Friday 16 December 2011

The Final Week


Making the Connections
Back on the bench again.  Monday/Tuesday December 12th/13th
I have a charming new room-mate, Leonardo. I can’t quite work out what he’s here for; I think it’s an intensive programme of physiotherapy to try and get some of his nerves and muscles reconnecting properly, so at least the poor chap has no harsh pain or post-operative wounds. He has brought a television, but unlike my previous room-mate, Leonardo is not over-addicted to glitzy game-shows and shopping channels, he does however like to keep it playing quietly in the background, well into the night but maybe he’ll switch off earlier tonight.
This final week is the build-up to being discharged as more-or-less independent. I asked the therapist whether I would be continuing with physio at my local hospital when I returned to Le Marche. But no, Friday will be the end of the enforced exercise and from next weekend onwards it will be up to me to get out and go walking. That’s quite a daunting prospect when you remember that I’ve only be allowed to walk unaccompanied for the past four days, and today was only the second time I’ve attempted a flight of stairs. But it is amazing just how fast the body learns. Suddenly the nerves appear to wake up as if to say Oh, that’s what you want me to do, is it? The best example is lying flat on my back and raising my left (operated) leg. Until yesterday afternoon that was impossible. The therapist would slip her hand under my heel and take the weight, but it didn’t matter how much effort I put into supporting my leg, it would fall back to the bench the moment she relaxed her hand. I have spent a lot of time lying on the bench, trying to raise that leg, but nothing that I twitched or tweaked had any effect. Then yesterday I managed to slow the rate at which the leg descended, and then – with a great deal of effort – managed to raise the leg again, all the way up to the 45 degree angle. This morning, it was all logged into the memory of my nervous system and I lay on the bench, happily raising and lowering either leg with impunity.
When I look back over the past three years since I first started limping, I feel a huge relief that is further reinforced by the experience of improved mobility each time I walk down the corridor. I can feel my balance improving every time. I have been so blessed by the way the operation and after-care have been handled.

Lambeth Palace
A surprise email.
I am eking out the last few hours of internet access as I have only a very small balance on the dongle in my netbook (laptop.) I logged on this morning to find an email from the Archbishop of Canterbury’s official residence, Lambeth Palace. I had received a formal acknowledgement to a letter I wrote 3 weeks ago, but never expected an individual reply from such a busy office. I had written to thank Rowan Williams and his colleagues for their positive support of the “Occupy” movement at St Paul’s Cathedral – a movement that has received terrible and inaccurate press coverage from most of the British media. I firmly believe that we are on the cusp of something that is every bit as revolutionary as everything that happened across the Arab world through the summer, and is perhaps as significant as the fall of the Berlin Wall. I have never been a Socialist because I always believed that Capitalism offered a more efficient system of social and commercial organisation, but we have now seen that when any political system – Left or Right –  becomes self-serving, it is the 99% of the population who suffer. I continue to follow developments keenly on the internet and hope that I can find some way to make a positive contribution as the changes progress. It’s all about communication – and that is my forte. If you want to get a glimpse of the scale of debate that is going on behind the scenes, you might well be surprised at the involvement of not only the protesters and the Church, but also Hector Sants, CEO of the Financial Services Authority and Ken Costa, former Vice-Chairman of UBS Investment Bank and Chairman of Lazard International. None of this appears to have been reported in the press but you can check it out at http://occupylsx.org/?p=2204
Back in the exercise room for my afternoon session and the girls crank it up again. No sooner was I revelling in the ability to raise my operated leg off the bench than the new exercise involves not merely raising the leg but then holding it at 45 degrees for a count of five and then lowering slowly and gently. I grunt and groan, but persevere. I can’t believe how tiring it is, nor how uncomfortable the hospital bed is, when I collapse on it, exhausted. I dream of sleeping horizontally across my double bed when I get back to Caldarola on Saturday.

Definitely lop-sided
Wednesday December 14th
The doctor did his rounds of the exercise room this morning and decided that my legs are definitely different lengths, and after months/years of compensating for the limp caused by my worn-out hip, this is now creating something of a problem. They fiddled around with various cork insoles in my right shoe, and when I started walking I could feel quite a difference. In time, my body will adjust naturally, but while the hip is settling down, I’ll wear an insole in my right shoe to help me to rebalance.
I still can’t get used to how tiring all of this. One hour of physio and gentle walking and I am totally drained. I went out like a light this afternoon – and that’s not because of a heavy lunch! In fact the food has been pretty poor this week. I am leaving more and more on my plate because it’s just not worth eating something which is completely tasteless – carrot broth with mushy pasta, meatloaf with overcooked cauliflower, and yet another baked apple – I’ve been served an average of 8 or 9 plain baked apples each week. Of course, the upside is that all my shirts have expanded comfortably, but what a way to spend the traditionally lavish run-up to Christmas….!

Stairs again
Thursday December 15th
Fabiola continues to show no mercy.
I try to kid myself that the exercises get easier. Maybe they do, but just as one routine becomes less painful, a new one is introduced that finds resistance somewhere else. After a particularly gruelling session we set off for the walk round the block, stopping at the top of a daunting flight of stairs. Ok, off you go, says Fabiola, and I search in vain for a handrail. There is none. I am at the top of a marble staircase with only my crutches. Fabiola encourages me to use whatever method I find most manageable. I put both crutches on the first step down and feel dangerously unstable. I try keeping my crutches on the top step and gingerly move one foot down a step. Nothing feels very safe, but after a step or two, and a dangerous wobble on the first landing, I start to get the hang of it.
What soon becomes clear is that there are so many things that the body has to learn and re-learn, and that I simply must not put everything at risk by trying to learn new tricks too quickly. I am, after all, an old dog, and you know what they say about old dogs and new tricks.

That colour doesn’t suit you…
My room-mate’s wife
I hope she doesn’t turn up tonight, because I have such a problem keeping a straight face. I am still trying to understand Italian marital relationships after the dining room episodes of cutting up food and spoon-feeding. Last night Leonardo’s wife arrived with three carrier bags of new clothes. She decided that he had to have the appropriate clothes to wear in the exercise room, and whereas most people have track-suit bottoms and some sort of tee-shirt, my room-mate was to be kitted out with what the Americans call leisure suits. Furthermore she decided his pyjamas needed replacing and he needed a casual jacket.
By the time she had opened the bags and boxes and spread her purchases on the bed, I could see that he would have been well-equipped for a 3-week Saga cruise. Then the humiliation started in earnest as he was forced to try on the various outfits and stand there, deeply embarrassed while I tried to keep a straight face and avoid catching the eye of his adult son who was also trying to avoid revealing his amusement. My favourite was the purple and pink plush outfit – but my mirth was swiftly overwhelmed by my grief for my room-mate, unable to argue with his wife’s effervescent enthusiasm.
Then she marched him off to the bathroom to give him a shower. Yes, shower him! He has some restricted movement – which is why he’s here for treatment at the clinic – but nothing very much and is perfectly capable of caring for himself. I wept silently as I heard him complaining at the shampoo and shower gel that were lavished all over him. 24 hours later, the bathroom still has a lingering scent of body-wash, overlaid with the Gucci cologne she bought for him.
I thought I had seen it all: pampered husbands being spoon-fed at dinner, washed, dried and preened, then finally dressed up like favourite dolls in awful, garish outfits, but it was the breakfast routine that really got me. The hospital orderlies come round with the choice of hot drinks and packets of biscuits or rusks with jam. Leonardo always chooses rusks and sits expectantly while the girls spread a paper napkin, unwrap the packets of rusks and take the lids off the portions of jam.

One last session
Friday December 16th
At 5.30 this morning the vampires stuck a needle in my arm and took their samples; at 6.00 they pushed a pill in my mouth and at 7.00 I decided I wanted to get wet and get clean. Showering is still a bit of a performance – there’s a hand-shower in the corner of the bathroom, and a stool,  but no curtains so no matter how careful one is, the water sprays pretty much everywhere. But it’s hot, and wet, and feels wonderful – even if the bathroom does end up flooded. [The cleaners took care of that before anyone slipped and had an accident.]
Nothing was going to stop the therapists upping the pressure for the final sessions. Fabiola tried new ways to bend back my left leg, and found new positions for me to lie before ordering me to move my disobedient limb. Lying on my stomach, straining to get it to rise, until she gently encouraged it and, amazingly, the nerves reconnected and started a twitch that became a nudge and the foot lifted just a fraction. A couple of attempts more, and my leg started to obey, but I felt the sweat breaking out on my forehead as I struggled to comply.
They have given me a list of exercises to work on in the coming weeks, and told me to make my follow-up appointment with Dr Passotti, the surgeon, as soon as I can – bearing in mind the Christmas breaks. The clinic doctor tried to persuade me to stay on for a further week, just to strengthen the hip and buttock muscles a bit more, but I fought my corner because I just cannot face another lone weekend here at the clinic. I have a suspicion that as the patient numbers decline for Christmas, his true motive is to ensure he has enough work to keep the therapists busy. Either way, it’s all agreed now, and I will be discharged sometime after 10 tomorrow morning.

…and in conclusion.
I have been very lucky. I have had intensive physiotherapy for more than three weeks and I could quite easily stride out from here with no more support than a normal walking stick. But if I did that, I think the nurses would kidnap me and lock me back behind the raised sides of my hospital bed, as they did on the day I arrived. They have a very strict routine, but all the evidence is that it works very effectively. I’ve kept in touch with my sister in Birmingham and exchanged notes on the speed of my recovery (she had her hip done in February.) Based on what she tells me of her expereicne, I am confident that this wonderfully extravagant process of intensive therapy is extremely beneficial.
I’ll miss the staff; the little nurse who christened me Santa Claus, the nurses who keep trying out a few words of English, the strange mix of other men and their dominant, fussy wives, and Lisa – the ex ballet-dancer turned journalist, fighting back from the brink of death after her car crash this summer to get back to presenting news stories on Italian television’s Channel 7.
Lots of stories, lots of experiences… and for me – it’s probably the start of a completely new lease of life.
Thanks to all of you who’ve expressed your pleasure in reading this blog; it’s kept me sane, amused and entertained. Since I now have the url www.bob-harvey.blogspot.com this site will live on with other stories of my continuing adventures. Just click “follow” to be updated automatically.

