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Pins and Needles March 7, 2008

Posted by Merujo in feeling good, friends, future, good stuff, health, medical stuff, things that scare me.
8 comments

So, I left you hanging this week, which wasn’t very nice. Truth is, I’m still dog-tired, and with a thousand things still undone. I feel like I’m on a social 12-step program right now. Remember to return e-mails, remember to return calls, remember to return library books…

It’s a really good thing I don’t have a pet, plant, spouse or child right now, honestly. It takes all my energy to get my shoes off in the evening.

And, it looks like there’s a very good reason for this.

Let me backtrack a bit…

Shortly after the car accident in September that left me with the Crapmobile Mark I totaled and a lovely line of fractures up and down my spine, I started to feel utterly exhausted. I assumed it was from the accident alone and the accompanying altered state from heavy duty painkillers. Just walking from my office to the parking garage to retrieve the Crapmobile Mark II left me without energy. That’s just two blocks, guys. Two blocks. I would sit on the cement block next to the Metropolitan AME Church on M Street and just try to figure out why I was so very, very tired.

My apartment is a pit – I barely have the strength to carry laundry up and down stairs, and the exhaustion combined with the relentless back pain means that cooking food – usually such fun – is like a form of torture. My short term memory has been as solid as Swiss cheese, which is not a good thing in any way, shape, or form. My eyebrows started to fall out – fortunately in a way that looks like I just got a little aggressive with grooming – and, if you recall from another of my misadventures, the dermatologist told me to start washing my face with a dandruff shampoo to control a small skin virus I’d picked up.

I haven’t been able to stay warm this winter – I wear a turtleneck everywhere, and I even brought in microwaveable aromatherapy slippers to the office. (Not that my feet can smell the aromatherapy – that’s just the way they come.) Frankly, I look and feel like crap. It’s not pretty, kids.

So, a few weeks ago, I went into my doctor to go over some routine blood work. Thyroid issues run in my family – my mother had severe hypothyroidism, and two of my sisters have had partial thyroidectomies, thanks to cancer and other funkiness. But to be honest, I have had my plate so full, that hadn’t crossed my mind. The doc looked at my blood test results and did an exam. “Your thyroid is extremely enlarged,” she told me. “I need you to go get an ultrasound. Now.”

So, I went.

And the results weren’t good.

Large nodules. Really big suckers. And the doc was concerned that I might have cancer.

Oof.

No one wants to hear anything like that.

I read a lot. I discovered that my list of maladies of recent months were the textbook symptoms of thyroid problems:

Unexplained exhaustion? Check.
Weakness? Check. (I couldn’t open a water bottle a couple of weeks ago, it had gotten so bad.)
Inability to stay warm? Check.
Susceptibility to skin viruses? Check, check, says JoJo the Dog-Faced Girl.
Eyebrows starting to vanish? Oh hell, yes, check!
Short term memory fried? What was the question? Oh, yeah – check!
Slow to heal? Just ask the doc working with me on rehab for my back fractures – check and mate.

Part of me was relieved to know there was a cause behind it all. Part of me was terrified at what the biopsy would show.

When I knew I would have to go in for a biopsy of both lobes of my thyroid, I got anxious. My sister, NurseRachet, said hers hurt like a sonufabitch. “Do you have any good painkillers left over from the car accident?” She asked me. “Because if you do, I’d take a couple with a swallow of water as I was pulling up the hospital. Had I know what it would feel like, that’s what I would have done.” I didn’t have any of the “good stuff” left. Just ibuprofen.

The Sasquatch found a blog entry describing one woman’s biopsy, which went a little wrong. I ended up hyperventilating in my living room after reading it. They nicked a nerve in her neck, and she felt the needles in her teeth, her eyes, dear god.

I practiced deep breathing techniques. I tried not to find read any additional firsthand accounts. I would be having an ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration biopsy. And the Sasquatch was coming with me. Only problem was, between the time I found out I had to have it done and the appointment, there was a week to wait.

And wait.

And wait.

And agonize.

And wait.

I was unfocused. I was freaked out. I couldn’t sleep.

I named the beast to coworkers and friends. I felt like, if you say “cancer” it has no mystery, no power, no hold over you. And, fortunately, thyroid cancer is one of the absolutely most survivable forms of cancer. Fortunately. Very, very fortunately.

