My Great MRI Adventure | New Year’s Eve 2021
by Elouise
In knee-high socks
And ortho shoes she trips
The light fantastic
Light as a feather
Music spins through soft earphones
To another world
Silencing all noise
Beauty fills every fiber
Of her weary soul
I’m lying on a long, narrow table. A long capsule slides almost silently over my body.
I’ve been up since early in the morning. D is sitting in the waiting room. I’ve been told more than once that the MRI will take 15-20 minutes. My name is called. I’m ushered into a small room with a closet. I answer a barrage of questions I already answered online and in the waiting room. The woman helping me is kind.
She tells me how to put on the two gowns lying on the bench, and where to lock my clothing and belongings. The only things I’m allowed to wear are my knee-high socks and one other piece of clothing I will not name.
I emerge draped in two huge gowns.
I’m directed to a barber-shop like chair obviously made for people larger than I. I can’t lean back or touch the floor with my feet. I sit up straight and hold still while the pacemaker team disengages Lucy Pacemaker and makes sure they can monitor my heartbeat/arrhythmia while I’m having the MRI. This takes at least 20 minutes. I’m happy to say that everyone who worked with me treated me as the Queen I am, for which I was most grateful!
Finally, I’m escort by a female nurse to the MRI room. The male technician who will be in the room with me the entire time has me change my anti-Covid mask for their mask (not as nice as mine). He also has me leave my changing room key on the table. The nurse and technician help me onto a very narrow table.
As fast as lightning, the technician inserts ear plugs, adjusts my head, puts a large cushion beneath my legs and knees, glues and tapes stuff onto my chest to monitor my heartbeat, puts a finger clip on my right thumb, and a rubber ball in my left hand. I’m to squeeze it if, at any point, I’m not comfortable. If I squeeze it for any reason, the MRI will be terminated and rescheduled.
Finally, sheets are pulled up; my feet are positioned just right and strapped down so they won’t fall off the narrow table. The technician assures me that he’ll be in the room the entire time, ready to help me. Then he disappears somewhere behind my head, and the capsule starts sliding over my body. I decided early on to keep my eyes closed and practice relaxation breathing. I was not prepared for either the noise or the heat.
Nor was I prepared for the cacophony of diverse sounds that bounced around me. Sometimes there were lengthy pauses; sometimes only a few sounds. Other times it was like being caught in crossfire that didn’t want to end. I wasn’t prepared for this strange mixture that had no rhyme or reason.
However, somewhere along the way I thought about drum beats I’d heard when D and I were on sabbatical in Kenya. Instead of angst, I had a bit of curiosity and interest, though I was still shocked by the diversity and clamor of this strange machine.
Suddenly it was done. The young man and my nurse helped me back to my barber-shop chair. The nurse handed me a bottle of water which I drained to the last drop. Lucy Pacemaker was returned to being in charge of my heart. I couldn’t wait to get out of there and have D drive me home.
Thanks for visiting today! For 2022, I pray you and I will grow as truthtellers, no matter how difficult or dangerous it becomes.
Happy New Year!
Elouise♥
© Elouise Renich Fraser, 31 December 2021
Image found at wfmt.com
Carol’s last two MRIs were with sedation at the hospital because she could not hold still for various reasons. Claustrophobia and Cerebreal Vascular Parkinsonism were two of them. Praying you receive Good News from your results. HAPPY NEW YEAR ELOUISE 🎉 ✨
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And Happy New Year right back to you and Carol Thanks for your comment. I pray the two of you will have happy moments in the days and weeks ahead. I don’t know much about Cerebral Vascular Parkinson’s. In any case, it doesn’t sound very uplifting. Thank you for your prayers. I’ll be relieved when the doctors can finish their tests!
Elouise 🙂
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Happy New Year, Elouise! I wish you the very best!
Yeah, MRIs are interesting. They make me sleepy – imagine that!
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I’m trying, but my imagination just can’t get there! 😟
On the other hand, I can wish you a Happy New Year!
Thanks, dw.
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Dear Elouise, I wish and pray that you will have a Happy 2022. PS, I enjoyed my MRI; the sounds were like an otherworld symphony – a strange music and I wanted to go back and listen more carefully. I hope the US tries harder to become united although I am not very confident.
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Dear John, Thanks so much for this note/comment. I pray your year will bring you joy, plus wonderful visits with your family members. I laughed when I saw your response to the MRI. Definitely ‘strange’ music. As for this new year, it seems we’re caught in our own traps–laid down deep in our history. Elected officials and ‘unelected’ bodies (such as the Ku Klux Klan) collaborated with police and elected officials from the start. Today we have multiple organizations (official and unofficial) terrified of losing the privileges to which they believe they are entitled.
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I will respond in a few days time with a post I have been cogitating upon for some months now. It is right on the point you just make.
It has been a real honour to have been a virtual friend these past years.
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What a kind comment. It’s totally reciprocated. You’ve taught and shown me by example over the years, though my visits have shortened since my health took a nose dive. I look forward to seeing your upcoming post.
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I will be part of the MRI Club tomorrow…your description will help me understand this strange zapping, boom, POW experience.
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Hi, Janet. I hope all goes well for you. It’s a shock to the system, for sure. What a way to begin the New Year!
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Unfortunately, I had to cancel the MRI because I likely contracted COVID. But who knows? No tests are available in my part of the country! I am sending a ton of love and good wishes to you in this new year. Please know that your words touch my heart and many others.