Monday 12 December 2011

Going Alone at Last


Equilibrio
Back to work – Friday December 9th
My wheelchair turns left. All the time and, unnervingly, when it approaches the landing where a steep flight of stairs leads down on the left….it veers to the left, as if possessed by some demonic power. A wheelchair is surprisingly hard work, though rather less so since I got them to pump up the tyres. The slightest slope is quite a struggle and I am sure I have built up some upper-body strength when I’ve struggled to drive the wheelchair up the gentle incline in the corridor without veering left into the wall (or down the stairs!) The other big factor is the condition of the ground surface. It’s one thing to be spinning along on the vinyl flooring of the clinic’s corridors and quite different to be negotiating across the rough tarmac of the car park downstairs if I go down in search of a coffee from the vending machine in the entrance hall. It’s another opportunity to appreciate the plight of tens of thousands of wheelchair users around the globe, and to realise just how they struggle to fit into a world that is designed around able-bodied people.
The doctor has finally given his approval for me to move around the clinic independently, with my crutches. They have decided I have done enough exercise work to re-establish a working relationship in the muscles of my lower body, and I no longer need to be confined to the wheelchair. This evening, for the first time, I shall walk down the corridor to the dining room with a large cushion slung around my neck on a cord. Well, – when you’re on crutches, you can’t carry anything; and even in a wheelchair you need some sort of tray or attachment if you want to be sure you won’t drop your phone or whatever. Everyone needs a big cushion to raise the height of the chairs because the hip angle sitting on a low chair is dangerously acute.  Similarly, if you drop something, it’s no good thinking about bobbing down to pick it up; you mustn’t put strain on that prosthetic joint or you run the risk that it might just pop out of the socket…. And that doesn’t bear thinking about. Maggy has sent me a “litter-picker” for picking things up: the sort of novel gift that is normally found only in one of those booklets inserted into the colour supplements that accompany the Sunday papers.
The experience of doing circuits on crutches around the corridors is strange and unsettling. If I think back to the days after the operation, when I struggled from my bed in Foligno hospital to get to the loo, the pain in the hip and thigh was excruciating. Such activity would have the staff here up in arms, and it  is unforgivable that they fail totally to coordinate the post-operative process and treatment between the orthopaedic department at Foligno and the rehabilitation clinic here. There should have been rigid instructions about not moving from my bed without assistance. As it was I was lurching between beds and hanging on to the door-frame of the en-suite, just to take some of the weight off my joints. I think the sheer size of the prosthetic they inserted meant the incision had to be long and deep. I believe now that they should have kept a closer eye on me and given me more guidance about what I could and couldn’t do. On the contrary, what actually happened is that I remember the physio nurses and my surgeon applauding my attempts at walking in Foligno…Here they would have locked me in my bed and read the riot act – which is what they did as soon as I arrived here and started unpacking my suitcase.
But now, four weeks on from the operation, there is no pain in the joint. There’s some painful bruising around my backside and lower back, and some muscular ache from the exercises, but no hurtful pain where it’s all been healing. What is unsettling and somewhat disconcerting is the reduction in coordination and balance – equilibrio – is the new word in my Italian vocabulary. I feel a bit dizzy and light-headed and there’s the marionette sensation I described in an earlier post, that some ­of the strings connecting some of the brain’s commands to the limbs just aren’t getting through. We were doing an exercise this afternoon, lying on the stomach on the work-bench with the legs bending at the knee and kicking up and down like a child learning to swim. I realised that my legs were going all over the place to left and right and I had to concentrate hard to make them stay on a straight axis and not flop around.
The result of all of this is that walking with crutches is hard work, not so much because of any aches or pains in the joints but because I have to focus on staying steady, keeping the feet pointing straight forwards, not wobbling and maintaining a steady pace. When I get it right it is hugely gratifying but when I falter, or sway, I feel incredibly stupid and incompetent. It is all a fascinating process.
Another milestone today was a flight of stairs. I learned to my amusement that the mnemonic my sister Maggy had learnt at her Birmingham hospital is the same in the Italian health service:- Up to heaven, down to hell. What this means is that when you climb up the stairs, you lead with your good (heavenly) leg, and when you descend the stairs you lead with your bad (hellish) leg. It was much easier than I thought it would be, proving once again – I think – that the emphasis here on intensive bench exercises prior to walking practice all pays off. I have been very lucky; but Lord knows I could murder a good meal and a large Scotch.

A visitor from Rome
Saturday December 10th
My elder sister’s son, Aldo is visiting me from Rome today. In the past few years, his family has turned out to be very musical – I think as much to their own surprise as to the surprise of everyone else. Aldo and both of the children sing in choirs that travel all over giving performances and participating in events. Tonight the children are singing in an opera at Spoleto, an Umbrian hill-town not far from here and tomorrow Aldo’s choir is singing somewhere else in the region. He has planned his trip so that he will be here at lunchtime today before he goes on to meet up with the children and be in the audience to support them tonight.
I was 15 when Aldo was born, and what seemed like a huge age difference at the time has – of course – diminished to the colleague category in recent years. I am finding something of a similar realignment as my children grow up; My eldest – Samantha in Hong Kong – faces the big Four-Oh shortly after Christmas while at the other end of the spectrum Digby, having recently become a father himself, moves into the final decade of his 20’s tomorrow. I hope that I can emulate my father by stretching the active years ahead. When we had the restaurant in Lincoln, Dad, well into his 70s, would be up and down ladders at this time of year, checking and changing the fairy-lights on the Christmas trees and giant star that decorated the fascias of the building. He once said that he rather fancied the idea of falling off the precarious ladder that was leaning on the Steep Hill side of the property. What better way to go, he said, than making Christmas brighter. The bottom of that 3-stage extending ladder was chocked up with some odd bits of wood and there was never anybody working with him and holding the ladder. My heart flutters when I think about it, even now. This was, of course, before Health & Safety legislation started to bite, and I imagine that today I would be locked up for dangerous working practices, whether or not there was an accident. He was constantly tearing a fingernail or cracking the dry skin of his thumbs when he worked in the bitter East wind that chills the side of Lincoln Cathedral after blowing across Holland and the Lincolnshire Wolds, direct from the Russian Urals. But Dad was careful, or maybe just plain lucky; he never injured himself with anything an Elastoplast couldn’t patch up. He would climb down at midday, hang up his colourfully patched jacket, smarten up his pullover and smooth back his hair with the palms of his hands, then perch on a stool in the bar with a glass or two of whatever red wine was open.
I’ve had 2 years of limping, and it has often made me think back to the time (at my age, more or less) when Dad was on the waiting-list for his hip operation. I used to get very angry with the Health Service when I saw his lack of mobility – the way he scrambled up the stairs on all-fours in his terraced house in Lincoln, and the way he winced as he limped along with a walking-stick. I’m not sure that I was ever as handicapped as he was at that time and I am incredibly fortunate to be able to take advantage of the huge advances in prosthetic surgery in the past 30 years. Even after just 4 weeks I can see that I have more flexibility of movement than Dad ever had after his operation. I remember Dad having to put elastic laces in his shoes because tying them himself was out of the question. I have to take it gently but I can already put on socks and tie my laces. I walked around the block this morning and the sensation remains the same; I have no pain, but I need to concentrate on my balance and stability. A few more weeks and…who knows?

Another day of rest
Sunday December 11th
I lose track of the days. I forget it’s Sunday till I realise the corridor is unusually quiet and breakfast (well, a hot drink and dry biscuits!) has not yet arrived. The room is stuffy, and when I open the window to let in some fresh air in, it is unseasonably warm, blowing up from the south, from across the Sahara, the wind they call Sirocco. As it’s Sunday there will be no sessions in the exercise room, just a constant flow of visitors wandering slowly along the corridor, peering into the rooms looking for lost relatives and reinforcing the sensation that I am in a zoo, on the wrong side of the bars. Today I shall walk the corridors like these inquisitive visitors, testing myself to be a little more stable than yesterday, trying to be less hesitant when I turn the corner, building a steady rhythm and reducing with every step the amount of weight I bear down on the crutches. I take an unsupported step across my room to reach my hairbrush, but the room sways and my hip wobbles and I quickly reach for something to hold on to. The rate of progress is deceptive; one moment everything is solid and secure, then one slight falter and panic sweeps in and I am back to square one, rebuilding confidence like a house of cards that has collapsed at one glancing touch. I forget that it’s a slow process, but then I look at myself in the mirror and see this long, straight scar perfectly healed and I remind myself that it’s all going to plan, it won’t be rushed, I need that elusive quality… patience.

Counting my blessings
Lisa put her head round the door and gestured the universal sign language for coffee. I followed her to the lift and went down to the ground floor where we sat by the entrance area enjoying the mild late-autumn weather. I cannot imagine facing the sort of prospect that lies ahead for her, of knowing that the next 12 months will be spent in hospital with no certainty of just what kind of life lies beyond. At times like this one really does count blessings, and she was talking about the gift she enjoys of having suffered no kind of brain injury. Car crashes, as we know from family experience, can lead to extended periods of recuperation over months and years before the brain is fully recovered. Lisa, however, is very positive and appears to have lost none of her journalistic acumen and clear thinking. When I look at my own progress, especially in the past week, I find myself wondering what I have done to deserve such rapid development when others simply have no idea of their own prognosis.
I remember being in the private hospital a few years back, with all that incongruous ambiance of a ‘BUPA Hotel.’ It was a totally sanitised environment in a way that this clinic never is. We patients in Trevi are a mix of people adjusting to new knee joints or prosthetic hips on the one hand and people undergoing long-term treatment for serious disabilities on the other. While the ‘BUPA Hotel’ feels almost totally removed from healthcare and borders on cosmetic treatments, this clinic works across a wide range of abilities and disabilities. It’s an environment that constantly reminds me to count my blessings. 

Thursday 8 December 2011

Isolation


The impossibility of not thinking
The last week…or not….starting December 4th

When I run a workshop on communication, I have to get people to understand that they are in a constant state of communication. You may or may not be talking, but you speak volumes, even in your silence. My current state amounts to solitary confinement – being the sole occupant of my room and only able to have limited exchanges with people who have no practical knowledge of my language. While I have a working knowledge of Italian, the local Umbrian accent is about as impenetrable as the Glaswegian dialect would be to a Milanese sophisticate. What I have come to realise is that I cannot escape the tyranny of thought; I can’t switch off, stop thinking or drift away, and while part of this stems from boredom and lethargy, part is also medical, or rather it is a chemical response to the use of morphine in post-operative care.

My sister Maggy had warned me that if they gave me morphine after my operation, I should be prepared for some challenging after-effects. This was confirmed in a radio programme I was listening to through my computer last week, when David Aaronovich – a highly respected journalist and author – described his experiences in hospital after being sedated with morphine after an operation. He was convinced that the nurses were conspiring to kill and eat him. Aaronovich is not the sort of person to spin sensational fantasies, and he gave me a context for the terrifying nightmares and haunting internal debates that I have been experiencing in the past three weeks, keeping me awake at night and genuinely frightening me with the lucidity of the arguments that the dreams presented.