Tuesday came, and I was up with the sun. I had to be at the hospital at 10:30 for an 11 a.m. procedure. I had my paperwork. The Sasquatch was driving me and was, as he always is, my rock of support. Man, I wanted this thing over and done with.

We got to Suburban Hospital right on time. I found myself being nervously chatty at the admitting desk. While the clerk went to retrieve my patient bracelet and paperwork, we watched another clerk read a celebrity news site online while she should have been checking in the elderly woman in front of her. Had either of us had our cell cameras in hand, I think we would have nabbed the clerk’s photo to post here. It was uncool.

Banded like some oversized, rare migratory bird, I was ready to go to radiology. I gave my iPodlet to the Sasquatch to listen to while I was being poked and prodded. He had brought his MFA homework with him, and he was being a saint. Albeit a saint with an empty belly. One mini Cadbury egg does not a breakfast make. I told him to buy a muffin while I was getting the biopsy.

Once we were in the small radiology waiting room, things moved very quickly. I signed off on a couple of forms and had barely settled in next to the Sasquatch when they called me back. I was still in nervous-chatter-ha-ha mode, and I discovered my off-kilter sense of humor did not play well with the staff. I think they thought I was nuts. I had to shed the top half of my clothes and put on a gown – I would be betadine’d for the biopsy. I followed a nurse into the procedure room and laid down. She ran the ultrasound over my throat to find the locations of the nodes, and then hooked me up to take my blood pressure. I started my deep breathing and closed my eyes.

“Don’t worry,” the nurse said. “Most people have elevated blood pressure coming in to a biopsy… Huh… 115 over 81…” Let’s hear it for deep breathing. Gotta try that zen thang the next time I’m in a stressful meeting!

The lights were dimmed and the doctor arrived. I swear to god, he looked like Artie Lange. You know, Artie Lange? Formerly of Mad TV, now Howard Stern’s sidekick? This guy:


Reassuring, no?

In the darkness, I see this pseudo-Artie Lange, in some green logo t-shirt, hovering over me. “Hey, I’m your doctor, let’s do this!”

Oh craaaap! A disheveled fat frat boy is about to stick needles in my neck! Gaaaaah!

He told me to arch my neck back as far as possible and focus on a spot on the back wall. “Imagine there’s a photo of Brad Pitt there.”

Again – my sense of humor failed me. “How about Brad Pitt’s house? I want his original Craftsman bungalow.. ow.. ow..” (Insert sound of crickets chirping…) “You know, if Brad Pitt’s available, that’s fine, too.” (Shut up, Merujo. Shut up, shut up.)

And so we began. The worst part? The injection of lidocaine to numb me. That felt like a blazing hot shot of acid to my throat. But in mere seconds, I felt nearly nothing. I kept my eyes focused on Brad Pitt as the gentle frat boy pressed a long needle repeatedly into my thyroid. Each time he took a sample, I could hear a beep. The nurse kept the ultrasound sensor pressed against my skin to guide the doctor’s route. I cannot tell you how many times he reinserted the needle. I suppose I could count the marks at the base of my throat, but I’m not going to bother. They’re fading fast.

Finally I heard a voice at the doorway. “Where is the pathology?” Frat doc responded, “There is none. It’s just fluid. I dunno… go ahead and spin it out, but you can’t keep it on a slide.” He turned back to me. “They’re just big cysts. Eh, I’m going to go back in and clear them out.” So the needle returned a few times more. And then, it was over. The doctor was out of the room before I even realized it, and the nurse leaned over me, “See, he already gave you good results. Just fluid. That’s great news.”

It was great news. No pathology.

No cancer.

They cleaned up my neck and put a bandaid on me. I hobbled out, redressed, and was handed a discharge slip. I found the Sasquatch and we walked out. Leaving the building I told him my doctor had been “My White Mama”and he laughed. And then, when we reached the car, I told him the results. No cancer. And we both cried.

No cancer.

We celebrated with one of the most awful-for-you meals known to man: the open-faced hot turkey, mashed potato and gravy sandwich at Chicken Out. That damn thing probably has a week’s worth of carbs on one plate. But when you’ve just given fate the big middle finger, it sure feels good. (And hey, if you eat it with a Coke Zero, that negates all the carbs, right?)