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Oh no! 😦 I’m so sorry to hear this. There’s nothing like giving up one unknown for another. I pray your experience with COVID (or whatever it is) will be short and as sweet as possible so you can get back to whatever normal looks like for you. Thank you for your most kind comment. And remember, lifeizstillgood! 🙂
Elouise
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Sending good vibes this New Year’s Day and praying that all turns out positive for you. MRI’s I’ve had were odd, yet relaxing in their bizarre way. Happy New Year dear friend. Hugs, Infinitezip ❤️🥰
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Happy New Year, Kim! Wow. I’m still looking for the ‘relaxing’ part of this ordeal. The best part is that it’s done for now. I pray all is well for you, especially with your writing. What a strange world we now live in.
Elouise 🙂
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Continued prayers for you. And the results of the MRI.
Happy New Year! Praying 2022 is filled with love, laughter, peace, better health, good memories made, and so many more positive things.
(((HUGS))) 🙂
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Dear Carolyn, I haven’t been over for a while to visit. I’m wondering how this time of year is for you and pray all is going as planned or expected–though not without ups and downs. I’m not yet at the end of all this testing and poking and prodding. Maybe by the end of January….We’ll see. Thank you for your witness when it comes to life and life’s unexpected gifts/surprises. I’ve learned a great deal from you and other bloggers who’ve had serious health issues. Thanks for modeling and living a different way of dealing with life’s realities. Sometimes I wish for another life, though most of the time I love the life I have, despite it’s unwelcome surprises. Happy New Year, and tons of hugs for you! Elouise 🙂
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It was a quiet, but nice, Christmas for us. All of our kids and grandkids could NOT come home. 😦 Fortunately we saw some of them in July and some in November. Before that, because of Covid19, work schedules, etc., we had not gotten to see them for over 2 years. 😦
Fortunately our youngest got to come spend time with us for Christmas. 🙂 It was good good to have her here! We always have such a good time! 🙂 She had to fly back to her home today so I’m sad and missing her greatly.
Yes, trying every day to focus on the good people and things which far outweigh the bad. 🙂
Thank you for being a positive in my life, Sweet Elouise! 🙂 ❤
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My heart goes out to you and all grandparents (included the two of us) who grieve the distance this has created between us and our various offspring. How wonderful to have your youngest visit you! If it weren’t for Smudge, I think D and I would be basket cases by now! As for Smudge, I think he believes he is the Chosen Prince of the family. 🙂
Here’s to a positive day (or at least as positive as possible)! Elouise 🙂
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I thought Smudge was King! 😉 😀
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Nope! His full name is Prince Oliver Smudge the Second! Definitely not King–even though he acts like it sometimes. 🙂
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Quite the adventure! They say you should start New Years Day as you intend to go on, so just as well you got this experience in before 2021 expired. Happy 2022 to you xx
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Good point, Gwen! It made me laugh. I hope this new year is less fraught than the last several years. We (here in the USA) seem to have forgotten what it means to be neighbors, and how to welcome strangers (even in the smallest ways) into our lives.
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Australia’s on the point of deporting the tennis great Novak Djokovic. Top that! LOL. Of course, there is a story behind it, and it has wide support. Living in an over-55s community of around 250, I can’t begin to imagine the challenges you face with neigbourliness.
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Thank you, kindly, Gwen!
I can’t imagine living in your over-55s community of around 250! We live in a desirable area, in the section that was built years ago for construction workers, hardware store owners, landscapers, etc. We bought our house from the widow of a construction worker. He built the house with remnants from old houses being torn down. We have an eclectic mix of huge, gorgeous beams in the basement, and (had when we moved in) the ugliest kitchen I’d ever seen in my life. Over the years, we’ve done any number of things to spruce it up. Our young (50s) neighbors with 8-year old twins just moved to Canada 😦 so we’re looking at a new family coming in (also with twins!). There are tons of young children in the street next to ours–also living in refurbished old-Gladwyne townhouses. Never a dull moment! I love it, and hope we’ll be able to stay put. Being elderly in this (mostly) younger community is quite pleasant.
I’m horrified at what’s happening here in the USA. It seems craziness has displaced every iota of sound, sane thought processes.
Still reading your book. I was So Relieved when you turned a corner and began ‘owning’ your life and your intelligence.
Happy New Year yet again!
Elouise
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I have to confess to rushing the last part of my earlier sentence. A neighbour came to look at something on my computer so I quickly bashed out a stray thought and hit send.
For me, it was a bit daunting to come to this community at first, in part because I was not accustomed to being surrounded by women – perhaps I should do an entire post to clarify that comment – and I was the youngest here. But over the years it has proved to be a good decision.
We get our ‘kid’ fix through sharing each other’s grandchildren. When they were little we used to arrange group activities where we all took on one or another responsibility e.g. my husband was the lifeguard on beach outings, while others stayed behind to make sandwiches for the hungry hoarde’s return. Later, we’d put them in the cinema with a kid’s movie, popcorn and a drink and told them to behave because we could see them on the security cameras (as if 🙂 ). We’d pop into the lounge for a relaxing drink and chat.
My #2 grandaughter visited recently with her young baby. She is the first of the group to choose motherhood. Much fussing all round!
I’m so happy to hear you are persevering with my book, as I can sense it has thrown up all sorts of conundrums for you. But ultimately, it is a triumph over adversity tale. These days, almost as if it happened to an entirely different person. xx Gwen
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Oh, Gwen. Your living arrangement sounds wonderful! Especially with the “kid” sharing of grandchildren. And yes to your comment about I Belong to No One. I’m so glad I’m reading it.
Cheers! Elouise
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