There was something of science-fiction scenario in waking up after my operation to find a piece of laboratory apparatus taped to my arm and linked to a feed into my vein. There was a glass tube containing a small sausage-shaped balloon – presumably the reservoir of morphine – which gradually deflated over the next couple of days. From what I could understand from the labelling it was a controlled-release 48-hour dosage. I certainly had very little pain, despite the scale of the operation, but I was uncomfortable at the idea of chemicals being drip-fed into my system constantly for the next 48 hours.

Since then, I have found myself lying awake, challenging every aspect of my existence and every facet of my lifestyle. While I have not had fears that the nurses were cannibals, I have been convincingly persuaded that my children and all those near and dear to me were simply putting on a pretence in their relationship with me. What was worse was that the arguments that developed in my brain were totally logical and perfectly reasoned and I could find no way to refute them when I awoke – if I ever did manage to get any sleep in the first place.

To confuse things further, a month away in the solitude of a hospital does focus the mind and does create the opportunity for serious re-evaluation of one’s life, lifestyle and purpose, in the way that a walk in the woods or a stroll along the beach simply does not allow. I have found myself confronting some pretty serious issues and I struggle to reach any conclusion as yet. But I refuse to go down that depressing road at this time; I think I would rather highlight some of the more amusing aspects of life in the Rehabilitation clinic.

Friends and Family
Moral support from back home

The most noticeable difference compared to British hospitals is the attitude to visitors. The whole Italian concept of family means that both at Foligno and here at Trevi, it’s not unusual for a close relative to simply move in and sleep in an arm-chair or sun-lounger next to the loved one. The nursing staff don’t seem to object because in such cases the patient often needs above-average care and the permanent presence of a family member makes life easier for them. A strange community evolves, with patients and their families mingling, comparing notes and gossiping. I'm surprised there aren't Primus stoves cooking up Nonna's favourite recipes.

Then there are the duty visits. The daughter of an elderly parent or relative arrives for the evening meal and keeps the patient company. There is no conversation, just a ritual vigil which ends with clearing the table and washing-up the cutlery (we all bring our own in Italy,) then a mumbled farewell till the next day. A variation on this is the fussing wife who tucks the napkin into her husband’s shirt collar, cuts up his meat, sprinkles the salt, chops up the salad and dresses it with oil. In extreme cases she will even spoon-feed him if he throws a tantrum. At least this provides some light relief on the male table, which is generally dominated by dour silence punctuated with the occasional grumbling remark about the quality of the fare, and the generous sharing of the newly harvested olive oil that each has brought from his own garden and which are individually compared and contrasted with epicurean analysis.

Even in hospital, appearances are all-important in Italy. The ambulance men delivered a new patient yesterday, wheeling her along the corridor strapped lying down on a trolley. Her hair was perfectly in place and she was wearing full make-up, lipstick, mascara, eye-liner, the works. She clearly wanted to be prepared for whomsoever she might meet along the way. Either that or she didn't trust the undertaker to do a good job if anything went wrong with her treatment.

There is no restriction on the use of mobile phones, and if there were then I imagine such a regulation would be ignored. The early evening is a cacophony of ringtones as most calls are missed or ignored.  Some of the older patients have been presented with a basic Nokia mobile especially for their stay in hospital, with the inevitable result that the phones are on factory settings. Consequently that infuriating Nokia signature tune will blast out at full volume while the aged relative first tries to locate the phone and then to work out how to answer it. Having missed the call there is then a slow punching in of a family phone number digit-by-digit since such niceties as “phone memory” and “call-back missed call,” were not explained by the kind-thinking offspring when they donated the device. Actually the operation probably was explained in great, complex detail - and rapidly forgotten. When the calls are made on these new-fangled mobiles the vocal communication is carried out fortissimo in the certain belief that the only way to be sure of getting a message through on such a tiny piece of technology is to be on the safe side, and shout.

The Integration of Shrek
Size matters

Of course, the biggest joke at the clinic is yours truly. I don’t think the locals have ever seen a full-size human male before, and I must have been asked my height at least a dozen times. There are some huge mirrors in the exercise room, and when I catch a glimpse of myself with one of the therapists, I crack up. It’s Shrek! – No question about it! I loom over everyone. I dwarf the therapist working with me and my feet hang off the end of the massage tables. My wheelchair has been taken apart and reassembled with extra bits to add width, depth and height and, of course, the jokes are endless. I think they assume that because they now have Shrek in their midst, they should be entertained by an oversized buffoon. I try to melt into the background, but – as Shrek himself would tell you – that’s easier said than done.

You’ll be pleased to know that I am making a major effort to integrate, but the men don’t speak to each other or even to themselves apart from the occasional grunt, and the women just gossip about whatever was on television last night – Italian X-factor or some complicated game show involving huge sums of money that are painfully won and then cruelly lost. If only I spoke better Italian we might perhaps discuss the Milan opera, the education system or the plight of the Euro. But somehow… I don’t think so.

Doctor’s verdict
Wednesday December 7th

It was time for my dressing to be changed when the doctor did his round this morning. Everything is healing up perfectly and the layers of gauze and tape have now been replaced with one modest Elastoplast covering the final inch or so of the wound. He set my discharge date for Saturday December 17th which will make my total stay just over 5 weeks in the two establishments, divided between the orthopaedics department of Foligno hospital and the rehabilitation clinic here in Trevi. Meanwhile, I am still strictly confined to my wheelchair except for short, escorted excursions with crutches, up and down the corridor as part of my therapy sessions. It is starting to make me a little nervous because I’d like to feel more competently independent, but all I can do is put my complete faith in the specialists and see how it all pans out. I secretly hope they are going to banish me from my wheelchair at the end of the week so that I have a full week of relative independence, managing with my crutches, before I go home.

The limited internet access is annoying. I have a dongle that plugs into the USB port on the laptop, but the signal is weak and intermittent. By using a remote LAN that fools the BBC into thinking that I am in Maidenhead I can access BBC and BBC i-player, but it is rare that there is sufficient broadband capacity for a reliable connection. Last night I was watching Young Apprentice, and it got to the when Lord Sugar was about to fire one of the contestants when the screen froze and the “insufficient bandwidth” message appeared. There is however plenty of capacity for downloading radio 4 and I have a library of Midweek, In Our Time, Saturday Live and Thinking Allowed that keep me entertained.

But who did Sugar choose? – the nice guy or the feisty girl?

Gynaecological Miscalculation
Thursday December 8th

I slept slightly better and was up and ready in plenty of time for the first session in the Exercise Room, - so early in fact that the doors were still closed when I wheeled down the corridor. It was suspiciously quiet so, wondering whether my watch had stopped I headed backed towards my room only to be met by the breakfast nurse gesticulating and laughing. ‘No, Santa Claus!’ (She has dubbed me Santa Claus as being more appropriate and slightly less offensive than Shrek.) ‘Oggi e festa, no palestra oggi.’ Today is a festival, no exercise room today.

And then I remembered something Fi had said when she’d driven the 200 mile round trip to bring me clean underwear yesterday. December 7th is the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, and it’s an Italian public holiday. Now, I know I’m only a bloke and not fully conversant with all aspects of childbirth but after fathering a substantial Harvey clan I do know that December 7th – December 25th is not a realistic full-term human pregnancy. I’m not sure that it’s even full-term for a mouse or hamster, come to think of it. Of course, it is J.C. we’re talking about here and so maybe we are not looking at a normal human confinement, though I have always had the impression that Mary was pregnant in a visibly human way and the mystery was how she got herself into that condition, not whether or not it was otherwise conventional.  Perhaps this 18-day pregnancy is all part of the miraculous, immaculate bit, but frankly, I don’t think that washes and I’ve seen nothing about it in the Gospels nor ever heard about it in Church. If my dongle were more efficient I would hit Google and probably come up with some really interesting research about the Council of Constantinople or a Papal Edict of 1124 A.D. but I can’t get that worked up about it. I’d rather sit down with some village priest and make my point that it’s all very silly and just an excuse for getting the congregation in practice for Christmas. It’s a bit like Harrods opening Santa’s Grotto in August when they can catch the long-haul tourist market. It’s faintly embarrassing and decidedly inappropriate.

Locked out of the Exercise Room
An excuse for a coffee break

So there it is. Another day with no physiotherapy: no leg-stretching, back-bending or toe-curling. Instead there is a constant flow of nurses and fellow-inmates putting their heads around the door and asking me why I am working, as if the only possible reason for writing were something to do with work…. And then a pleasant surprise when a different head looked in at the door.

One of the less elderly inmates is Lisa,– I imagine in her 30s – who, like most of the residents is wheelchair-bound and who wears a frightening piece of moulded plastic body armour that holds her upper body rigid. She appeared at my doorway while I was writing and asked if I fancied a coffee as she was heading off for one and wasn’t allowed to go alone. I had no idea that coffee was available anywhere, nor that we were allowed to leave the 2nd floor, but apparently we are allowed access to the ground floor as long as the nursing staff know what we are doing and we do not go alone. Imagine my feelings after 28 days of incarceration! Five minutes later I was over the moon, sitting in my wheelchair in the courtyard in the bright winter sunshine, enjoying my first cup of coffee since dinner at the hotel in Foligno four weeks ago.
Lisa is in much tougher plight than I. She was in a serious car accident in the summer and has been in the clinic since mid-September. In January she will have further surgery but there is no clear prognosis as to how things will turn out and she is likely to be back in the clinic for much of next year. She told me how she had trained as a ballet dancer and then built up a successful career as a television journalist… now she just has to live from one day to the next.

We were talking about the tough regime at Trevi, and also about the fact that they do not rush to get patients on their feet and mobile. The whole emphasis is on getting the muscles and the nerves working properly before putting them into practice with standing and walking. We were both describing the awful sensation of impotence when you try to move a limb and the body offers no response. I will lie on my back in a physio session and the therapist will tell me to raise my left leg – the one that was operated on. Try as I might, I can manage no more than a mild twitch, and even when the therapist takes some of the weight the exercise feels nigh on impossible. I can best describe the sensation by comparing it to a marionette with one or two strings no longer connected to the puppeteer. It is not so much painful as just blank. Nothing happens, there is no sensation, just a total disconnect between the brain’s demands and the limb’s response. It is this that I most want to overcome, because it engenders a quite terrifying sense of impotence and incapacity.

But then I look at someone like Lisa. Clearly from her dance training she will have been in total control of her movement and coordination before the accident; she now has no idea what the future holds for her. How can I possibly complain about spending 4 weeks here when she faces the prospect of spending most of 2012 here with no certain future for her life stretched out ahead of her? Slipping out for a coffee this morning gave me far more than fresh air and a reviving brew, it put a lot of things into perspective.

