Cherishing the Now

an eye

Sutures in blue

“I look like Frankenstein,” she said, and she was close. The result of her eyelid surgery to remove a small basal cell carcinoma looked pretty gruesome to me the next day when I removed the bandage. She bruises easily, I know, but the swelling and the technicolor blotches set me back. I thought but didn’t say, my God, how does this ever come back together? So of course I took a close-up photo with my iPhone and tried to text it to the doctor in a far-away town. I may be paranoid, but I got spunk.

And what do you know, you can’t do that. It appears to be illegal for doctors to even receive such images from a patient, which makes sense when you think about it, but on the other hand, how helpful. I’m not the only one with spunk, in other words. An act of God occurred and briefly, in a private space, a thing was seen before it vanished in the ether.

“It looks perfect,” he said.

There was more, but that was plenty. Before I go any further, I can report that after forty-eight hours, the outlines of a normal pretty face are evident again. The swelling has gone down, and now the skin is pulling at the sutures. She has little jerks and fits of pain. Morale and stamina are sketchy, but she’s mostly good.

I think I’m a terrible home doctor because I get scared and overcompensate. [Note: she says I’m doing fine.] One of her instructions is to clean around the sutures twice a day with a q-tip and hydrogen peroxide—we can’t have any scabbing or the wound “might begin to separate.” Oh, great. I see much better up close than she does, so this comes down to me. Naturally my q-tip was too wet the first time (no scab, no scab!), and after she’d gone to bed, I worried that I might have gotten a tiny bit inside her eye. No, she didn’t scream or flinch, but a couple of things she did complain about were way down at the bottom of a list of symptoms I googled in the idiot hours when even dogs had ceased to bark.

Oh Lord, I’ll have to wake her up and wash her eye out! No, wait. We can’t do that, not with the surgery. Eye-drops then, at least, the kind you use to balance the pH. Oh no, we’re out! It’s 2:00 a.m. I’ll have to buy some in the morning, dammit!

Which I did, although I couldn’t sleep.

After cranking up the anxiety level by trying not to answer “Why do you want to go buy those?” I headed off to Walgreen’s in the dawn. I scored the drops, we put them in, it didn’t change a thing. Discomfort and some affect on vision is common for a few days after surgery where the eyelid skin gets cut and stitched, duh, due to swelling and more watering of the eye than usual. The business still unhinged me. By then we’d each achieved that level of okay where you can be polite except your stomach hurts, so I over-applied the high-tech vaseline the nurse prescribed and this time did let some ooze into her eye. Good thing I bought those drops, I thought. Brilliant. So evolved. That must be why we both still feel like throwing up.

Last night I felt better for some reason, sitting down to get a start on writing this. A preternatural calm descended for a time, which ought to tell me something. I was even able to dip in and out of the writing to administer to my wife without veering off into awful politics on social media, worrying about the home we haven’t found, or haunting the refrigerator. I infer there’s something there, and Jesus, look at where we get to live.

Get well soon, babe. Get well soon.

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John Hamilton Farr lives at 7,000 feet in Ranchos de Taos, New Mexico, U.S.A. As New York Times best-selling author James C. Moore tells it, John is “a man attuned to the world who sees it differently than you and I and writes about it with a language and a vision of life that is impossible to ignore.” This JHFARR.COM site is the master writing archive. To email John, please see CONTACT INFO on About page. For a complete list of all John’s writing, photography, NFTs, and social media links, please visit JHFARR.ART  

  • Fw May 24, 2016, 9:32 AM

    Good Morning, John…I hope your Lovely is doing well..!! She is in good hands…Be well, John…
    Cheers, Fred

  • Marti Fenton May 24, 2016, 11:20 AM

    Surgery cuts something apart and healing often looks ugly. Remember that is part of what we are dealt as Earthlings. I’ll try to remember that too.

    • JHF May 24, 2016, 11:53 AM

      I know. It’s not the way it looks so much as all the rest. It just unhinges me.

  • Rita May 24, 2016, 1:08 PM

    You are doing amazing! Tending to one’s post-op honey has got to be the biggest challenge ever for an empath. Obviously, the best possible distraction for you is writing about it, (and looking for the house). And this topic is so hilarious/not funny that it makes for great material, but you were (obviously) wise not to make that first photo public. 🙂

  • Rita May 24, 2016, 1:09 PM

    Wait. Is that the photo?

    • JHF May 24, 2016, 4:41 PM

      Yes, but only after multiple stages of Photoshop filters, inverting colors, etc, to disguise it. I doubt she’s seen it yet. Now you’re spooking me.

  • Rita May 24, 2016, 9:13 PM

    Wow. That is awesome. She will love it. Right?

  • M.J. May 25, 2016, 12:06 AM

    Hope your sweetie feels better soon! Not fun, but it will get better with all your loving care. I thought I was the only one that always freaked out about the care of sick loved ones.

    • JHF May 25, 2016, 12:53 AM

      It’s the location. Physically sensitive and cosmetically important. I don’t know if I’m doing the right thing. High tension. Probably am.

  • M.J. May 25, 2016, 1:59 PM

    If it makes her feel better. I tripped on a dirt and gravel road busted my lip, broke my nose, skinned my eye where my glasses broke, had gravel in my cheeks, had a gaping big hole between my nose and lip that had to be cleaned, trimmed, and stitched up. I survived and only have a tiny small scar where the hole was that only I notice. It took time. My husband had to put up with all the kidding of why did he hit me. Ha! His answer , “No, she’s just clumsy and can’t walk and talk at the same time. Ha! Hang in there!

    • JHF May 27, 2016, 3:02 PM

      I thought for sure I’d get some of that “why did I hit her” stuff, too. But she’s prettied up fast, and glasses kinda cover it. Stitches out, she’s doing very well.

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