I told Eli that my blog posts are painfully uninspired and that I suppose if I wrote one daily like I did in the early London days, I'd be better. Stretching the muscle and all that. It takes a lot after living in Oman for nearly four years (!) to make me stop and shake my head but I had a head-shaking experience a couple of weeks ago that's worthy of an attempt at a post.
I've been having shoulder pain for the past four months and while I was in the US, it became worse. I think I injured it upon arrival at baggage claim, and then I ran all summer instead of really using it. My physical therapist (a lovely British woman) was shocked at how much movement I'd lost since early June. She proclaimed my impingement issue solved (because I religiously did my exercises over the summer), but said that I was now presented with capsulitis, aka "frozen shoulder". I've been seeing her twice a week for sessions which are fairly painful as she bends and stretches my shoulder in directions it has no interest in moving. Some days it feels like things are improving but other days it definitely does not.
Anyway, two weeks ago she suggested that I get an MRI. Her clinic doesn't have the machine, so she suggested I go to a clinic called Al Afaq, because it's the cheapest shoulder MRI around (95 rial versus 120). It probably seems stupid to shop for a bargain on an MRI, BUT we are paying our healthcare costs until we meet our deductible. (I would love to explain how our insurance works but I don't understand it despite my best attempt - and once I was so frustrated about this that I actually wept.)
I had a sense that I wouldn't enjoy having an MRI, but on television they don't look so awful. So I agreed to go but made the appointment a week in the future. Here, if you need an MRI you call and basically go get an MRI that day or the next. So this was a delay tactic on my part.
I arrived at the clinic - and I use that term loosely because it was actually a couple of rooms with four people in them: two Omani ladies, one doctor and one technician. The receptionists had enough English between them to check me in, until we got to the question about if I'd had surgery before and if I had any metals in my body. Commence very awkward conversation about IUD. (Is that metal?! And, I didn't even think about my dental fillings until I was already in the tomb.)
Following this conversation, they put me into a changing room and handed me a garment that I could not fit over my head. I kept removing it and looking for the fastener (recognizing that it could not be a zipper or a snap), finally put my clothes back on, went out and told them I couldn't fit the dress over my head. I was embarrassed, but they didn't seem surprised and went and got me another one, which I mercifully got on with a fairly strong tug.
When I entered the room with the imaging machine, I was relieved because it's what they call an "open" MRI. Let me just say that this is bullshit. It appears to be open. But they made me lay down with my right shoulder (that's not the MRI shoulder) closest to the machine. I kept saying, "no, it's my left shoulder, shouldn't I lay the other direction?" and they kept nodding at me and telling me to lay down. At which point it dawned on me that I was going to be deep inside the machine even if it wasn't a tunnel.
So I decided to close my eyes the entire time.
They got me situated, I asked about forty thousand questions ("if I have to push the button and stop, do we have to start from the very beginning?" "How many sequences will you do?"); they told me not to breath too deeply and they slid me into the machine, and also up toward the top of it so I was snug as a bug. (It turns out I may present with mild claustrophobia; but then again, would anybody find this enjoyable?)
It was every bit as terrible as I thought it might be -- it is SO loud and the noise is unpredictable and startling at times, and it lasted forever (I think only 40 minutes in the end). When he finally came in my ear and said it was over, I allowed myself to open my eyes and found it difficult to wait the five seconds until they slid me out.
After I got dressed (was needlessly worried about getting the dress thing off; I managed to get it over my apparently large head on the first try), I went out to pay and was informed that I needed to use cash. Sigh.
The good news is that nothing too terrible is wrong with my shoulder and PT should resolve my capsulitis. And now I have the rest of my life to dread MRIs.
I've been having shoulder pain for the past four months and while I was in the US, it became worse. I think I injured it upon arrival at baggage claim, and then I ran all summer instead of really using it. My physical therapist (a lovely British woman) was shocked at how much movement I'd lost since early June. She proclaimed my impingement issue solved (because I religiously did my exercises over the summer), but said that I was now presented with capsulitis, aka "frozen shoulder". I've been seeing her twice a week for sessions which are fairly painful as she bends and stretches my shoulder in directions it has no interest in moving. Some days it feels like things are improving but other days it definitely does not.
Anyway, two weeks ago she suggested that I get an MRI. Her clinic doesn't have the machine, so she suggested I go to a clinic called Al Afaq, because it's the cheapest shoulder MRI around (95 rial versus 120). It probably seems stupid to shop for a bargain on an MRI, BUT we are paying our healthcare costs until we meet our deductible. (I would love to explain how our insurance works but I don't understand it despite my best attempt - and once I was so frustrated about this that I actually wept.)
I had a sense that I wouldn't enjoy having an MRI, but on television they don't look so awful. So I agreed to go but made the appointment a week in the future. Here, if you need an MRI you call and basically go get an MRI that day or the next. So this was a delay tactic on my part.
I arrived at the clinic - and I use that term loosely because it was actually a couple of rooms with four people in them: two Omani ladies, one doctor and one technician. The receptionists had enough English between them to check me in, until we got to the question about if I'd had surgery before and if I had any metals in my body. Commence very awkward conversation about IUD. (Is that metal?! And, I didn't even think about my dental fillings until I was already in the tomb.)
Following this conversation, they put me into a changing room and handed me a garment that I could not fit over my head. I kept removing it and looking for the fastener (recognizing that it could not be a zipper or a snap), finally put my clothes back on, went out and told them I couldn't fit the dress over my head. I was embarrassed, but they didn't seem surprised and went and got me another one, which I mercifully got on with a fairly strong tug.
When I entered the room with the imaging machine, I was relieved because it's what they call an "open" MRI. Let me just say that this is bullshit. It appears to be open. But they made me lay down with my right shoulder (that's not the MRI shoulder) closest to the machine. I kept saying, "no, it's my left shoulder, shouldn't I lay the other direction?" and they kept nodding at me and telling me to lay down. At which point it dawned on me that I was going to be deep inside the machine even if it wasn't a tunnel.
So I decided to close my eyes the entire time.
They got me situated, I asked about forty thousand questions ("if I have to push the button and stop, do we have to start from the very beginning?" "How many sequences will you do?"); they told me not to breath too deeply and they slid me into the machine, and also up toward the top of it so I was snug as a bug. (It turns out I may present with mild claustrophobia; but then again, would anybody find this enjoyable?)
It was every bit as terrible as I thought it might be -- it is SO loud and the noise is unpredictable and startling at times, and it lasted forever (I think only 40 minutes in the end). When he finally came in my ear and said it was over, I allowed myself to open my eyes and found it difficult to wait the five seconds until they slid me out.
After I got dressed (was needlessly worried about getting the dress thing off; I managed to get it over my apparently large head on the first try), I went out to pay and was informed that I needed to use cash. Sigh.
The good news is that nothing too terrible is wrong with my shoulder and PT should resolve my capsulitis. And now I have the rest of my life to dread MRIs.
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