The other thing we talked about – as people always do in a hospital environment – was food. For anyone who likes food, eating in hospital is a pretty awful experience. I try to remain positive, and at least with today being a nationally recognised Feast Day, there was some improvement. A little lasagne, followed by slices of roast turkey with a light gravy (we will gloss over the accompanying sprouts.) Then there was a custard-filled pastry, a piece of fruit and a banana yoghurt. Not great, but way better than the usual fare. Lisa is fortunate in having her support team of friends and relatives who supply her with packed lunches and suppers; I don’t think she could possibly survive months here on the regular offerings.

Stoicism is not normally perceived as an Italian characteristic. Lisa exemplifies a calm inner strength and her fortitude and attitude have left me humbled and in admiration.
 I must stop complaining; I am the lucky one who knows when I’ll be leaving and that I will be fully recovered in a relatively short period of time.

Saturday 3 December 2011

Writer in Residence


The Numbers Game
The Weekend - November 26th- 27th
In the UK there are approximately 1,000 hip replacement operations every week. My guess is that many Britons expect to have the operation sometime in their 60s or thereabouts, just as they expect to be wearing spectacles and having teeth crowned. I don’t get the impression that it’s like that in Italy.
The initial shock was the specialist at Trevi asking me why I had a hip replacement operation carried out at such a young age (67.) I was quite taken aback and tried to explain that the X-rays showed that I have virtually no cartilage remaining in my hip joint and was becoming increasingly less mobile, but I don’t think he fully understood. The reality is that when I am out and about locally in Italy, I see many more people walking with sticks – bent over and moving slowly, than I would have seen around the town in Tunbridge Wells. It seems almost to be an accepted condition that comes with age, like a State Pension.
Then I look at this amazing Centre and am blown away by the quality and intensity of the care. Last week there have been just 19 patients in the post-operational unit; there are a few more on the floor below, where they care for people with more complex conditions resulting from serious accidents. The 19 patients comprise 5 men, of whom I am most certainly the youngest, and 14 women. We are all here for 3 weeks of intensive physiotherapy, 2 hours every day, 5 days a week, with the morning sessions being 1:1 and the afternoon sessions being in groups of 3 – 5 patients. From the moment I arrived, the rules were set down: no movement without assistance, no getting out of bed to go to the bathroom, no dressing myself, no standing without shoes on my feet, no attempting to move around without my wheelchair. My crutches are kept in the exercise room and I will not be allowed to have them in my room until they are confident of my ability to handle myself safely. They keep on nagging me to the point that it becomes quite irritating. How did you get out of bed this morning? Who dressed you? You must stop leaning forward when you work on the computer. Don’t get out of bed without a pillow gripped between your knees….and so on.
By contrast the hospital back in Foligno imposed no restrictions whatsoever. Nobody objected if I staggered to the bathroom, clinging to furniture and door-frames; nobody offered to help me with my socks or slippers and my attempts at walking up and down the corridor were met with admiring remarks and encouragement.
In UK and the US the emphasis seems to be on rapid recovery. I have looked at several UK and US websites dealing with hip replacements and I am staggered to read things like:
“On days 1 or 2, most total hip replacement patients are given a walker to stabilize them. By the third day after the surgery, most patients can go home.”
Today is my 15th day after the operation, and they are still rigid here about what I can and cannot do. On the other hand, I am virtually unaware of my wound/scar and have no pain at all when I stand to get in and out of the wheelchair.
Then there’s the matter of medication. The UK and US sites suggest that by day 5 the occasional paracetamol should be sufficient to control any discomfort. I am still having daily checks on blood-pressure, antibiotics twice daily and a nightly injection of an anti-coagulant into the stomach wall. Is this overdoing things, or does the UK NHS skimp and cut corners? I just don’t know.
In the exercise room, any walking with crutches is expected to be as upright, normal and steady as possible, and while it is tiring, it is virtually pain-free. I watch elderly women who have completed their stay striding out confidently, albeit with two crutches. So what’s the answer? My instinct says that this 3-week rehabilitation course is an extravagant luxury that I have been fortunate enough to be offered on the local health programme. We’ll see how I am in a couple of weeks’ time. The surgeon at Foligno predicted that I’d walk out of here without crutches…. Now that would be quite an achievement, and for all their cheek and nagging and bullying, I’ll be extremely grateful to the staff I leave behind.

Lop-sided
The Week,  November 28th – December 2nd
The intense medical attention continues: blood pressure, blood samples for analysis, body temperature,  pulse rate and, of course, as in hospitals everywhere, the close interrogation about bowel movements. When such constant, detailed attention is paid to my condition, you will understand that it was something of a shock when the doctor examining me one afternoon paused and asked, with a slightly quizzical expression, ‘Have you always had one leg shorter than the other?’ When you put this in the context of the fact that they’d sawed a chunk out of my thigh bone in order to fit the prosthetic hip joint, you can see that I wondered whether they’d misread their measurements. In fact, I remember that many years ago, my local chiropodist in Lincoln identified a slight difference in my leg length, and commented that very few people had legs exactly the same length. I decided against putting my Italian doctor’s mind at rest and replied ambiguously ‘Most people have some difference in their leg length.’ He raised his eyebrows and gave an Italian shrug.
I don’t know if they did correct the leg length difference in the course of surgery, because I feel unbalanced now, anyway. Balance is one thing that is drastically affected by this operation. Your body has to learn it all over again. I often feel quite dizzy as I stand up – though I prefer to think that this is the direct result of a severe drop in food intake combined with a total lack of alcohol. The nerves need to reconnect where the muscles have been damaged and it all takes time. We are not used to being patient and letting time move at its own pace; we expect quick-fix remedies, and the body doesn’t work like that when it comes to healing. I have spent a week trying to learn to slow down, rest, take naps and doze, but it doesn’t come naturally.
Physiotherapy is a mix of pain and pleasure. The morning session is one-on-one and most of the session involves deep massage around the wound area. I start stretched out on a work-bench the size and height of a dining-room table. The first sensation is one of discomfort, lying on a hard surface and feeling the muscles stretching out to the maximum. When the therapist starts I can hardly feel the fingers rubbing my muscles, and at other times I wince and squirm as she hits the spot. Then she starts to get my muscles working, getting me to press my legs downwards into the bench, or push my legs outwards. The challenges start when I have to move the leg that has been operated on. She tells me to raise it 45 degrees and it simply doesn’t move until she takes some of the weight in her hand. Then she gets me to draw circles in the air with my pointed toes and the leg simply doesn’t understand left, right, up or down.
All the exercises are designed to stimulate muscles that have been underutilised while I’ve been limping around back at home with a stick, or muscles that are adjusting to a new role now that the hip joint has been replaced. The exercises are never weight-bearing; - in fact the whole attitude to mobility is rigid. In UK they get you up and walking in a couple of days, but it’s now 3 weeks since my operation and here at the clinic in Trevi they still insist I move around in a wheelchair, and they keep my crutches in the Exercise Room for supervised walks.
After the best part of an hour on the bench, they bring me my crutches and allow me to walk, but this is not about my ability to move around, it’s about my ability to walk perfectly upright, steady, controlled, feet pointing perfectly forward, back straight and hips first – like a mannequin. That’s an awful lot to remember at the same time as thinking about balance and stability so it takes a few strides to get it all together. The therapists are true disciplinarians with demanding standards and run a constant commentary of criticism – head up – chest out – feet pointing forward – move both crutches together – take shorter steps – take bigger steps – shoulders back…..and so on, so that the 10 minute walk becomes quite exhausting.
We finish up back at the wheelchair and while the therapist whisks away my crutches I spin back to my room to rest and probably doze.
The afternoon session is in groups of 5 or 6 and involves exercises which the therapist supervises like a Sergeant-Major on the parade ground. We are scattered around the room, lying on individual workbenches, and follow a series of exercises that involve working both legs independently, and other exercises that develop lower back muscles. No nice gentle massage in this session, just work that brings tears to the eyes. After the best part of an hour, we again have walking practice with the crutches.
I think it gets easier, I think the walking becomes more sedate and better synchronised, and the greatest frustration is probably having to climb back into the wheelchair at the end of the session and spin off back to the room. Maybe I’ll be allowed to move around on crutches next week – I’ll just have to wait and see.

The Constant Chatter of Friends and Relations
The weekend – 3rd- 4th December
It’s Saturday and the clinic is deafening with the buzz of visitors up and down the corridor. Several of the patients came round this morning, wishing a cheery goodbye as they left at the completion of their stay, others have been whisked away back home for some proper food and a few home comforts and will return later. My taciturn room-mate, known only by his surname to one and all, was collected by his daughter after breakfast. I could never penetrate his thick Umbrian accent, but he had a ready smile and reminded me of Grancio, the contadino who share-cropped Dad’s vines and olives, with his wrinkled leathery complexion, slow, steady movements and fixed, friendly smile. He had brought a small television with him and this was permanently tuned to a constant output of game shows and news broadcasts, whether he was awake or asleep, or even in the room. Since went home the room has been blissfully quiet, though this does increase the sensation of solitary confinement.
The cleaners have now given the room a thorough going-over ready for the next resident. The cleaning both here and previously at Foligno is an eye-opener. It is literally on-going and meticulous. This afternoon they stripped the vacated bed of its mattress and started to deep-clean the bed frame and the mechanism that raises and lowers it. Finally, they reassembled everything and shrouded it in a clean sheet ready to be made up as and when a new occupant is expected. Everything in the room is cleaned on a daily basis, from skirting boards to door frames – and they do two cleans a day just in case they miss something.
This morning they changed the dressing on my wound but still won’t say when I’ll be discharged. They want the wound to be completely healed, so I’ll just have to wait and see how things develop day by day. I’ve spent the day catching up on Radio 4 – I hadn’t realised how much I had missed the intelligent banter and witty comedy – and I still have a couple of unread books in Fi’s Kindle. There’s no reason to be bored, though the routine inevitably becomes monotonous.
The one treat I can look forward to is that at weekends I will have a yoghurt as well as an apple for my dessert, and in this institutionalised existence it’s amazing how such tiny factors achieve great significance. I wonder if it will be banana flavour or strawberry flavour.

