By nature, I am not a risk-taker. No desire to go skydiving, or bungee-jumping,
or even scuba diving. However, some might argue that the fact that I, at my
advanced age, choose to play basketball, puts me firmly in the Risk Taker
Category, right alongside BASE jumpers and lion tamers. They might be right.
One of the things I love about our community here is the
opportunity to be active. Monday
through Friday, there’s a different sport that moms can take part in at the
school gym. My days are Tuesday
Volleyball and Friday Basketball.
Now, I should tell you that I am no athlete. I played two years of basketball in high
school that mostly consisted of me making jokes with my friend Tessa as we rode
the bench, hoping Coach would put us in, but also slightly terrified that Coach
would put us in.
But now, as an adult, playing pickup basketball is
awesome. I start EVERY GAME. There is no bench to warm, because usually
we’re lucky if we have enough players for three-on-three.
Some of the volleyball ladies, circa 2014 |
We play for about an hour, and exult in all the calories
burned. Then I go home and drink a
600-calorie “recovery shake” that negates all calorie burn. David accuses me of
playing basketball just for the recovery shake (Recovery shake: a frozen
banana, some milk, some cocoa powder, a few tablespoons of peanut butter).
So what makes this risky? The fact that I keep getting injured. A few years ago at Friday Basketball I caught
a crazy pass and when I looked at my pinky finger it was bent in a freakishly
unnatural 90-degree angle. Thankfully my
friend Karen, a nurse, was there, and she popped it right back into place. But it took weeks to recover.
Last Friday I was playing basketball, and we were having a
good game. Then, a loose ball, and
Holsten tussles with another lady for the ball.
Did the thought, “Slow down, honey, and remember the pinky!” go through
her mind? No! It was more like, “Ball, ball, must get ball!” and then boom, I
was on the floor in pain.
I had twisted my ankle, and it immediately began to swell to
mythic proportions. David was called,
and he very graciously took me to the nearby hospital with a working x-ray for
a scan, not once saying what he was probably thinking, “NOW, will you stop
playing ball?”
"Where to, ma'am?" |
Who gets real x-rays anymore? A few years ago after the finger incident, I
was back in the U.S. and saw an orthopedic doctor for his take on how I was
healing. I handed him the x-ray that was
done in Indonesia, and he inspected it like a relic from Tut’s tomb: “Hmm,
haven’t seen a film x-ray in a long time.”
This photo has nothing to do with this post, other than we saw this on the way to get the x-ray. A dude carrying a goat on the back of a motorcycle. |
Yay for working x-ray machines! Now, just don't think about the dried blood on the table. |
Ouch |
The waiting "room" outside radiology |
But we’re just glad we can get an x-ray here, be it film or
digital. Karen was a big help, writing
some doctors in Singapore for an opinion, and checking on my foot. The pain has been intense, but it appears
that it’s just a sprain. Our expat doctor Dr. Di took a look at me yesterday
and put me in a boot, and that has helped (our little clinic has quite the
collection of boots, crutches and braces that get passed around the community).
David just got back from meetings the day before my injury, so he’s been able
to chauffeur me and the kids around and help with everything.
In many ways, Indonesia is a wonderful place, but it is
sorely unaccommodating to those with physical disabilities. Trying to negotiate parking lots and stores
in crutches is about as easy as roller skating at the beach. And because most cars here – including ours –
are manual transmission, I’m unable to drive with a gimpy foot. This experience has made me more empathetic
with those dealing with long-term disability here. I think of the man who often sits outside one
of the stores in town, and I understand better why he moves so slowly on his
crutches.
On Thursday, David brought out two medivac patients, both with foot injuries, and neither had crutches, so they got pushed from the plane to the ambulance on a luggage cart. It kind of makes me mad when I contrast that with the American experience of handicapped parking, handrails, ramps, and ECVs outside of every Wal-Mart that make it so much easier to get around with an injury.
David's medivac passengers catch a ride to the ambulance |
A few people, after hearing how I hurt myself, have said,
“Well now, that’s why I don’t play sports!” It’s crazy, but all I can think is,
how long till I can get back out there and play? So maybe I am more of a risk
taker than I thought.
1 comment:
Oh, sad to read all about your accident and x ray story. One of my friends had a hairline fracture in her ankle and it was quite painful. I wish you a speedy recovery.
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