The
beginning of this story starts before the actual beginning. In
keeping to the wisdom of Alice in Wonderland I shall quote a line,
totally out of context, to justify my actions.
"Begin at
the beginning," the King said gravely, "And go on until you
come to the end; then stop."
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The
pain in my foot started in November, so by mid-February I decided to attend
to it. A pain is a chronic pain if it persists for longer than two months.
Yes, I know better, but I was testing the theory "If I ignore it, it
will go away." |
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I went through
the proper steps and made an appointment with Dr. Seel. He poked and prodded,
then took some x-rays.
The joint and
bone were pretty messed up. (Rolling a piano over my toe 20 years ago
probably did not help.) We discussed my options and surgery promised the
best resolution.
I did not want
to have the operation done right at the end of spring because I would
be off-work and screw-up everybody's vacations. He was O.K. with that
and said
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I
could have the surgery done anytime, but I would be off-work for 12 weeks
afterwards. My suggestion to have it done "last year" would have
worked fine if we had time-travel technology. We agreed to fix this foot
in October, which seemed to be a good omen. |
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Chelsea
Community Hospital has a very competent and caring staff. From pre-op, OR,
to post-op they are excellent. They explain what they are doing in appropriate
detail and a reassuring manner. If it were not for the commute I think I
would like to work there. |
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I did not move
much during the days post-op. Dr. Seel recommended ice, elevation, meds,
and videos is about all I should do. When the post-op pain stopped I had
a "flight into health" which proved both temporary and painful.
I resolved to follow my doctor's instructions to the letter.
We were a pleased
to see that the incision was healing nicely without any signs of infection
or other badness. When the dressing came off I could move my toe, no great
shakes, but it was immobile since the surgery.
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Dr.
Seel had cut through the tarsal bone near the base of my great right toe
on a "V" shaped angle. That is to say, he chopped off my big toe.
He cleaned up the joint, removed the overgrowth on the tarsal and lowered
it to correct the cause of the malformation. He repaired the severed bone
with a screw-like device. |
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It will take
a long time for this surgery to heal in the manner that it is intended.
Cleaning up the pathology and aligning the bones is only the first step.
The bone needs time to firmly knit together so the problem has the least
likelihood of recurring.
Dr. Seel took
his time to answer questions and lay out the do's and don'ts.
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In
the short run, I'm looking forward to taking a shower. |
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In
the long run, I'm looking forward to walking to work and carrying my lunch. |
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On
the mend... |