Sunday mornings, there's no DJ who mans the radio stations. It's all run via computer software and in the course of playing music for the first few hours, the station will repeat some of the segments that other DJs had produced throughout the week. One of the subject matters covered this week, people who wished they had a more interesting story as to why they sustained an injury. Right away, I recalled the day I tore my bicep and the harrowing details that followed.
PART ONE: THE INJURY
I had been off of work prior to this injury, due to..., what else? An injury. I had a traffic accident that had resulted in a serious back injury which required months and months of rehabilitation. I'd returned to work only weeks before this event occurred.
I worked nights at a local retail establishment and in the mornings, before we were set to depart for the day, we'd perform a thorough clean up of discarded packaging and other refuse. We had put a stand up air compressor out that night and had an empty box, which we had filled part way with plastic wrap and other shit. It didn't weigh very much at all, but when I picked the box up to place onto a flatbed cart, I felt something snap inside my arm. It took me by surprise and as I recall, I scurried backwards into the racking, holding my arm with my free hand.
I'd be lying if I said it hurt a lot, because to be honest, it actually kinda felt cool, but it's definitely not something I wish to repeat. It felt like an unraveling, which in actuality, it is. I recall the blinds that my great-aunt, Chrissie, had at her house. As a child, we weren't allowed to adjust the height of them because, I'm guessing, at some point, one of us idiot kids, tugged on the blind and let it go, sending it skyrocketing to the top of the window, thus requiring a tall ladder to scale to retrieve and return to the lower portion of the window. If you've experienced this, you'd be familiar with the thwap-thwap-thwap sound the blind makes as it reaches the top. This is exactly how my arm felt.
I knew right away what I had done to myself and when work was finished, instead of heading home for some much needed rest, I instead found myself in the waiting room the the University Hospital.
PART TWO: A QUESTIONABLE DIAGNOSIS
The case was performed by medical interns, who first sent me for X-rays, which proved inconclusive, so they followed up by performing an ultrasound on my arm.
The whole time, I was insisting that I had torn the bicep, explaining that I felt it unravel inside my arm, but they weren't having any of that. They kept forcing their belief that I would be in a world of torturous pain if I had, indeed, torn the muscle from the bone.
I insisted that pain is only a figment of the imagination. It's fear-based and most of those who experience pain, manifest it solely because of a fear of the unknown. Like, "Holy shit! What did I do to my arm?" kind of bullshit. This was not the case, here. I firmly held my ground, insisting that this was the reality. The young know-it-alls would not succumb to my claims.
The ultrasound proved as inconclusive as the X-rays were. It was at this time that the surgeon popped in for a consult. The interns, having fun at my expense, tried to get the doctor in on the teasing. "He claims that pain is fear-based and because he 'knows' what he did, he's not feeling any pain."
I recall the doctor pausing, leaning his head from left to right, then replied, "Yes. That sounds reasonable." Suddenly, the room got quiet, the physician leaning in between two of the three young docs, his eyes fixed on the video feedback on the monitor.
"It's difficult to see just how bad the damage is. We'll have to open it up to get a good look."
Long story short (too late 😉), the surgeon pulled me aside the day after the surgery and reported to me with a huge smile smeared across his face. "Yep! You tore that sucker clean off the bone!" He slapped my knee, continuing the tale with a chuckle in his voice, "It was beautiful. You couldn't have torn it more perfectly."
The waitress was enthralled, leaning in, mouth open and hanging on my every word.
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