123 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
123 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
Copyright 1994(c)
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ONE MAMMOGRAM, PLEASE -- WELL DONE; HOLD THE ONIONS.
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By Del Freeman
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There are a number of things that, without ever having
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entertained even fleeting thoughts of them, I know I do not want.
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In fact, I don't even know how long the list is, because I'm still
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making it. For instance, I do not want okra and anything. I do not
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want invasive surgery that closes with the surgeon murmuring "Uh,
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oh!" I do not want five of six winning lottery numbers; any pet
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that rapidly gains an uncommon amount of weight in the midriff
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area; or candy, of any type or consistency, that contains the word
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'sour' in its description. 'Sour' candy, for my money, is an
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oxymoron tantamount to 'honest' lawyer.
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And now that I am almost half a century old, and have finally
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come to terms with the awful truth that there is no Santa Claus,
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tooth fairy or Easter bunny, I do not want any more emotional
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masturbation by mail from Ed McMahon and his sidekick, Mr. Clark.
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My loving husband, David, says I am rigid, and perhaps he is right.
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I do not seem to respond well to new stimuli, and had sort of hoped
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to avoid any in future. Alas, that was not to be.
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Yesterday, I experienced a new sensation: mammography. For
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those of you who have never had this experience, let me forewarn
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you that the age-old expression "putting one's tit in a wringer,"
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pales by comparison. I always thought that was a bit crude, but
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someone, somewhere, (no doubt male), has apparently been moved to
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investigate it sufficiently to develop a machine to duplicate the
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imagined sensation. This is proof positive that the Marquis de Sade
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lives on.
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["Have you ever had a mammogram?" asked my doctor.
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"No," said I, innocently.
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"Would you like one?"
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"Sure, why not?" said I.]
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That, people, is what is known as an ill-informed response.
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Would that she had merely asked me if I'd like a crack across the
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nose with a brick. I'd have known the answer to that one.
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Correctly, this exchange should go:
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["Can you say mammogram, Mrs. Whomever?," from the male
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doctor.
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"Can you say Bobbitt, doc?," from Mrs. Whomever.]
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I was, at best, a trying patient. When finally I left the
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hospital, the nurses were taking up a collection to send me to the
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hospital down the road for my next mammogram. The radiologist
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kicked in $20 without even being asked. I think he was a sore
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loser. I mean, he didn't have to get all huffy just because I said
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I wanted him to slap his Mr. Johnson up there and let me tighten
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the screws on it.
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["I don't need that," he pointed out, logically.
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"I know," I agreed. "I just want you to have it."]
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I don't know what I thought a mammogram was, but I'm sure I
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envisioned it as something very similar to an x-ray, and equally
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non-intrusive. What it turns out to be is a Chinese torture device
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that works like an electronic vise grip of mammoth dimension. One
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is sidled up to it with one's ta-ta strategically positioned in
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between two level surfaces, which are then manipulated by foot
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pedal closer together until one's badge of womanhood is
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inextricably grasped within the two surfaces, flattened like a
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pancake. I expect the hospital must spend a lot of time on a daily
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basis turning away people with nose rings, dressed in whips and
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leather, queuing up to the machine and shouting "Me, first!"
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For someone like me, who has ever suffered from fibrocystic
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breast disease, (i.e., these babies hurt if you look at them), it
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was a real treat. My protests would have rung no louder if they'd
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done an emergency splenectomy with a dull toothbrush, sans
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medication. Finally, the technician called in reinforcements. Of
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course, since I enjoyed it so much we got to do more pictures than
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the average patient. We took front shots; we took side shots, and
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they went away to be read. Then we took more side shots and they
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went away to be read. Then we took yet more side shots which went
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away to be read. I was beginning to feel like Christie Brinkley on
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a bad hair day.
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The moral of the story is that we found two little somethings
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which the radiologist doctor "thought" were harmless little
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whatchanames. In order to ascertain more about them, we did a
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sonogram. That's the thing where they take this jelly out of the
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deep freezer, apply it to a probe, and run the probe all over one's
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ta-ta. I am persuaded that all of medicine is merely a prelude to
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full-blown massochism.
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["Excuse me... I just need a touch more goop."
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Back to the deep freezer.
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"Oh? You like this? Well, let's just stick this little thing
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with a metal clip on the very tip of your ... ah... yes, both of
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them. Then we'll all take turns seeing if we can hit the bull's eye
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with a slingshot and steel rivets at 30 paces."]
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Three hours later, the radiologist still "thought" these were
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harmless little whatchanames. Furthermore, he thought they were
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non-aggressive little whatchanames. I interpreted that to mean that
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even if I have cancer, at least it's not P.O'd about anything.
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My doctor, the one who got me into this mess with that
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innocuous little question: 'Would you like a mammogram?' is a
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female. I have no doubt she is going to advise me to take three
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fingers and play with myself on an on-going basis henceforward. I,
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hysteric that I am, will be totally useless at this since I can
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already feel an increased size and thickness in this particular
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ta-ta just since yesterday. By Tuesday, I expect the little
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whatchanames to be, like killer tomatoes, the size of Cleveland.
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The radiologist wants to "follow" these whatchanames. That
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means six months from now I get to go back and do this
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mammogram thing again. Six months or Tuesday, whichever comes
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first.
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I have only one request, which I think is eminently
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reasonable. The radiologist doesn't seem to agree, so I think it
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should be put to a vote, and here goes...
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Next time, while they manipulate my ta-ta down to the
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thickness of a well-cooked grilled cheese sandwich, I want to just
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hold the doc's Mr. Happy in my hand. It will give me courage and
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calm my fears. Besides, I understood everything they said about the
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necessity of this procedure and how it wasn't designed to be
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painful but to be medically beneficial. I will go quietly into that
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good night, ... chin high and unafraid, if I can just lightly hold
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the doc's Mr. Happy. I know we can reach some amicable agreement
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about this.
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As I cradle the doc's Mr. Happy in open palm, just before they
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tighten the vise grip, I shall turn to him and smile.
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"We're not gonna' hurt each other, are we doc?" I shall ask
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sweetly.
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I am willing to arm myself, for purposes of persuasion.
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-30-
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