And there we are.

It still hurts a little to laugh and yawn, and singing along with the car radio is out for a few days yet. But those are inconveniences I can live with. I go see my doctor in a few days, and I imagine I’ll start a thyroid-regulating medication at that point. That’s nuthin’, though. A cakewalk. And I will be thrilled, frankly, to get my energy – and my eyebrows -back through the wonders of chemistry.

No cancer. That’s a beautiful thing.

Be well, everyone. Have a great weekend. Make sure your friends know you love them.

Peace out.

Hooray for The Linguists! December 3, 2007

Posted by Merujo in film, friends, language, our changing world, research, travel.
5 comments

A film featuring the amazing work of my friend David Harrison and his colleague Greg Anderson – linguists studying dying languages across the planet – has been chosen for the Sundance Festival in 2008! The film, called (unsurprisingly) “The Linguists” follows David and Greg as they travel to extremely remote areas of the world, documenting languages facing extinction. Currently, there 7,000 languages on our planet. However, we lose a language approximately every two weeks, and, within a hundred years, half of the world’s languages will have died. As the last speakers, elderly and isolated, pass away, their languages – and so many elements of their knowledge systems – will simply cease to exist. David, Greg, and other concerned linguists are working hard to document these tongues before they vanish. It’s fascinating and tragic and, in our shrinking world, probably inevitable.

If you will be at Sundance, I encourage you to try to get a ticket! It will be shown four times during the festival, and David and Greg will be there for Q&A.

Happy, happy hand turkey!! November 20, 2007

Posted by Merujo in arts and crafts, friends, gratitude, hand turkeys, holidays, man hands, my lack of artistic ability, Seinfeld, Thanksgiving.
7 comments

I know tomorrow most of my friends will be: 1)stuck in an airport security line, getting some “bad touch” from the freaks at TSA; 2) trapped in an ungodly jam on I-95, I-80, or I-shoulda-stayed-home; or 3) fighting with some angry suburbanite over the last good Butterball at Safeway. So, I figured I’d send out Thanksgiving wishes to you all now, before you head over the river and through the woods.

And who can say it better than Tom Hand Turkey, sharing the thoughts of so many of his brethren this holiday week:


Yeah, I’m a classy girl. And what fine work I can do with MS Paint, huh? The Sasquatch commented on his deformed feet. I just like to think of him as a very special digitally-rendered hand turkey in need of orthopedic shoes. No wonder he’s so cranky. (The turkey, that is. Not the Sasquatch.) By the way — that’s a free-drawn hand. No actual human hand was traced for that turkey. I mean, yeah, I’m certainly no delicate flower, but I swear I don’t have mutant “man hands” that look like this bird. I just have really shaky mouse skills.

Honest.

Jerry: She had man hands!
Elaine: Man hands?
Jerry: The hands of a man!


But, seriously, I hope each and every one of you has a lovely Thanksgiving, no matter where you are! I am thankful for your friendship, your readership, and your continued support through my very strange life. May your holiday be peaceful, joyful, and filled with tryptophan and tasty carbs!

With every good wish for Turkey Day,

Merujo

Mocking Apple Products November 12, 2007

Posted by Merujo in Apple Products, blogging, friends, iPhone.
3 comments

I love to torture the Sasquatch, who is a Mac user, by calling Macs not computers, but “Apple Products.” Now, keep in mind that, in another world with lots of cash, I would likely be an Apple person, too. But, for now, I just enjoy tweaking and annoying my friend.

Recently, I saw this fairly pretentious iPhone commercial that gave viewers the impression that the workings of commercial aviation could be altered by a cockpit crew member checking the weather function on his damn phone. My friend and fellow blogger Chuck, the man Beyond the Cheddar Curtain, works in the aviation industry, and he wrote an entry recently about just that commercial. The entry has a link to an amusing (and profane) parody of the commercial, which made me laugh inappropriately. “It rained for six hours that night.”

