Meeting Doctor Soul Mate
Somehow, the universe knows.
It knows when you have on a fresh coat of MAC gloss and some cute heels
you got on sale at Charles David and clean hair that's looking halfway
decent. It knows. That's the night you won't meet anyone.
If a principle is true than so is its opposite, which I proved by
meeting the future Mr. Strasser in a Utah emergency room, between bouts
of moaning in a fetal position and dry heaving. To be honest, the future
Mr. Strasser probably has no memory of me other than in his notes:
"Patient presents with fever and severe stomach pain. Possible
pancreatitis. Please refrain from asking her out because that would be
unprofessional even though you're obviously unbearably attracted to
her." OK, I added that last part.
It's hard to imagine that I could have been less delectable. In Salt
Lake City for work, I woke up one morning with searing stomach pain. I
called my mom, tried every remedy in the hotel gift shop and wept for
about six hours before giving in and finding the nearest hospital.
A co-worker drove me there, and as we pulled up to the ER, we passed a
landing pad for trauma choppers. Kind of put my tummy ache in
perspective, but man did I feel bad; I couldn't eat, couldn't walk
upright and I had the green-hued sheen of an extra on "Six Feet Under."
After checking in, I was given a room next to another woman named
Teresa, a psych patient who couldn't stop shouting "Who took my shoes?"
I don't know, Teresa, the Crazy Fairy? When the nurse told her to lower
her voice, she said, "I can't hear myself until I talk loud."
Oh really? Well, I can't stop heaving and the sound of your voice is
about as settling to my stomach as last week's sashimi.
Just when Crazy Teresa (and I call her that so you don't get confused)
got sedated, a 19 year-old named Amber came in screaming, "It's my
birthday. You don't know what it's like to be a junkie!" Whatever
happened to broken bones and slingshot wounds?
At that moment, in walked my doctor. Cue the violins and gauzy light
because no way an intern in the ER could be that gorgeous. He adjusted
his wire rim glasses and tucked a loose tangle of long blond hire behind
his ear.
He introduced himself and I thought, "Mr. Strasser, what are you doing
in Salt Lake City? Do you realize we're getting married? I think I love
you." (I should mention here that I had a high fever and may or may not
have been delirious.)
Now, there are many conversational topics that are nice for that first
meeting with one's soul mate: the weather, favorite movies, work,
religious beliefs, politics. One topic that doesn't make that list is
bowel movements.
"Have you had any bowel movements today? Are you having diarrhea? Are
your bowels discolored?" asked Dr. Soul Mate.
On the one hand, decent medical care required that I be honest, on the
other, human dignity required that the color of my stool be between my
maker and me.
My health won out. "To tell you the truth, doctor, it's sort of puce."
"Puce? I'm not sure what color that is," he said.
"It's kind of a purplish-brown." Great, now I'm trying to explain to the
doctor that my poop is an autumn. Puce, it's the new brown. This was not
going well.
"Married or single?" he later asked.
"Me or my poop?" Yeah, that wasn't funny, but cut me some slack, I was
being fed through a needle.
Did he really need to know, I wondered? Or was he secretly saying that
he too felt our union was destined?
"I'm not sure what's wrong with you. I'm passing you along to my
attending," he said. That must be doctor speak for "It's not you, it's
me."
Of course, if he had made advances toward me, I would have thought he
was sleazy and unprofessional and quite possibly had a puce fetish I
could never accept or understand. It was a lose-lose-lose my lunch
situation. We were star-crossed lovers, doomed. Still, if he had
actually noticed me, he might have overstepped the rules of propriety
and I might have overlooked his overlooking and it would all be a cute
story - except the part about the puce poop.
He left with me with an IV of nausea medication and the attending
physician, a very nice, very butch looking woman who shut Amber up with
one stare. She sent me home with a prescription, a diagnosis of heat
stroke, directions to eat only food I could see through and the fantasy
that somewhere in Utah, a young intern is pining for me, wishing we
could have met under circumstances that were easier to stomach.
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