Since the usual space beat is a bit slow, I thought I'd do an update on life in general. So, yeah, this is going to be a me me me meeeee post, and I haven't really done one since my surgery back at the end of January. Let me throw in an update on the rest of life that I haven't talked about since the day before Thanksgiving. In fact, let me start there.
While I've never been given a formal diagnosis of
Benign-Paroxysmal-Positional-Vertigo, or BPPV, as
Aesop and several other folks commented
to that post I've assumed that's what it is. I'm right
around three months since the accident that caused it and while the day to day
problems are at least an order of magnitude better, they're not quite completely
gone. There are still motions I go through or positions that I get into
that cause it more than others, but none of them cause that reflexive eye
twitching (nystagmus) that seems like a control loop trying to orient itself
by finding horizontal and vertical. That was pretty much gone by the
time of the surgery, Jan. 26, but there's a better story about that I'll get
to in a minute.
The recovery from surgery has gone as well as I could have hoped. I left the hospital that Friday with a handful of prescriptions, a pain concoction (a seriously revolting tasting syrup - I suspect being intentionally revolting to discourage use), two different medications for spasms in the area, and an anti-nausea drug that Mrs. Graybeard used while getting chemotherapy. Once or twice, I tried the "use this one first" drug for esophageal spasms since I had some pains that weren't responding to anything but a heating pad, but they didn't respond to that drug either and they went away within another couple of days. I was completely off the meds within a week of the surgery.
Part of the advice for the hernia surgery recovery is to eat smaller meals; I
quickly found that wasn't optional. I simply couldn't eat what I was
used to. While it has gotten closer to normal, it's still not quite
there, but that's fine. An element of physical therapy for this repair
is to eat; the instructions say a couple of bites every couple of hours.
The hard part there is remembering, because if I'm not hungry, I don't think
about eating.
The fun story is that when I woke up from the anesthesia the afternoon of the
surgery, I felt less dizzy than I thought I did the day before. The
argument for keeping you overnight is partly to ensure the anesthesia doesn't
leave you dizzy and, of course, was something all the nurses wanted to ask me
about. I got some funny looks when I told them I thought I was less
dizzy than before the anesthesia. There are a couple of possible reasons
for this; the more likely one is that it's my body's own weird reaction to the
anesthesia. The other is that when I was under the anesthesia, they put
my head in a position like the
Epley maneuver
that's used to treat the BPPV and unintentionally had a positive effect on me.
I had a followup two weeks after surgery (2/9) and was expecting to get the
next followup on 2/23, which is an easy date to remember, if nothing
else. Based on how I was doing at the one month followup, it was moved
to 3/9. I'm still restricted to not lifting over 20 pounds, and since I
have no idea what a bad outcome of lifting things would look or feel like, I'm
respecting that. Except for carrying my wooden stepladder into this room
last week to change a "dead LED" light bulb. And maybe one or three other little things.
Meanwhile, since I hadn't been able to ride a bike since Thanksgiving, I
started riding my indoor trainer right after New Year's. I took off the
two weeks between surgery and the first followup, but since now it's pretty
much activity as tolerated, I went back to riding indoors the day after that
(Friday the 10th). I have always found riding indoors horrifically
boring, but ignoring that, the questions center on how comfortable I can be
riding outdoors. That's probably going to be a real question in a few
weeks. My balance hasn't been an issue on the indoor trainer, but I can
sense it's better now than at the start of January. Not riding outdoors
until my 3/9 checkup is probably prudent.
Good news in all respects.
ReplyDeleteThe video has me starting my day with a smile.
Yep, feelings because we are humans.
When I started looking for a video, I expected to find some singers warming up by singing that "me me me meee" refrain, and instead got offered this. Couldn't resist the silliness.
DeleteBonus points if you can name the entire band without looking.
ReplyDeleteNot me. Not even close.
DeleteGlad to hear of the improvement!
ReplyDeleteGood luck on your healing.
ReplyDeleteCould I ask you for a series on radios? No not entirely ham related but signals for sure. I dug up my emergency hand cranked radio. It’s ok and still works but it for my nostalgia up. I was wondering if there is good used radios on eBay to buy while they are still available? Digital or analog? Mono vs stereo. Weather and short band? Other signals features? I can add a power bank that could be solar with some nicad batteries. That might be an awesome “winter” project. And useful for camping or emergencies. Thanks.
I appreciate the vote of confidence that I'd be familiar with everything there could be. All of the thing you mention, like mono vs. stereo, weather vs. shortwave are personal "what do you like or want" questions. They kind of depend on where you are and what conditions you expect.
DeleteMaybe a starting point would be this 2015 piece. I no longer recommend the little shirt pocket shortwave receiver in there, the Kaito WRX911, though. I've had three of them and all had the volume control fail.
Glad you are doing better.
ReplyDeleteThe BPPV can be a royal pain. I already had balance issues from severe inner ear infections in my late teens. Then around 50 the BPPV shows up. Most days are not a real issue. Then there are the days when I get up in the morning and literally bounce off of the wall multiple times just trying to walk across the room.
Good to hear a positive report. I was wondering, but not worried too much, since you've been keeping up the posting.
ReplyDeleteBTW, I'm always up for more radio stuff. Latest mystery for me is how antenna compensation does what it does. (i.e. stick a 200pf cap at about 25' in series with your 40M EFHW) 73
Latest mystery for me is how antenna compensation does what it does. (i.e. stick a 200pf cap at about 25' in series with your 40M EFHW) 73
DeleteShort answer: if you're adding a series cap you're almost always canceling out some series inductance. Do you have an antenna analyzer like an MFJ-259 or one of the RigExpert models? Do S-parameters mean anything to you?
The more I use my NanoVNA, the more I think they're a modern marvel. They do, however, provide almost all information as S-parameters. I've been thinking of writing an intro to S-parameters.
Thank you for the mention of BPPV and the Epley maneuver. I read right past the reference at Thanksgiving. Didn't apply to me.
ReplyDeleteThis Feb 11th I slipped on the ice and hit the back of my head hard. ER and CAT scan said nothing wrong. Next day I noticed certain head positions made me dizzy.
Reading your post and boy did that sound familiar. Checked out what Mayo and John Hopkins sites had on BPPV. Tried the Epley maneuver three times at home and the positional dizziness cleared up.
Thank you
Mike G
Thanks for passing that on, Mike G. It's always good to know that something I posted helped someone.
Delete