Thanksgiving in a Box November 11, 2007

Posted by Merujo in family, feasting, friends, holidays, obnoxious neighbors, solitude, Thanksgiving, traditions.
2 comments

For the record, I’m not lazy. No sir, not one bit. But I don’t see a need to go through a massive amount of solo drudgery to produce a Turkey Day meal for one person. Just like virtually every meat-eating, red-blooded American, I love the smell of turkey cooking – oh hell, yes! But I just don’t see the point in messing up the whole kitchen for just me. Also, since my back is still pretty painful, standing in the kitchen all day is not particularly attractive (especially since I no longer have Percocet.) Plus, if you add up the costs of putting together a traditional meal… well, jeez, louise, it’s damn expensive.

If fuel wasn’t now as expensive as a gallon of milk, I would drive up to New Jersey and harass members of my family. Or I could join very kind friends in Virginia. Sure, I love the camaraderie of sharing the holiday with others, but this year, I actually want some splendid isolation. I am taking the week of Thanksgiving off (it’s use or lose vacation time, and I have no $$ to travel anywhere) to write. I want solo time. I need solo time. And since a trip to the Arctic (with access to Marlon Brando and superpowered glass shards) isn’t in the cards, my overcrowded living room shall be my Fortress of Solitude. This will be another Just Merujo holiday. And that’s very, very cool this year. I can stay in jammies all day, slap rice-filled heat packs on my back, and write to my heart’s content.

Even more cool? I’m getting Thanksgiving in a Box from the local Shopper’s Food Warehouse. A little lazy? Eh, maybe. But let me tell you — the lovely 12-pound Butterball bird they gave me two years back was fan-freaking-tastic, and it both fed me leftovers for ages and made a great base for homemade turkey stock. (Reminder: must get cheap freezer containers at the dollar store.)

Here’s the deal, fellow DC-area solo travelers (and those bereft of cooking skills): you get a full family meal for $39.99 (you can get a “deluxe” version for $5 more that nabs you classier taters, green bean casserole and an extra pie), and all you have to do is pick it up at the store (you name the pick-up date/time) and reheat stuff at your leisure. You get the following:

10-12 lb. Butterball® Turkey
1 lb. Turkey Giblet Gravy
2 lb. Seasoned Mashed Potatoes
2 lb. Cornbread Dressing
12 oz. Cranberry Relish
12 pk. Butter & Egg Dinner Rolls
8” Pie (Apple or Pumpkin)

The bird (totally tender if my last order is a good example) takes two hours to reheat, filling your home with the super smell of crisping tryptophan without the need to check/recheck/baste/recheck… You get the drill.

I’ll have Thanksgiving for days and days and days. It’s really quite the bargain (says Sofa Penny Diving Girl.) And no sink full of dishes.

You can order online, arrange your pick-up time, and, voila, you’re set.

I’m just hoping the morons upstairs won’t be offering me any, uh, “soundtrack” to dine by this year.

If they do, I guess it’ll give me an excellent excuse for opening a cheap bottle of Australian red and putting my headphones on…

Gobble, gobble!

Wings of Glass November 2, 2007

Posted by Merujo in art, creativity, friends, glass, life.
1 comment so far

I am surrounded by friends who give me inspiration. The Sasquatch has returned to graduate school – online and after work (consuming most of his time) – to get an MFA in Graphic Design. The Atomic Editor has taken on a new role at a dream institution where he can edit some awfully fine writing and put together one of the nation’s coolest magazines. And Javi, of course, is overseeing the move of his comicbook creation to the small screen. (I have to wonder if Javi has to strike against himself, being a Writers Guild guy… hmm…)

Now, my fabulously talented friend, glass artist extraordinaire Lunesse, has a new page on TalentDatabase.com, highlighting her beautiful beads and jewelry. Take a gander at the gorgeous pieces she has on her portfolio page there. Pretty rockin’ stuff, eh? The girl’s got talent, and now she’s balancing her glass craft with watching her new kiddo, just arrived in August. I’m impressed. As most of you know, I have trouble finding matching socks in the morning. By the way, if you get a hankering to buy something that Lunesse has created, you can click on her store link, her Etsy link, or – if you dig making your stuff – her JustBeads link for, well, just beads. (If I had any skills at all in making my own jewelry, I’d buy some of her funky beads, but since I’m less than adept at such things, I’ll just keep saving my pennies to buy a piece of her fab jewelry!)

