Sharing a blood bond
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Sue Clark
“Finding the right person is an art,” I told my financial advisor, as
we sat sipping tea at Diedrich’s coffee on 17th Street in Costa Mesa.
No, we weren’t talking about potential boyfriends for me, or about
her own great husband. Although she handles my vast financial
holdings (as I like to joke), this also wasn’t about the next Alan
Greenspan or the search for an upright chief executive officer.
This was more critical; this was about blood. Ours, to be
specific. In addition to our common desire for my comfortable
retirement, this woman and I share another bond. We both have to have
blood drawn on a regular basis. Although we look like fine strapping
girls to the untutored eye, beneath our good looks lie a couple of
annoying autoimmune disorders requiring, among other
responsibilities, regular blood work.
And though we look tough, when it comes to blood work, we are
wimps. My own school is having a blood drive tomorrow. When the kids
asked me if I would give blood, I gave them a resounding ‘no.’
However, I plan to be there for any of them that, like my friend and
I, need post-traumatic stress counseling afterward.
She had regaled me with tales of inept phlebotomists who had made
jocular comments such as, “Oops, not getting any blood from this
one,” or “Wow, your veins are bad.” When the blood tech says those
words, we both agree we are doomed. Psychologically, it doesn’t
exactly pump up my veins to hear, “This is really rolling around, and
I can’t get in,” or “Your blood pressure must be very low, because
your veins are flat.”
Between anecdotes, we would feel a little woozy and sip more tea.
I told her about my famous fainting incident near Hoag Hospital, at a
little lab to that I’ll never return. I woke up on the floor with the
techs all shouting at me from above. Turns out I had not done the
trick my friend told me about, and was not hydrated. When the tech
stabbed me the third time, I slipped out of my chair to the ground.
The trick, my advisor confided, was to drink tons and tons of
water prior to the draw, as well as warming up my arms with warm
water. I told her a few moves of my own, including chatting up the
technician in an unceasing stream of commentary, while turning my
head away from what he was doing. It makes me sound inane and
garrulous -- as my friends would say, “What else is new?”
My own true love is Ahmad, a technician close to my
rheumatologist. My doctor is brilliant and her request that I go to
Westcliff Labs, and Ahmad, was brilliant. Ahmad knows my drill: I
have to go into a room with a bed and lie down, so if I faint I’m not
plunging to the floor and scaring everybody. I have to engage him in
fascinating conversation throughout the entire draw while craning my
neck the opposite way like an Egyptian hieroglyph. He has to act
perfectly calm and talk to me in a stream of soothing tones answering
all my chatty questions. Then, when I’m brave enough, I get to ask,
“Are you getting any blood?” And he must reply, “Of course; I’m all
done, and you have good veins.”
I’m down to once every six weeks, now, but with a previous doctor
I had to have blood drawn for the same disease each time I went,
which was once a week. When my new -- and did I say brilliant --
doctor told me only once every four to six weeks, I tried to hug her,
but she is a little shy.
Suffice it to say a good blood-drawer is hard to find. My friend
has a great husband, and I had lots of good guy friends, but the two
men in our life that we also depend on are our own private Draculas.
I think I’ll stop writing about this now. I’m getting a little woozy.
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