She had wanted to stop for an iced coffee on the way, something to
reward her for actually making this appointment, but as it turned out,
time was too short to allow a stop. Even without the steeling
effect of the coffee, Amy sat as poised as she could manage in the
upholstered chair in the examination room. With one leg crossed
over the other and the light that glinted off the new toe-ring
highlighting the pedicure she had treated herself to, she thought she
looked composed and cavalier as the doctor whipped out one radiograph
after another, placing them against the lighted panel on the wall and
saying "yes, there it is" and "hmmm" and other such
pronouncements. She only half heard him when he said words like
"progression" and "spinal cord lesion" and was amazed herself that her
thoughts were still elsewhere and not on this grim soliliquy.
"This is what I don't want to see in a patient with your
condition. This is the kind of thing that could put you in a
wheelchair in five years if you aren't willing to do anything about
it". His admonitions were stern. He was a believer in
"telling it like it is" and was firm in his opinion that her stance of
denial was no longer going to serve her well. She had long lived
as if refusing to acknowledge her condition could stave off its
effects.
"I don't understand", he said. "Someone with this kind of
problem, who refuses treatments that have a proven history and yet
smokes".
"I know, you don't understand why anyone would refuse accepted
treatments and then ingest large quantities of poison daily.
Well, that is just because you haven't known me long enough", she
quipped.
The doctor's face didn't show any appreciation of her feeble attempt at
humor. This was one situation where she couldn't fast talk her
way out of it. He was not impressed. He wore a face of
concern and to his credit he noticed the tears welling up in her
eyes. He didn't know her well, for he thought she now cried
because of his diagnosis and recommendations, something she was only
barely acknowledging.
The physician's voice droned in the background as her mind wandered to
other words that were indelibly etched in her memory. It wasn't
as if she had not expected to hear them, she had heard the death
rattles coming from that corner for a long time. Steven hadn't
managed to surprise her with his announcement that he was
leaving. It was no surprise but it was no less painful for all
her preparation.
When she met Steven she was impressed with his talent as a
photographer. His work was well received and he was not lacking
in assignments. He had been kind in his assessment of her
paintings and even asked her to paint something for him. They seemed to
have something in common and it naturally led to a relationship. At the
beginning it was light and fun, they enjoyed all the same things, their
tastes were so similiar she felt for the first time in her life that
she had met someone who was capable of understanding her. She
understood him too and his ambitions, though she didn't share
them. His job at the newspaper was not his life goal, she knew
that. She also knew he would do whatever was necessary to
achieve. She wouldn't have been so hurt if only he had been
honest with her.
"I can see three or four, yes four new episodes since the last brain
study". She heard the words and thought, that isn't too
bad. It has been ten years, four new areas of damage in ten years
sounded like a bargain compared to what might happen in that amount of
time. It was the next words he used that caught her attention.
"And here, there is a black hole", he said.
"Excuse me, a black hole?", she asked.
"That's an area of permanent damage", he explained.
Amy chuckled bitterly. The doctor looked quizzically at her reaction.
"You have to understand this, that is just so, so... so perfect",
she told him. "That so perfectly fits me it is actually
funny. What area is it in?"
"What area? Do you mean what does it control? Memory, concentration, some sensory".
She looked at him suspiciously. "I have an excellent memory."
"I am not saying it is necessarily causing problems, you asked what that area of the brain controls and I told you."
For a moment she forgot all about being angry with Steven and
concentrated on being angry with this man who could so blithely talk
about things that were never going to affect him personally. He was
trying to scare her, he clearly disapproved of her "hands off" attitude
towards her condition for so many years although he grudgingly admitted
that she was doing well considering her inattention to it.
"You don't understand", she had told him. "Up until now, I was winning".
But today she was being told that she wasn't winning any longer, that
she couldn't win. Normally, nothing made her more determined than being
told she couldn't win. She had spent her life fighting losing
battles. But Steven's timing had taken the fight out of
her. His boss had given him an assignment that took him to San
Diego. While out there he had made some connections and through them
received an offer from a magazine. He told her he could not pass
it up, it was the opportunity of a lifetime. She knew that it
wasn't really much more prestigious than the job he had at the paper,
but it had one fringe benefit. It gave him an excuse. Her
pride made her pretend to believe, maybe part of her needed to believe
that he was sorry to go. But in her heart she knew he had planned
to leave all along. She had entered the doctor's office today, already
thoroughly defeated. She surprised even herself when she nodded
mutely at him when he asked if she were ready to give in and try the
injections. She had been fighting too long. It was time to admit
she couldn't win.
"I suppose I have no choice", she said as she accepted the tissues from
his hand, dabbing at tears that had very little to do with this
morning's appointment and everything to do with her
disappointment. Choices were things only others seemed to
possess. She left the office with yet another choice taken from her.
She never turned on the radio but drove through the rain in silence,
the only sound the one that came from the stripped wiper blade as it
scraped and scored the windshield. She hadn't bothered to have it
replaced as the shrieking it made perfectly matched the cry that echoed
within her. The employee at the drive thru smiled and called her
"honey". He was sweet and yet she knew he called everyone
"honey". So many in the line, so many times he had used that
charm. She asked for sugar in the iced coffee, but still it
tasted bitter.
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nedful thingsThere are things that we need and things that are Ned. Nedfulthings: a collection of labyrinthine conversations and a fistful of dreams...WidgetBucks - Trend Watch - WidgetBucks.com
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The Coffee Chronicles - You Can't Win Them All
Comments
Re: The Coffee Chronicles - You Can't Win Them All
by
Gone Away
on Thu 23 Jun 2005 10:54 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
Hard to comment on this since I want Amy to win...
Re: Re: The Coffee Chronicles - You Can't Win Them All
by
Ned
on Fri 24 Jun 2005 08:55 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
The battles we know are losing ones are sometimes the ones we fight hardest and the ones where defeat is most keenly felt.
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