Late afternoon Tuesday the 17/10/2006, I’m on my back inserted into the MRI at Kingston Hospital. Despite the headphones piping cheesy music it’s still very noisy inside. I’m pulled out of the cylinder after about half an hour. The radiographer assures me that I’ll be called with the results the following day and I leave.
That night I’m calm. I’ve already rationalised that I have a small brain haemorrhage. I know this can be remedied quite easily with either medication or a small operation. After all, it made sense; stress or exertion seemed to bring about my seizures. I reasoned that this was likely caused by blood pressure building up causing the weakened intracranial lesion to swell and ultimately press on the same area in the brain thus eliciting the same sensations of Presque vu, olfactory and auditory hallucinations and eventual disorientation. I thanked God that I took that module of Physiological Psychology at University. I knew that it would pay off one day.
Early afternoon Wednesday the 18/10/2006, the phone in the living room rings. It’s the dashing doc’s secretary. He wants to see me later this afternoon. Feelings of dread and fear well over me.
A couple of hours later I’m ushered into his austere but spacious office. As the doctor offers me a seat I glance to my left to see him put up what appears to be an x-ray of what must be my skull on an illuminated wall mounted x-ray reader. I identify it before he can utter another word. A large white mass, like a clenched fist, sitting behind my right eye. His words fall on me like hammer blows to my body. “I’m afraid you have a large brain tumour” I look again, this can’t be true, this sort of thing happens to other people. “Tumour?” “Yes”, he replies, and then the words start ‘bouncing off me’, words that no amount of training in psychology could prepare you for. Words such as ‘astrocytoma, inoperable, mortality. Nausea wells up in my stomach, I cup my head in my hands and begin to weep like an inconsolable child. “But I was a good cop”. “And you still are”. “How long has this thing been in my head?” “There’s no way of telling”, comes the reply. “Typically, they’re very slow growing. Could be ten, fifteen years, could be longer”. I start to think back on all the things I have done with this ‘time bomb’ in my skull. I bloody climbed the Glyder range in Wales. Negotiated Corno Grande, highest peak in the Apennines. I’ve scuba dived underwater mountains in the Med. Raced solo across Europe on a Kawasaki, and got myself through the tough training at Hendon police academy, all with this crap growing away, festering. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in the rain. It’s now my time to die. “Look, in my experience tumours such as these are largely benign. However, we won’t know until we have a biopsy performed. In the meantime, I’m writing you a prescription for anti-epileptics. We’ll be in touch with a date”.
I float to the hospital dispensary. Hand shaking I pass the prescription across the desk, I’m given a number. Mercifully, I’m alone in the waiting room. I stand with my back to the pharmacists and sob quietly.
That night I’m calm. I’ve already rationalised that I have a small brain haemorrhage. I know this can be remedied quite easily with either medication or a small operation. After all, it made sense; stress or exertion seemed to bring about my seizures. I reasoned that this was likely caused by blood pressure building up causing the weakened intracranial lesion to swell and ultimately press on the same area in the brain thus eliciting the same sensations of Presque vu, olfactory and auditory hallucinations and eventual disorientation. I thanked God that I took that module of Physiological Psychology at University. I knew that it would pay off one day.
Early afternoon Wednesday the 18/10/2006, the phone in the living room rings. It’s the dashing doc’s secretary. He wants to see me later this afternoon. Feelings of dread and fear well over me.
A couple of hours later I’m ushered into his austere but spacious office. As the doctor offers me a seat I glance to my left to see him put up what appears to be an x-ray of what must be my skull on an illuminated wall mounted x-ray reader. I identify it before he can utter another word. A large white mass, like a clenched fist, sitting behind my right eye. His words fall on me like hammer blows to my body. “I’m afraid you have a large brain tumour” I look again, this can’t be true, this sort of thing happens to other people. “Tumour?” “Yes”, he replies, and then the words start ‘bouncing off me’, words that no amount of training in psychology could prepare you for. Words such as ‘astrocytoma, inoperable, mortality. Nausea wells up in my stomach, I cup my head in my hands and begin to weep like an inconsolable child. “But I was a good cop”. “And you still are”. “How long has this thing been in my head?” “There’s no way of telling”, comes the reply. “Typically, they’re very slow growing. Could be ten, fifteen years, could be longer”. I start to think back on all the things I have done with this ‘time bomb’ in my skull. I bloody climbed the Glyder range in Wales. Negotiated Corno Grande, highest peak in the Apennines. I’ve scuba dived underwater mountains in the Med. Raced solo across Europe on a Kawasaki, and got myself through the tough training at Hendon police academy, all with this crap growing away, festering. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in the rain. It’s now my time to die. “Look, in my experience tumours such as these are largely benign. However, we won’t know until we have a biopsy performed. In the meantime, I’m writing you a prescription for anti-epileptics. We’ll be in touch with a date”.
I float to the hospital dispensary. Hand shaking I pass the prescription across the desk, I’m given a number. Mercifully, I’m alone in the waiting room. I stand with my back to the pharmacists and sob quietly.
3 comments:
The title of your entry is said by Tyrel to Roy Batty, just before the latter crushes the formers skull.
The second quote is “ all those moments will be lost, like tears in rain. Time to die.” That line is said by Roy Batty to Rick Deckard, just after Roy saves Rick and just before Roy dies.
Film title is- Blade Runner.
year is- 1982
Actors:- Roy- Rutger Hauer
Rick- Harrison Ford
Tyrell- Joe Turkel.
Now for extra credit, what book was it based on? Who wrote it? and when?
Oh and by the way, that is one ugly photo of you.
I thought you where the bad cop. {shaaat it yoo slaaag}
You tease me sir. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968) by the genius hand and mind of Philip K. Dick of AI fame.
You're surprised by the scan!? I was lead to believe that I was a cybernetic organism: living tissue over a metal endoskeleton, and that my brain was actually a C.P.U., a neural-net processor - a learning computer. And there was this one name going through my head all the time O'Connor or something like that. Yeah, I thought it would take a lowering into a vat of molten metal or being zapped by a Phase plasma rifle with a 40 watt range to finish me off. I'll be back
I didnt eat the cheese and onion hoola hoops tonight the packet seemed smaller than childhood and the thought of the orange rope still sat fore front in my mind, as did the deletion of the coordinates passed to me earlier by Rainman. So do you think he would of? Explain your DNA away to the boss.
Keep your foot to the floor the view isnt for you mate not yet, it rains somewhere all the time so get an umbrella.
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