He yelled at the top of his lungs, "TERI!!!"

Some habits, it seems, truly can't be broken.

Thanks for reading.  Take care.
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www.bobnortham.com
Author of The ABC's of the Big D: My Life on Dialysis
Bob's Prescription for Living With Dialysis:
Follow Your Recommended Diet and Especially Watch Your Potassium, Phosphorous, and Fluid.
Stay Active - Find a Form of Exercise You Like and DO IT!!
Laugh Every Chance You Get.
PrimeTimer
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« Reply #1 on: August 02, 2014, 10:23:30 PM »

  :rofl; Kind of like when George Carlin went on a rant about "our stuff".
« Last Edit: August 02, 2014, 10:24:51 PM by PrimeTimer » Logged

Husband had ESRD with Type I Diabetes -Insulin Dependent.
I was his care-partner for home hemodialysis using Nxstage December 2013-July 2016.
He went back to doing in-center July 2016.
After more than 150 days of being hospitalized with complications from Diabetes, my beloved husband's heart stopped and he passed away 06-08-21. He was only 63.
kitkatz
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« Reply #2 on: August 03, 2014, 12:16:41 AM »

Very true and many of us bring in so much stuff it is comparable to moving in.
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Remember your present situation is not your final destination.

Take it one day, one hour, one minute, one second at a time.

"If we don't find a way out of this soon, I'm gonna lose it. Lose it... It means go crazy, nuts, insane, bonzo, no longer in possession of ones faculties, three fries short of a Happy Meal, wacko!" Jack O'Neill - SG-1
Ninanna
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« Reply #3 on: August 03, 2014, 01:33:18 AM »

Ha!  You are too funny Bob. :)
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Spring 2006 - Diagnosed with IgA nephropathy
June 2013 - Listed on transplant list
Feb 4th 2014 - Kidney and bone marrow tx (both from my mother) as part of a clinical trial at Hopkins
Simon Dog
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« Reply #4 on: August 03, 2014, 01:13:21 PM »

When I was in-center, I had a ritual when I had this one particular tech

- I'd ask someone to turn the machine towards me so I could see it and reach the controls
- The tech would turn it back
- I'd ask someone else to turn it towards me
- repeat as necessary

I was once told 'you're not allowed to touch the machine' when I asked for a glove.  (tech asked why, I told her I was asked not to touch the machine ungloved).  I told her "actually, the rule is I am not allowed to touch the machine when anyone is looking".  She understood and got me the glove.

At one clinc where I was a transient, the tech assigned to me was busy on her iphone, so I just started setup.  I though someone would come over and talk to me when I started drawing saline and setting the treatment rx but nope, no attention until I finally went to the tech "lines are in and the machine is setup, want to put me on or do you prefer I do it?".
« Last Edit: August 03, 2014, 01:14:38 PM by Simon Dog » Logged
BobN
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« Reply #5 on: August 05, 2014, 08:54:11 AM »

Thanks PT, kk, Ninanna.

Simon Dog, keep showing them who's boss brother.
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www.bobnortham.com
Author of The ABC's of the Big D: My Life on Dialysis
Bob's Prescription for Living With Dialysis:
Follow Your Recommended Diet and Especially Watch Your Potassium, Phosphorous, and Fluid.
Stay Active - Find a Form of Exercise You Like and DO IT!!
Laugh Every Chance You Get.
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