Lunesse, along with being a gifted artist, is a tremendous writer and a damn fine web designer, too. She left a successful tech career in the IT mecca of the San Francisco Bay area to become a glass artist. I can’t begin to tell you how much I admire her for that! It’s an amazing life change – and one that requires bravery and strength of character along with real talent and tenacity.

There are days when I would love to chuck the office life and just pursue writing, but I have always been just a little too afraid to do it. Lunesse did it. She leapt off that cliff and found she had wings. Wings of beautiful glass.

I hope I am willing to take that creative leap of faith someday, too. In the meantime, though, I’ll just be delighted to see what new things she and the rest of my friends make.

It’s a wonderful thing to have creatively inspired friends. They encourage me to want to do better, to aspire to more.

I’m damn lucky to have such people around me, and I know it.

You’ve Got a Friend October 14, 2007

Posted by Merujo in friends, funny stuff, music, sick stuff, SNL, videos.
4 comments

This morning, I heard a rerun of A Prairie Home Companion, performed up in Baltimore, with Carole King as a special musical guest. I mentioned this just now to the Sasquatch via IM, and had to follow it up by simply typing, “CAROLE! CAROLE KING!”

Now, this won’t mean much to the youngins out here, but to those of us working on long teeth, it might get a snigger of recognition. The Sasquatch and I have been saying that back and forth to each other for a looong time now. And below, you will find the somewhat tasteless, but funny origin of that call, courtesy of the big, hairy, arboreal creature who found it on YouTube…

This is *so* wrong, and yet, still amuses me inappropriately decades later:

Was that Paul Shaffer’s real hair?!?

Sputnik October 4, 2007

Posted by Merujo in creativity, Dolby, friends, fun, music, Mutha Russia.
2 comments

Fifty years ago today, the Soviet Union changed the world by launching Sputnik 1, the first man-made object to orbit the Earth. Thus began the Space Race and the rush to create agencies in the United States like NASA and DARPA. Dollars were poured into scientific research and education. Many things we take for granted now – like the Internet – eventually came out of the West’s panicked reaction to Sputnik and the thought of Soviet superiority in space.


I am just old enough and young enough that Sputnik’s shadow hovered over my childhood. I was born just a little more than a handful of years after that first metal satellite orbited our planet, and nearly a handful of years before man set foot on the moon. It was a point when the Cold War was growing warmer, and I developed an early fascination with All Things Soviet.

Without the mania and growth and competition and fear that came in Sputnik’s wake, who knows if I would have grown up to become a Russian-speaking kinda-historian? I was a Cold War baby who wanted to see what was on the other side of the Iron Curtain. And, in time, I saw it, in spades.

That all seems like a lifetime ago.

Today, I rarely use my language skills, except at the local Russian grocery store or to talk back to the pseudo-intellectuals that yammer on the local Russian cable TV channel. But last month, a friend of mine gave me an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. He asked if I could help him with a small element of a project he was preparing. Could I come up with Russian song lyrics for a melody he’d crafted for an upcoming concert in England to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the launch of Sputnik?

Who could say no to that?!?


It was a blast to help a friend and collaborate on something really creative. Writing lyrics that make sense and rhyme and match the rhythm of a melody is tough enough in your native language, but it was a good head-scratcher in Russian. I loved it. Made me think. I even ran the lyrics past my old Russian professor at Mac (who gave me a good drubbing for my single grammar mistake, which I fixed with the change of one verb, I’m happy to say.) I think my friend was pleased with the finished product – I made him an mp3 of me singing it (fortunately, right before I completely lost my voice to pneumonia!) where I went awfully sharp, but he was still able to add keyboards to it for me to get an idea of what the final song would sound like – ambient, ethereal, celestial. Just lovely.

The concert was last night, in a city where I once lived (and got many bad 80s haircuts!) I’m so sorry I couldn’t be there. But, even had I been able to buy a ticket to London, I don’t think my back, post-accident, would have tolerated the transatlantic flight.