Saturday 26 November 2011

In and out of the rehab clinic


Big Mistakes
Monday November 21st
Everything hurt.
I think I had overdone it – all my marching up and down the corridor – and this morning, every muscle in my leg and back was complaining. Today I had to pack, and I had not realised just how much of putting things in a suitcase involves twisting, turning, bending and stretching. I fought bravely on, in the belief that this was the right thing to do and that I would gradually loosen up, but everything hurt.
When they wheeled me off to the ambulance I was again back with the sense of helplessness – I could do nothing for myself. I was strapped in the back of a glorified van with obscured windows, unable to see more than a glimpse of the world outside- and I recognised none of it. When I had arrived, 10 days previously it had been mild and sunny; today was bitter and wintry. I was disoriented. It was a short run to reach the clinic and it was exhausting…this whole sense of being held hostage on unknown terms combined with the sense of bruising and muscular strain. Maybe now I would be coddled and nurtured.
They unloaded me after the short drive to Trevi and wheeled me in. The first impact was the view through a doorway to my right, an explicit Torture Chamber. All I could see was a vast hall equipped with racks, benches, wall-bars, weights, pulleys and incongruously colourful giant beach-balls. A coven of what appeared to be Women’s Institute committee members were huddled around a table engaged in a strange ritual. They were cutting up pieces of felt and ribbon and stitching them into extremely unattractive Christmas decorations. I came over all Jack Nicholson.
Surely it can’t be this bad – but we were only just starting.
The room had two beds and shared a bathroom with a similar room adjacent. It was quiet, as everyone was at their morning exercises. All my comfortable, home-making things – the computer, the headset, the Kindle and so forth were packed into the two suitcases so I rested, but soon became restless. After 20 minutes or so I stumbled out of bed and started to put away some of the bits and pieces to make space for unpacking the suitcases. I had just hung up my jacket when a nurse appeared at the door, arms akimbo. Her comments were along the lines of:
‘Well, Mr Harvey, what do you think you’re doing? Out of bed, barefoot, no walking frame and no crutches….! Get back in bed this instant!’
I climbed back sheepishly, upon which the nurse pulled up the sides of the hospital cot, leaving me completely trapped and imprisoned in my bed with a urine bottle should I need it, and a call button should I need anything else. She then wagged her finger and told me not to try anything like that again…and marched off.
I was completely held prisoner for most of the rest of the day while a selection of other officers and wardens interviewed me about my medical history and criminal record.
At four in the afternoon, two orderlies arrived to unpack my stuff. This process is undoubtedly one of the greatest insults to personal dignity as clothing and undergarments are held up, surveyed and commented on, together with all the other peripherals that comprise one’s packaged, travelling identity. Then came the next lecture: If I wanted to get out of bed for anything, I was to use the call button to summon someone with my wheelchair; I would only be allowed to move around on crutches later, as and when they thought my body was safely adjusted and coordinated.
Is that quite clear?
Yes, Miss.
So, will you be cooperative from now on?
Yes, Miss.
Right, you may join the other inmates for the evening meal in the dining room; Maria will fetch your wheelchair. What do you say?
Thank-you Miss.  
And so it was that I was wheeled away and wheeled back, locked in my bed where I escaped to the internet on my computer and the story of Lord Sugar and the precocious teenagers on Young Apprentice.

Parrots and other birds
Tuesday November 22nd
The early-morning nurse asked for my parrot. Even if I had been wide awake, I would have been confused, but as it was, awakening in the bars of my cage in a still-unfamiliar room, I was totally speechless. And then she pointed at my side table, and I realised that the silhouetted profile of a parrot would be identical to the silhouetted profile of the urine bottle. So there’s new Italian language vocabulary that’s not in the average teach-yourself book. I asked for my wheelchair so I could go to the bathroom, clean up and shave. When it was brought I sat patiently, doing just as I was told, waiting for the patient from the adjacent room to vacate the bathroom.
When I heard the door open and close, I wheeled myself through and luxuriated with the tingle of toothpaste and the stimulus of hot, soapy water. After a few blissful minutes, I felt ready to face the challenge of the physiotherapy programme as I spun the wheelchair neatly round, climbed out and sat at the table where I had set up my computer. The nurse appeared again, and she was still not happy.
What do we do before we get in or out of the wheelchair?
Put the brakes on, Miss.
Yes, Bob, we put the brakes on, don’t we? And we don’t go to the bathroom alone until we are physically stable and competent, OK?
No Miss, I mean Yes, Miss.
Bathrooms are dangerous places and you might slip and have a fall, and then what would you do, and what would we do, Mr Bob?
Is that a rhetorical question, Miss?
I was determined not to let them get me down, and after my weak tea and dry biscuits I rang the bell for nurse to put my shoes on and help me into my wheelchair so that I could spin on down to the exercise room for my first session of physiotherapy.
The coven were in full session and had added gold ribbon and tinsel to their ingredients. They cackled away, mass-producing bows, stars and hearts. I wished I’d brought the Kindle, not realising that the physiotherapy would be in individual sessions, so all I could do was sit and wait. It was a couple of hours later when my turn finally came and one of the extensive team of nubile wenches introduced herself: My name’s Francesca and I’ll be your therapist during your stay with us here in Trevi. Rather like an American diner: My name’s Bonnie and I’ll be your server for this evening. Except that it sounds more alluring in Italian.
She led me over to a bench the size of a double bed, told me to lie down and stretch out and then climbed up next to me. I started to forgive the Kommandant. Then Francesca started to massage the thigh muscles surrounding my wound. The sensation was exquisite, I could feel all the tension floating out of my legs, and across my lower back. She worked on my calf muscles then lifted up my legs and had me stretch, raise, bend, lower. It was initially difficult, but as the hour progressed, my whole lower body started to regain some sort of sense of cohesion.  
She paused for a moment and then took a decision and had me stand with my crutches, then told me to walk across the room. I felt a wonderful sense of OK – now I’ll show you!  …and I stepped out confidently. Francesca called out to a colleague to look at me, and I knew that what they had said at Foligno was right – I had made a very rapid early recovery and with a bit of effort and application I could be a star pupil and stop having the warders tell me off for being too ambitious. When I returned to my room I was glowing with a sense of achievement and looking forward to the afternoon therapy session after lunch and the rest period.
Just before three I asked a nurse to supervise me into my wheelchair, and then I spun off and settled myself in the corridor outside the exercise room with the Kindle. I was enjoying the opportunity that my incarceration created to lose myself in a wide variety of reading and was getting to grips with a thriller set in modern Moscow. It wasn’t long before the girls arrived, passed me my crutches and told me to walk across the room. I was super-confident this time. I walked steadily and smoothly, then carefully manoeuvred a 180 degree turn to meet their alarmed stare. But it wasn’t my ambulatory expertise that had mesmerised them; it was the pool of blood by my feet.

Emergency Repairs
They hurried me back to my bed and within minutes a flurry of nurses and doctors appeared and together rapidly agreed that they would patch me up and put me in an ambulance back to Foligno. Foligno created the problem, let Foligno fix it.
So it was that I sat in the ambulance wheelchair in my exercise clothes, wrapped in a blanket. I was clutching the Kindle for two reasons: I couldn’t face the boredom of all the waiting around that hospitals always entail and secondly, I was dying to learn the next developments of the story in which I was totally engrossed. As the ambulance sped away, I was once again overwhelmed with that sense of being totally out of control and only partly conscious of what was going on around me.
As they took me back to the Orthopaedic ward at Foligno hospital there was much banter with the staff. I told them I’d come back because I didn’t like the food in Trevi, which caused great amusement. A doctor and nurse took me into a treatment room and they spent what felt like a painful hour reopening and cleaning my operation wound. Apparently there was a hematoma – a build up of blood and liquid underneath where it has started to heal over. They bandaged me up again and that’s when they told me I’d be staying overnight, and possibly for a day or two more.
An hour later a suitcase arrived with my phones and computer, three shirts and two pairs of underpants. No trousers. The tracksuit bottoms that I’d been wearing were drenched in blood, so once they’d wheeled me through to a bed, I draped these over a radiator to dry out – I couldn’t live in underpants knowing that relatives and assorted crows would be in and out, day and night.
Finally, I crawled into bed, wondering what the doctors would all agree in the morning.

Slowing down
Wednesday  November 23rd
I decided, as soon as I awoke, to do everything I could to avoid being “hospitalised.” In my mind I was no longer a patient, I was now a resident at the physiotherapy clinic in Trevi, temporarily in Foligno hospital for a quick-fix to a minor problem. I didn’t want to get back into all the trauma and transfusion of being poked and probed by nurses and orderlies. I wanted to maintain a sense of transition beyond that and being well-on-the-way-to-full-recovery. I wanted out: I wanted to get back to Trevi, the Torture Chamber and all those lovely young therapists.
I removed the itchy tee-shirt I’d been wearing in the exercise room and pulled a clean shirt and underpants out of the suitcase; I took the track-suit bottoms off the radiator and satisfied myself that the bloodstains had dried into invisibility and pulled on my seductively comfortable fleece slippers.
While my fellow residents were still sleeping, I rearranged the room, commandeering the table and moving it against the wall and under the window beside my bed. The view of the road and car-park were all part of the psychological context of not really being in hospital. Then I wired everything up: the computer plugged into the mains, the mobile-phone chargers both hooked up and the dongle connected up to test the internet access. My pillow now became a cushion for the hard chair and I was as happy as could be expected while I waited for the poke and probe teams to start their rounds.
First the vampires took 4 or 5 blood samples (once they’ve got a good flow they seem to want to fill a whole row of little bottles.) Then it was heart-rate and blood pressure, which were both excellent.  Later the sweet trolley arrived and the anti-biotics, anti-coagulants and whatever were checked, dispensed and logged. Finally, well into mid-morning, the three musketeers arrived, comprising Leonardo, my surgeon, with his boss and the human tailor who had sorted out the wound the previous evening. Together they inspected, clucked and tutted and Leonardo gave me a scrawled prescription for a special a waist-high orthopaedic stocking which is designed to protect against deep vein thrombosis. That didn’t sound too arduous, until he told me I’d have to wear it for at least a month. Ah well! It gives a whole new meaning to Christmas Stocking. With pleading eyes I asked whether I still had to stay in hospital, and they gave their unanimous verdict that they would keep me at least one more night. Understandable, I suppose; they didn’t want to be the laughing stock of the Trevi crowd if I started leaking again.
And so I started an extremely boring and disorienting day. I read till an inedible lunch arrived- sticky, over-cooked pasta followed by their speciality of meat-loaf disguised as cat food, or vice-versa. In the afternoon I listened to the BBC Radio Four podcasts I’d downloaded, Play of the Week, Saturday Live, Thinking Allowed and the Now Show. The isolation brought with it waves of depression, made all the more poignant by the constant flow of visitors and overnight campers who arrived to surround the other beds. The brain rejects logic in such situation and wallows in emotional weakness – looking back later, in hindsight, it’s all easy to analyse and dismiss: it just gets difficult to handle at the time.
Dinner was more appetising, though that’s a rather strong adjective to use, and in the course of the evening I finished my book, let Laurie Taylor provoke me with ideas on moral issues, and chuckled at Richard Coles’ guests on Saturday Live. I stretched out on the bed, itching from too much wriggling from attempts to find comfort in a bed that needed to be six inches longer, and finally dozed off, determined that this should be my last night in the hospital, if that could, please, dear God, be possible.

