Friday 24 October 2008

Little Pricks

The Social Secretary and I are so pumped full of viruses - in the last few days we've had flu, tetanus, polio and diphtheria jabs - that it's hard to know whether we're well or not. K had the flu one too, and we've all had unexplained headaches, until it dawned on us why. I've been putting off the tetanus booster for years - I reckon I snag myself on sheepy barbed wire so often that I get boosters from the bacterium itself.

At the flu one, in the village hall, K got the giggles when the administering doctor confided, "Just a small prick." Mine said, "Let it hang," but I think he was referring to my arm and the slightly camp hand-on-hip pose that I'd helpfully adopted. Afterwards we had to fill in forms. Sex, age, no problem. Then came, "Ethnic Origin". Sounds straightforward, except I put 'White Caucasian' and the SS put 'C of E'. Then we spotted an advice sheet, and crossed those out and obediently wrote 'White British' as instructed. Probably Caucasia is now an independent former Soviet republic, but ethnicity to me is not equivalent to 'nationality'. Next time I'm going to write 'Sudanese Ginger' and see what they make of it.

Along with her second jab the SS also had a routine smear test (not in the village hall). This was made more awkward by the fact that she was meeting for the first time the nurse whose dog she would shortly be walking twice a week (times are hard). She probably now knows the SS more intimately than I do. I passed the time playing with the new do-it-yourself blood pressure machine in the waiting room, which prints you a read out like those fortune-telling machines in fairgrounds. (I'm 'optimal', which is a lifetime first for anything; I may frame it and hang it with my sub-optimal certificates in the downstairs gents).

My non-twin sister-in-law once importunately fell for a hot doctor at Guy's who was involved in administering and assessing the results of her barium meal test (she described it as like consuming and passing a bowl of plaster of paris). Although on the scale of barium meal test attraction I'm sure sister-in-law scored highly, she didn't get a date out of it. Sometimes the odds are just stacked against you.

8 comments:

  1. My art director had to drink a radioactive substance through a leadlined straw to shrink his thyroid. Like a radioactive milkshake to go with your sister's gigacounter fried...

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  2. Glow in the dark meals. The thought of drinking anuthing dangerous enough to need a lead straw shrinks more than just my thyroid.

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  3. Gald to hear the smear test didn't occur in the village hall! As someone who has to collect such demographics for my work place I look forward to us scoring higher in the Sundanese Ginger box in future.

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  4. C of E cracked me up!! Wow you must be swimming with horrid viruses after all those jabs. I'm still debating whether to have a flu jab this year, I've had it every year and had the most horrendous flu each time, but this year apparently there's a killer flu coming to get us all...I think it's already on the Paris metro.

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  5. Steve, we should all have a hobby, and collecting demographics is as good as any.

    Daisy, do you get the flu as a reaction to the jab, or in spite of having it, so to speak? Anyway, I think you should have the jab again; the real thing (as opposed to the colds people call flu when they ring in sick) is miserable, and as you say there may be a nasty variety on its way.

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  6. My dad once had to get a tetanus jab. The nurse said to him "Just a small prick," and he seized the opportunity for an inappropriate joke and replied, "Yeah, but I've got a nice smile." She just looked at him coldly and continued with the injection.

    Oh dear.

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  7. Hattie - As a master of the inappropriate remark myself, I like your Dad already.

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  8. Haha - thanks. I've accepted your meme tag by the way...

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