And so, yesterday evening I missed my great three-minute or so debut as Thomas Dolby’s Russian-language lyricist, but that’s okay. It was simply a delight to help him out. And I hope the audience really dug the song, sung as a duet by Thomas and his friend, Bruce Woolley. Bruce plays the theremin, which is pretty damn cool. Bruce, with Trevor Horn & co., wrote a little ditty called “Video Killed the Radio Star” back in the day. How cool is that, mah fellow children of the real MTV era?

I sent Bruce a note via his MySpace page last week, and he sent back the nicest message as he was working to learn the phonetic Russian I’d provided. I’ve been humming the song to myself for weeks now. When I was working on the lyrics, I was concentrating so hard, I apparently sang it out loud as I pumped gas one afternoon. The guy across the pump from me just stared like I had a third eye. Considering the number of Soviet emigres in my ‘hood, it’s entirely possible he understood me and was just wondering what the F I was singing about.

Before he left for the UK, I gave Thomas two vintage Soviet lapel pins, celebrating the launch of Sputnik. They were cast in either 1957 or 1958. I can’t quite remember. And I managed to maim Thomas with them when he put them in his pocket and one of those suckers stabbed him in the finger. Lovely. Stab the keyboardist’s hand while he’s on tour. Jeez, Merujo!

The dangerous pins in question.

When I find a review of the show online, I’ll share it with you. Here’s a little skinny from the venue, so you know what this was all about.

I might have been stuck on the sofa in Maryland with my heat pad and a fistful of painkillers last night, but I was in London in spirit, kids. Big time.

The Last (for now ) Dolby Hurrah & the Jazz Mafia Blog September 20, 2007

Posted by Merujo in blogging, creativity, Dolby, friends, music, sadness, the Birchmere.
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So, tonight is my last Dolby concert for a good long time. Thomas has moved to the UK for a while (sounds like his kids are digging being in school in England) where he will work on his new CD. (I was doing to write “album” but I realized just how old that would make me sound!) FYI — he’s making this new recording entirely “off the grid” – he’ll be recording in a green studio (wind, water, solar-powered) and on a sailboat, using this cool technology called eSession to work with collaborators long-distance. I think that’s pretty brilliant, actually. As Thomas said on Wednesday night, the new CD will be out “when it’s out.” We could have a long wait, but that’s okay. Part of the fun will be the adventure of seeing how it all comes together. There’s a good podcast interview from Electronic Musician magazine with Thomas about the green recording plans and eSession.

But I’m a little bit sad that I won’t see him again for quite some time. Over the years I’ve known him, we’ve only met up in person a handful of times before the tour. Such is the way with friendships struck up via the Internet! I have some friends I’ve NEVER met in a decade-plus of knowing them. (Which is strange, perhaps, but, in some sweet way, much like pen pals of old – a little linkage to our letter-writing past.) It’s been a real joy to share the gigs with dear friends. I’ll miss it all.

But we all have things we need to do – lots of creative stuff for everyone on the horizon. And the time is coming to take a deep breath and dig in. Get to it! Autumn will be here on Sunday, and it’s my new year, as far as I’m concerned. Bring it on, Mutha Nature. I’m ready!

(Now, if I could just shake this friggin’ case of pneumonia, thanks!)

On another topic — in case you’re a Dolby fan and you’ve missed my links previously, the Jazz Mafia Horns have a blog, and Adam Theis, trombonist extraordinaire, has been blogging from the road with Thomas. If you check out the most recent post, you might even see a fuzzy photo of Gonzomantis, the Sasquatch and me (photos are appropriately fuzzy when a Sasquatch is involved, I do believe!)

Off to launder and enjoy a little of my flex day before the Birchmere gig…

Dolby at Rams Head Annapolis September 20, 2007

Posted by Merujo in Dolby, friends, fun, music, wine.
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It was great. Fantastic evening. My friends and I had a total blast, and the music rocked. It was lovely to see Thomas tonight – had a nice chat after the show – and to meet the Jazz Mafia Horns. Great guys – amazingly talented.

I’m completely zonked now, but I think I’ll sleep well. I had a glass of red wine in honor of Lunesse, who was missed greatly tonight. Haven’t had a nice glass of wine in quite some time, and I think with the pneumonia, one merlot is enough to make me good and mellow.

More when I’m awake.

(Yeah, I stink at non-flash photography in dark places…)