Escaping back to Rehab
Thursday  November 24th
I put my marker down: I dressed and packed. Not without talking first with the various medics who checked me out on their early-morning rounds and verified that all was well with the way the wound was healing. I confirmed that my partner was coming at midday and would then purchase the special support stocking so that I would have everything needed to make the move back to Trevi. They confirmed that I could then make the transfer by ambulance. Sorted!
Sadly, nothing in Italy is that simple.
As soon as Fi and Gerry arrived they went off to purchase the stocking from the shop on the ground floor, but returned promptly with a list of the measurements they needed. I rang for a nurse to help with the measurements – to make sure we didn’t mix up ankles and knees on the list, but the nurse didn’t want the responsibility and sent for someone “official.” Another medic arrived and was meticulous in determining the essential statistics so that after another 20 minutes I was all set to go and asked for the administration to book transport, while Fi and Gerry grabbed some lunch
Another 20 minutes and the nurse returned to tell me that transport would not be available until next morning. I was sitting there packed and ready to roll, so I told them I could arrange my own transport (by having Fi and Gerry drive the 10 miles to Trevi.) The nurse said I’d need a discharge letter and went off to arrange it.
Another 20 minutes and Fi and Gerry came back and I explained the situation. Fi went to arrange a wheelchair, and in the confusion I thought she picked up the discharge note and she thought I had it, but in any case I was on my way down in the wheelchair, hugely relieved to be moving to a positive environment.
Another 20 minutes and I was belted into the front seat of our car with my luggage and longing to put the hospital behind me and get on with the recuperation and rehabilitation programme.
Another 20 minutes and we were driving round in circles around Trevi, as Tom-Tom tried to send us down disused, dead-end farm tracks. We switched off Tom-Tom and headed for signs pointing to  Centro, sometimes the old ways are the simplest.
One final 20 minutes and I was in my room, happy and content, and Fi and Gerry (- many, many thanks, guys,) were driving off, up over the mountains homewards.
At least 4 specialist medics (I lost count) came and wagged a finger at me with lectures about not putting strain on my wound, always getting someone to help me stand and not trying to dress myself. I kept an attentive expression and nodded gravely. The truth is that Foligno hospital never told me anything – they just assumed I’d be OK and when I did try walking up and down, they applauded my efforts. I never broke the rules before, and I love the structured programme that Trevi enforces. Tomorrow I’ll be back in the routine… and relishing every minute on the way to regaining full physical independence.

Pain, Punishment and Progress
Friday  November 25th
Next morning, there were fresh checks on my bandages and more stern words of warning about the importance of doing exactly as I am told, and I was finally back into the clinic’s rehabilitation programme. I waited patiently outside the exercise room till Francesca summoned me to wheel myself through, then I climbed up onto the massage table and stretched out.
Her fingers started to knead and manipulate my bruised and strained muscles. The sensation was truly exquisite. It was a strange combination of pain and pleasure. Sometimes I was almost reduced to tears, and at other times I thought I would stop breathing.  After the massage, she started on the exercises, forcing me to push against resistance, or raise a leg that simply seemed immobile, or leverage my back up off the bench with my feet raised up high and balanced on a giant, inflated exercise ball. Each exercise was repeated ten, twenty times, then a pause to catch my breath before twisting into another improbable position and discovering more, new, previously unused muscles.
Finally, I swung off the bench and was handed my crutches and given marching orders: slow, steady, straight back, even paces, don’t stoop, not too fast….Bravo!
There was another session in the afternoon with further exercises that looked so simple, but were totally frustrating when my legs simply would not do what they were told. But I knew there was progress, and when I went to bed, I found that for the first time in 2 weeks I could lie on my side without every muscle in my thigh and hip screaming out in protest.
The message at the clinic is still the same. Rest: don’t try to do everything at once. The challenge is that all I want to do is get back to normal as fast as possible – and this gentle process is not an easy one to accept. Still, if I can just overcome the guilt around being out action then I’m sure I’ll get there in the end.

Sunday 20 November 2011

Orthopaedics in Italy


Introduction
Autumn 2008
The benign doctor in the consulting room in Tunbridge Wells smiled: ‘You’re getting old, Bob! It’s a touch of sciatica!’
I’d developed a slight limp and stairs were starting to be a bit of an exercise, especially when I was carrying the shopping back to my apartment. Then there was the back-ache and the tendency to put my weight onto one leg when I was standing around. Sometimes it was very painful and I started to have physiotherapy, which made things a little more comfortable. The local NHS trust was broad-minded and when physio didn’t resolve the matter they sent me for acupuncture, and in my long search for comfort I also tried deep massage and – of course – the good old idea of exercise. Everything helped to some extent, but nothing resolved the discomfort.
After several months I bullied the doctor into getting me an appointment with the orthopaedic specialist, but by the time it was all fixed up with the joint replacement centre in nearby Crowborough, we’d already started the move to Italy. Thus it was that I flew back to UK in the winter of 2009/10 for a series of consultations, X-rays and scans. This time the evidence was clear; the cartilage of my left hip joint was worn, and I would eventually need a replacement. In the meantime, I could just keep on with anti-inflammatory capsules and pain-killers. On reflection it was a business decision to delay the expense of the operation for a year or so; there was always the possibility I might die in the interim, in which case the NHS would have saved the cost of a major operation. From a personal point of view, all it did was prolong the painful condition.
I returned to Italy and established my Italian domicile so that I could register with the Italian health services. Once this was done, my affable local GP sent me off for X-rays and – in common with the British specialist – he decided I could struggle on for a year or two. Like any self-respecting professional, he changed the medication to assert his authority, but the principle was the same: anti-inflammatory capsules and pain-killers together with something to stop the anti-inflammatories upsetting my stomach.
Through 2010 I gradually became less mobile and early this year I persuaded the local GP to refer me to the specialist and see if I could get “on the list.” The suave, debonair Italian surgeon took one look at the X-rays and smiled across his Adriatic tan and designer stubble. ‘Yes, we’ll put you on the list; there’s no cartilage left, it must be quite painful.’ They took my phone number and promised to call as soon as they could fit me in.
Nothing happened for six months, and then the surgeon’s secretary called me in September and told me he was now based over the mountains, 100km away in Foligno; would I mind coming there for the operation, and would next Tuesday be OK?
Shock! Yes, I would be happy to drive to Foligno but not next week, because I now had a hectic diary with my son’s wedding in October and a Public Speaking Masterclass to run on November 1st. But anytime after that…
The communication lines went down again, and despite several attempts to make contact we heard nothing. Then, when I was actually on my flight back from UK to Italy after running the November Masterclass, they called to ask me to come in the following week. No, not for tests or X-rays; this would be for the operation.
With Fi planning crucial business meetings in London that following week, I reverted to lone-traveller mode. Rather than have her lose a day being a taxi service I would hop on the train to Foligno, treat myself to the local Umbrian cuisine at a recommended local hotel and then check into the hospital at the appointed time the following morning.
I unpacked, then, after the weekend, I repacked.

On the Train
Wednesday November 9th
Tolentino station would fit perfectly into the Italian equivalent of any 11-year old’s “Hornby 00” layout. “Hornby double-O” was probably the most popular model train set and if there is a station in the range of continental accessories, then Tolentino would be the model.
A single track comes in, bifurcates to run alongside two ground-level platforms, then departs to west and east as a single track once again. Back in UK, the line from Devon down to Saint Ives used to be single track, with a physical “token” that the driver or his mate grabbed off a pole at one end and then deposited on a hook at the other end. The token was the size and shape of an unstrung tennis racket, so the driver could loop his arm into the ring and pull it from its pole without needing to stop. The eastbound and westbound trains alternated and this token would be used to unlock the points for the train that would be travelling in the opposite direction. It’s a no-nonsense, effective and beautifully simple solution to running on single track lines.
Ferrovia Italiana’s single track control is probably automated – I’ve not seen the driver reach out to take the token, but the track itself is most likely much as it was when it was constructed. Hefty oak sleepers are in-filled with rocks that are uniformly the size of cricket balls, and the train rattles along with a reassuring sway. The label on the window announces “E pericoloso sporgersi” [-it’s dangerous to lean out] just as the label did 50 years ago when I unscrewed one and added to my multi-lingual collection of “Gentlemen lift the seat,” “No Smoking” and my prized treasure “Do not flush while the train is standing in the station” – black on silver aluminium in English, French, German and Greek.
Even in the cities, many continental railway platforms are at ground level, so you literally climb up into the carriage. Not a problem 50 years ago when I criss-crossed Europe with my student rail-card, but more of a challenge with a hip that gives me a decided limp, and a suitcase that is not so much heavy as simply awkward.
This train-line seems to survive on school kids. Just as the clock was ticking towards 13.36 at Tolentino, the carriage was invaded by teenagers, all chattering, joking and jibing. They were headed two stops up the line to San Severino which presumably lacks the educational facilities that Tolentino offers. There’s always a game of slamming the door between the seating area and the standing area beside the exit. This is generally associated with horseplay and flirting, involving a group of girls in the end block of seats and a group of guys in the standing area. Nobody seems to tire of the game, accompanied by much joshing and jostling as the train pulls in to the station where they all tumble out with much shouting and jeering.
 Halfway from Tolentino to Fabriano the train reaches Matelica, famed for its white wine, a Verdicchio that rivals (and, in my opinion, bests) the more renowned Verdicchio of its rival town, Jesi near to Ancona. The vineyards stretch up the slopes and the winemakers are out between the vines, checking sugar levels and deciding when to pick. I love this journey on up through the mountains to Fabriano, where the track meets the main line that runs from Ancona on the Adriatic to Rome and the Mediterranean. The scenery is spell-binding; a constant panorama of mountains covered with thick forests and valleys planted with olive trees, maize and vegetable gardens.
At Fabriano I catch the train headed towards Rome and alight at Foligno where I am staying at a small hotel (thanks, Trip-Advisor!) so that I can be at the hospital for 8am.

HARVEY Robertjohn
Thursday November 10th
Somehow or other, the description of my wonderful meal in Foligno and the scathing attack on the ethics of local taxi-drivers all got lost, so consequently my description of this day starts with my arrival at the hospital…
I negotiated my way through the hospital bureaucracy registering myself the way they like to call me HARVEY, Robertjohn and was eventually ushered into my room, sharing with a man roughly my own age. The 2nd floor is dedicated to Orthopaedics and Urology and judging by the complex pipes and tubes that surround his bed, I gather he’s here for the latter.
I had an ECG and several blood tests; I had a chat with my surgeon and I had various X-rays. The pleasant surprise was when the surgeon asked if I was willing to have 2-3 weeks residential physiotherapy after my operation. No cost, and the likelihood of a much more speedy recovery.
How could I refuse? It’s an excuse for another blog.

11 - 11 - 11 - 11 - 2011
Friday November 11th
They woke me at 6 for injections, then at 7 for more blood tests, then at 8 to shave my thighs, then... it went on and on as the clock moved on towards 11 o’clock.
 What, me? - Superstitious! Nonetheless, it was around 11.11 on the 11th day of the 11th month of the 11th year of the millennium that they wheeled me off to the operating wing. I was trolleyed across to a giant serving hatch in the wall, then my bed was cranked up and a wide conveyor belt pulled me through the hole and onto the operating bed. The operating wing of this ultra-modern hospital is literally physically isolated, almost quarantined and looked more like part of a set from a James Bond Goldfinger command centre rather than a room in a hospital. 
More pretty, bright nurses, more conversations, more tests, more interrogation and then I signed my consent to the risk of this operation on a rather large person. One of the nurses wiped my lower back with alcohol and then slipped an injection needle into my spine. Oh Heavens Alive! - They were going to chop my leg up while I was under only a local (they called it regional) anaesthetic. Happily, they put a curtain across so that I couldn't see what was going on, but that didn't prevent the shock of seeing sundry staff splashed all over with blood -  my blood. Even the spotlight over the operating table had flecks of scarlet blood on it. At least there was a discreet curtain at neck height so that I could not watch what was happening below my waistline.
Suddenly, the sound coming through the curtain was deafening BANG! CRASH! They were hammering – not tapping – the prosthetic joint into position. I shuddered with each hammer-blow trying not to imagine what it would feel like without the numbing drug.
Later, the surgeon confided that it was the largest (62mm diameter) prosthetic he had ever fitted. All this stuff about 11-11-11-11-11 isn’t mere hocus-pocus. As son Toby said last night, his children will have a bionic grandfather The biggest surprise was that as the anaesthetic wore off, I no longer had the sensation of the painful joint connection that has grown steadily worse over the past two years. I am, of course, still bed-ridden but I feel much livelier.
The night-time was weird. I lay flat on my back with a tangle of tubes hanging over me, dispensing saline, morphine and paracetamol; while other tubes were draining away waste fluids and blood. I don’t tend to sleep calmly and woke around 3 in the morning, having knocked out most of the tubes and with the left side of the bed scarlet. A nurse appeared and cleared everything up, but no sooner had she left than I reached too far and once again and sent more blood spraying over the clean sheets. I’ll try and behave better, now that it’s Saturday


Groggy and Bilious
Saturday November 12th
It’s a strange mix of feelings.  I’m confined to bed at the moment, so my bum gets itchy. The bandage is soaked through, but they’re not going to change it till the medics have seen me. There’s a drip in my right hand which makes it difficult to master the keyboard, and finally – I can’t consume a dry rusk without bringing straight back up.
So I write this little self-indulgence, play the odd game of patience and read.
And sleep.
And that’s about all for the moment…!
I managed to knock two more needles and pipes out of my arm in the course of the day  but all this hardware should be unplugged tomorrow (I hope) and maybe I’ll be allowed to walk and start my physiotherapy. Right now I am feeling mentally very lively, with just a bit of pain from bruising but it could be that I am just high on morphine. It does feel a bit like prison, but I guess I’m just impatient. I am so tempted to swing my legs round and stand up, but I suppose I should wait till tomorrow morning, and if I do that I’ll probably pull the tubes out again.
Thankfully, there’s no television in the room and I’ve downloaded plenty of Radio 4 podcasts, and there’s plenty to read having borrowed Fi’s Kindle. So, on that note… I’ll return to reading Soul Mountain.

Stiff legs and embarrassing indignity
Sunday November 13th
For the last 4 months I’ve had high blood pressure. My local doctor banned salt, coffee, tea and most other simple pleasures; he also gave me pills to lower my blood pressure and these had limited effect. Of course, blood pressure is something they check daily in hospitals and when they double-checked the readings yesterday and today, it was steady at 115 over 70 which means that I am super-fit. The obvious answer is that if I am to maintain perfect health, I need to spend more time in bed, being waited on hand and foot. Regrettably, that’s not likely to go down very well at home.
But you never do get two doctors to agree, do you? My specialist in Tunbridge Wells insisted I should take Testosterone permanently, since my blood analysis showed a zero count (something to do with radio-therapy 25 years ago.) Daily applications of testosterone gel quickly sorted things out – I had more energy and it was easier to control my weight. However, the family doctor in Caldarola seems to put testosterone supplements on a par with cocaine, and gesticulates angrily when I raise the matter. Once I get my mobility back I’ll track down testosterone on the internet – I am fed up with the lack of energy.
They keep promising that they’ll take all my tubes out today: what a relief that will be! I am beginning to wonder just how stiff I’ll be when I get up – and I had half the answer when I tried to lie on my back and bend my knees this morning. The sensation of serious bruising is severe, and I keep thinking back to the way they took a hammer to the prosthetic to get it to fit. That, and the whine of the electric saw, will haunt me for years to come.
I suppose I am still on a morphine high and should prepare for a tedious cold turkey when that particular medication ends. This empty waiting is depressing and I find myself too impatient just to sit and read like a good boy. I’ll play patience on the computer for a while and try and magic up a medic on unplugging duty.
The unplugging medic didn’t arrive until 4pm, but before then, my sister arrived from Rome at midday and we had a pleasant couple of hours shooting the breeze. She brought grapes and digestive biscuits as well as a little bag with the things you don’t get in an Italian hospital – cutlery, paper napkins and towels. She shared my lunch and then, when I was nodding off and couldn’t keep my eyes open any longer, she went off to do some sight-seeing. She called me from the station before taking the train back to Rome having had a wonderful couple of hours exploring Foligno, discovering piazzas and palaces, and an artisan food market where she bought honey and cheese, and tasted mead.
I feel a wonderful liberating sense of relief now that most of the tubes, drains and catheters have been removed. There’s just a saline drip remaining, and that doesn’t get in the way of my keyboarding. Tomorrow I’ll be allowed to get out of bed. But I do have a confession to make: I could not face the indignity of my giant nappy a second time and when everything was quiet earlier this afternoon, I carried my drain bottles in a carrier bag and very, very gently made my way to the loo. Yes… rash, I know, but it felt SO GOOD!
I won’t try it again until they say I’m allowed out of bed, I promise I’ll be a good boy now.

Wot – no trousers?
Monday November 14th
I slept restlessly. I dozed off at 9 in the evening, so that by the wee small hours I was wide-awake. The morphine had finished Sunday afternoon, so I’m sure that some of my condition was withdrawal.
I was getting very uncomfortable, sweating and grubby in bed, and it was a luxury to have a nurse give me a bed-bath this morning, then replacing the sheets all around me.  They still won’t let me wear trousers – just the pyjama top. My theory is that it’s a feminist revolt designed to humiliate men. Well, it works and all the men clutch the fronts of their dressing-gowns sheepishly as they walk up and down the corridor
 It was good to feel relatively clean but better still when, after a bit of negotiation, they gave me a Heath-Robinson monstrosity of a kind of Zimmer frame with wheels and bicycle brakes and pads that fit under the armpits. Now I can make my way independently to the bathroom. No more nappies!
I had all the thrill of my first blood transfusion today as my haemoglobin (that word does sound like a Danish Dwarf, doesn’t it?) count was down as the result of the blood I lost in the operation. I’ve not had one before, and I was terrified to watch an air bubble work its way down the tube into my vein. I never did any science or biology at school but I had this belief that an air-bubble in the blood stream would kill a patient…..?
Well, that was a couple of hours ago, so I suppose that’s just an old wives’ tale.
Then along came my surgeon. Like all his underlings, he treats me as a special case – a Super-Sized Englishman who seems to have an indomitable positive attitude. He explained that his Italian male patients are all wimps, so I raised and lowered my leg and wiggled my hip joint, to the amazement of him and his assistant. Once more he recounted that he had never inserted such a chunky prosthetic. I can believe him – I heard the hammering!
He is keeping me in hospital at least until Friday and then they’ll take me by ambulance to nearby Trevi – about 10km away. This is a rehabilitation clinic and they will keep me in for 3 weeks at the end of which they claim I will be walking normally – without crutches or sticks. Well, that’s what he said. It has always amazed me the way that footballers and rugby players suffer crippling injuries but are back playing in just a few weeks. I suppose this is the answer, intensive physiotherapy and structured exercise.
So, all in all, a positive day, though it’s going to be pretty boring for the rest of the week. The dumpy unshaven Italian who has been sharing my room checked out today, to be replaced by another, similar dumpy Italian. The care is excellent even though the food is hospital – sadly.
I think I should enjoy my hibernation and prepare for Yuletide.

Sawdust and Syrup
Tuesday November 15th
I do not know how anyone can start the day with these tiny biscottate – dry rusks that crumble into sawdust. I admire the technical expertise that goes into their manufacture; it takes a clever process to create such perfectly formed slices with even colouring from slightly brown at the edges to a pale gold in the centre. But the lack of flavour is unbelievable, and they disintegrate into dust and crumbs when you bite into them.
That’s the choice at breakfast, served with a plastic pot of very sugary jam that is either yellow (apricot) plum (blue) or red (cherry.) The beverages are sweet lemon tea or roasted-barley “coffee.” Not a very nurturing way to start the day, especially when one wakes un-refreshed after a long night, drifting in and out of dream-filled slumber till the first nurse comes for blood samples at 05.30. There are more medical checks every half-hour or so, then the orderly arrives to strip the bed and I need to decide whether to stay in bed or move to the table and chair.
Later, someone came to check on the mobility of my joints, but the physiotherapy won’t start till they move me to the rehabilitation centre; right now they just want my wounds to heal and my strength to build up again.
And this is incredibly boring.
But my life in Italy is never boring, and the phone rings. A UK production company is stuck on developing a theme for an annual conference for 3,000 employees – or maybe 5 x regional conferences each for 600. What can I dream up that will confront their corporate employee cynicism?
·        Well actually, I’m in hospital recovering from major surgery…
·        I’ll send you some stuff…
·        I don’t have web access…
·        Let me just run this by you…
·        Call me back, the medics are back to do more tests
·        Do you remember that concept you did for the insurance company?
·        Well, suppose we took this approach….?
…and I’m hooked because they offer me the two things I can never refuse – money and flattery.
The rest of the day is taken up with text messaging and topping up phone credit and trying to think up new zingy ideas. The phone keeps ringing and gradually the project takes shape. I just don’t believe that I am master-minding ideas for a quarter-million plus budget, propped up in a hospital bed in my underpants and pyjama jacket. It was so nice just curling up with Radio 4 podcasts, but it’s even nicer to be wanted – for money!

Sweat, Grease and Drips
Wednesday November 16th
I lay down feeling sweaty and sticky last night and by the morning I couldn’t stand sleeping with myself. I wheeled myself into the bathroom and greeted the stranger in the mirror. To my pleasant surprise I discovered I was much more stable on my feet, and I managed to give myself a once-over with a hand-towel soaked in hot water and lots of liquid soap. By the time I’d shaved and combed my hair I felt much more human.
Most of the morning was spent working on the conference proposal ideas, with text messages interspersed with phone calls, and it was great to be back in the – remunerated – buzz again.  Lunch was an improvement on last night’s dinner – a meat-loaf which might well have been cat food, but I still find I am eating only about half of what they put on the plate. As the noise level rose with the arrival of more dumpy little ladies to sit at the bedsides of their suffering spouses, I settled in to a couple of hours of personal writing and reading.
The test regime continues, starting with blood samples at 05.30, then continuing with temperature checks, medication and blood-pressure during the day. My blood-count is still low, and they are watching it closely; they also want to do some more X-rays to check it’s all settling down well.  They said the surgeon would be talking about the physiotherapy centre, but that didn’t happen either, so my day pootled along.
 I’ll just get even more used to being waited on and looked after. It grows on you. The beauty of it all is that if I start to feel any pain from the healing wound when I’m trying to get to sleep, I click the bedside buzzer and they hook up a Paracetamol drip to my arm and the pain evaporates in minutes. But, as I found out next morning, there is a downside.

Urgent Attacks
Thursday November 17th
When I was suffering in the night they brought me a second drip – not Paracetamol, and I dozed peacefully. It seemed to settle me down, but regrettably the constant cocktail of antibiotics and palliatives comes with their particular mix of side-effects. At 05.15 it was time for the daily blood-test, and as the nurse probed to find a vein, I felt my stomach rumbling and bubbling. All the simple basics of day-to-day life become a challenge when you lose control of your mobility and panic sets in. No sooner had the nurse departed than I swung round out of bed and limped to the loo as fast as I could make it. But I’m on that Zimmer contraption –I can’t move quickly and it becomes a desperate race to maintain my dignity. It is all just too humiliating.
I skip breakfast [wisely] and stick to plain water, propped up on the bed, reading a wonderful book until two flirty young nurses wheel me off supine on my bed, to have my new hip x-rayed. The earlier medication makes me light-headed so I decide to make a joke of it and stretch out on my trolley with hands crossed on my chest in the manner of a medieval knight on a cathedral tombstone. The humour is not lost on the girls who break into fits of giggles.
I’d not long been back in my room when Gerry and Debbie stagger into the room with a large suitcase. We sort through the selection of clothes and I decide against half of them… I wonder whether someone thinks the Physiotherapy Centre is a sort of State-funded Champneys. On the other hand, I am now blessed with a thick towel, my favourite tea-mug and the Italian language course that I had promised myself I would tackle in my isolation. In any case, it’s better to have the opportunity of choosing from a broad selection of clothes and stuff than miss something vital, and it is wonderful to have slippers on my feet. Having visitors means having the help of someone who can nip downstairs to buy me a couple of bottles of water as well as the crutches that are compulsory for the next few weeks.
We chat for half-an-hour and they take away the dirty laundry and the excess wardrobe, then I slip back into the routine.
Leonardo the surgeon comes by with a broad grin on his face. He has seen the X-rays and is thrilled with his handiwork. I say I would love to see them, so he pulls out his Android phone and scrolls through the pictures in the manner of a proud father boasting about his new child. I have to admit that even to a layman, the picture is impressive. He takes the crutches and adjusts them to the maximum height, then coaches me in walking with both crutches synchronised, and keeping my feet squarely facing ahead.
Finally, he bids me farewell as he will be working at a different hospital on Friday, and by the time he returns to Foligno, I should be in the Centre in Trevi. I take his mobile number and promise to phone in a month once I have had new X-rays taken, to fix a follow-up appointment.
He smiles broadly, and as he leaves I feel my stomach rumbling and bubbling. I seize my crutches and manipulate my route with my new-found dexterity.

Clunk-Click, Every Trip
Friday November 18th
Nights are never comfortable. It’s only possible to sleep flat on my back and that only works for me after Burgundy and Brandy; normally, I like to curl up on my right-hand side, and then I hardly move all night. Last night was typically restless, the stomach-churning persists but at least there are no more early-morning blood-tests so I got to sleep through to 06.30.
I still have a wound-dressing the size of an exercise book, so there’s still no chance of a shower, but a mop-down and a wet-shave brings me to life. Now all I have to do is to wait for a doctor to tell me what is happening today. It all seems to be very ad hoc in Italy. Last-minute appointments are the norm (I had 6 days notice with a phone-call to come in for my operation.) This morning, here at the hospital, a medic marched into my room and gave the man in the next bed a document of some sort. The patient immediately leapt out of bed. His time had come; in the space of five minutes he had dressed, packed up, phoned someone to pick him up and was out of the door. Now I have the room to myself, I haul the blinds up in the windows so that the room is really bright, claim the table as my desk and relax.
Keen to develop my mobility skills, I take my crutches and stride out, up and down the corridor. The two physio-nurses give me big smiles and encouragement, then the sister comes out and talks to me while the physios fine-tune the adjustment on the crutches. Sister tells me it’s all settled for Monday morning; I should pack up after breakfast and then the ambulance will take me to Trevi. There is a spring in my step as I march back to my room. The crutches clatter – “clunk-click: every trip.”
I rearranged the room, set up my language studio with my headphones and Italian course and learned some verb endings. Another stroll before lunch, then I decided to read another chapter of the book, and I stretched out on the bed.
It must have been an hour later that I was assailed by 3 girls dismantling my office – which meant undoing all my rewiring of phone chargers and computer transformers. Before I could say “…haven’t we met somewhere before…?” my bed was being raced down the corridor to stand watch on a loudly snoring patient in a room two doors down. When I move in somewhere I do truly occupy it, and while one girl was hanging up shirts another ran two and fro with toiletries, pens, odd socks and paper napkins. I think we’re straight now, so I’ll get back to my book.

Full-scale nightmares
Saturday November 19th
It was Friday evening, and the man in the next bed was attended to by a small crow.
If you’ve been anywhere near the Mediterranean, you’ll’ know what I mean: a stooping little-old-lady who moves around constantly, fussing here and there, waddling and swaying from left to right like a crow on a ploughed field. Well, that’s his wife – I presume – and she twitters constantly in his ear. As far as I can make out, he’s just had his hip done and he lies in bed and moans, mumbles and mutters. Maybe I was just lucky, because I cannot relate to the discomfort he seems to be going through.  And it goes on and on. Moan, moan: twitter, twitter. Visiting hours end but that’s not going to deter the crow who pushes two chairs together and settles in for the night. Now there’s more moan, moan: more twitter, twitter, and it’s just enough to stop me dropping off.
When he does finally drift into a morphine-induced sleep and when she is settled into her makeshift bed, my personal nightmare starts. I become haunted by every negative interpretation of everything that has ever gone on in my life. Logical equations with depressing conclusions float convincingly around in my head and things that have been said in any aspect of my life – professional, social and personal – are reinterpreted to undermine me further and further. Hospitalisation destroys any sense of personal identity in the course of institutionalisation, so there is nothing I can tell myself to counter the total sense of loss and deprivation. The hours crawl by and nothing alleviates the sense of despair. Daylight brings no sense of relief; it’s just another countdown to another day, another blood-test, another cramp in the coccyx from trying to sit up in a bed that’s just a few inches too short for comfort, another day of watching the crow in her vigil.
My sister Maggy did warn me about post-operative mood swings, (she had her hip done in February.) She has also told me that even just one dosage of morphine stays in the system for months. Even so, I’d not expected anything this violent. There is, of course, only one answer, and that is to sit it out until the mind refocuses and the extent of the self-delusion becomes clearly apparent. But I also acknowledge that the haunting interpretation has a degree of validity… maybe my nightmare scenario is the reality; maybe I must stop kidding myself. Maybe my world really is falling apart.
Cue International Rescue theme music: Thunderbirds are go…!
Maggy called and must have been on the phone to me for the best part of an hour. She dispensed lots of care and lots of tough love, forcing me to re-examine many of my judgements and conclusions. I didn’t accept it all, because she didn’t have all of it totally correct, but most of what she said was pretty much spot-on. Then it was Jane Plimsoll on the phone – ever wise and gentle – and then Digby came through with the sort of filial love which always blows the clouds from the sky.
I was drugged; I was over-reacting; I am OK. Same message as the last pages of my Kerala blog earlier this year.
Do I believe it yet? Now there’s the rub.

New Dawn
Sunday November 20th
Things change. No matter how many times we experience it in life, we never cease to be surprised when things change and life moves on. Every year, summer fades into autumn and months later winter breaks into spring. Yesterday morning I was in a very black place but when I went to bed last night I was no longer haunted by demons. I was enveloped in a pleasing sense of security and I knew I would drift into a peaceful sleep.
Which I did; only to be woken just as I was slipping deeper and deeper. The lights went on and roused me from my slumbers. The man in the next bed was surrounded by staff. His wound was giving him a deal of pain following his operation. They sorted him out rapidly – that’s the beauty of administering pain-killers through a drip – but it was some time before I could get comfortable again and sleep.
I started this morning determined to get clean and fresh. A total shower was out of the question as my hip is still partly padded by a large wound dressing, but I reckoned I could strip off and at least get my hair properly shampooed. By the time I’d shaved I felt transformed and once I’d dressed I decided to attempt a rather longer walk around the corridors to see how it felt and whether I believed I was making any progress.
As with the black moods, it’s all about little changes that gradually create big transformations. Each step makes a difference and though I could feel the bruising around my hip, I could also feel improvement as I paced out the full length of the building and back again. It was tiring, but I’ll try to do it a couple of times more before I am transferred, tomorrow to the Rehabilitation Clinic tomorrow morning.
After a week in Rehab (Wow - a true celeb!) I'll post again.