Entries Tagged 'Thailand' ↓






From your Father

Dear Matt,

Have just re-read your latest blog and have come to the conclusion that your memory is failing you or have chosen to indulge in spot of boasting.

With respect to the number of condoms you took over – my memory tell me that I counted them all out and counted them all back in again and that the totals tallied exactly not so much as one had been used!!! Perhaps you would like to publish a retraction?

Your ever loving

Dad






Medical notes part II

I am still in Bangkok, bathing in splendid torpor and reading a lot. Yesterday I played a game that entailed staying in bed all day and seeing which of a series of unlikely body positions would induce sleep the quickest. Prior to that I read all 650 stunning pages of Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections in one sitting, which got me sunburn and a headache.

Previously, I set myself the task of exploring the city entirely on foot, watched two dogs launch a guerrilla ambush on a third and then stumbled across a cinema and sat down to an afternoon of The Great Raid (great) and Harry Potter (hairy.)

My walking tour was curtailed by an aneurysm in my groin. Well, not an aneurysm per se but it might as well have been. My glands were swollen and aching. I managed to convince myself that I was probably dying and got a fitful night’s sleep, waking every seven minutes to inspect myself.

(Aside 1: The last time I had underpant discomfort in Asia I hobbled back to the UK with my tail and “the worst case of herpes” my doctor had ever seen between my legs. She was ultimately proved wrong through a series of elaborate and largely painful and humiliating tests. I was never in doubt, of course. That year had been particularly barren for me. My mum had given me 144 condoms for a ten-month stint in Malaysia. I came home with 143 and knowledge of the “posh wank.”)

So the next morning I was pleased to see that the swelling had gone down and I could swing without discomfort. BUT! the pain had crept up twixt my buttocks and was really quite sore. So I jumped in a taxi, ready to hear that I had an insect living in my veins. Or only a few days left to procreate.

(Aside 2: My medical history is largely the story of my backside. When I was only a few months old, I was laid on an operating table and force-fed a barium enema to highlight a fistula. Fast forward 23 years and there is a big black man shaving my bottom while I sob quietly into a pillow, prior to the removal of a pilonidal cyst.)

Bumrungrad Hospital is awesome. The first two floors have Starbucks, McDonalds and Pizza Express, it’s listed on the Bangkok Stock Exchange and is testament to how hospitals the world over should be. Within five minutes I was having my vitals measured and okayed, then a receptionist asked me what the problem was. I told him - “enlarged glands in the groin, painful buttocks” - which was more than his English could grasp. I said it again, louder. Then again. Then I said, highly embarrassed, “I think a GP will be fine.”
“OK , no problem sir … is a lady doctor ok?”

And after 15 minutes of questioning, medical history, sexual history, early modern history and the weather in Belgium, I am once again in a hospital with my pants around my ankles and a very petite, gentle Thai lady has her nose level with my arsehole, prods a bit, mutters sympathetically and diagnoses cellulitis and lymphadenitis, which will almost certainly clear up after a course of antibiotics. “Don’t worry! No more surgery.”

So if you need me, I’ll be lying on my front, inducing sleep.






Down in the mouth

I’m aware that this won’t be very exciting for anybody but me (and possibly my Mum, who will work herself into a frenzy about 3rd World medical facilities) but I’ve just been to the dentist and it was WONDERFUL!

There’s something quite unnerving about letting strangers stick sharp things into your mouth and scrape around, but this time I’m glad I did. I’d been bothered for a couple of days with red gums and was becoming increasingly manic about the implications of them. As I get older I become more anxious, more of a hypochondriac. Any headache has me reaching for the guidebook’s health section to read that I have either the first signs of typhus, typhoid, Hep A, B or C, malaria, dengue, tetanus, diptheria, bilharzia, arachnophobia, yellow fever, polio or Crohn’s disease. Normally it’s nothing worse than a hangover, but it doesn’t stop me worrying.

So off I popped. Down the road from my hotel is a boutique dentist’s surgery with a very attractive receptionist. So I popped in for a check-up and came out one and a half hours later with six new fillings and a numb face.

I had always prided myself on the state of my teeth. Previous trips to the dentist over the past few years have never lasted longer than 15 minutes. I’d get a little badge that says “I was brave” and compliments on a perfect set of incisors. So perhaps I had been lulled into a false sense of security, even overconfidence, about my oral health.

It took three minutes and six sharp stabs to identify cavities I never knew I had. I suppose if you poked me in the eye with a sharp stick it would be sensitive as well, but there were definitely painful spots that contrasted with the non-painful spots either side of them.

It was unlike any dental appointment I’ve ever had (the last one was over two years ago) but I remember fillings being metallic, slimy tasting and liable to stick out like a nun at an orgy. These this time involved a little bit of paste and an ultra-violet gun. I got pricked twice by a syringe with a bent nib (a novelty in itself) and didn’t feel a thing.

To combat the red gums I had a “scaling and fluoride polishing - Full Mouth” and my molars are shining like cats’ eyes. You can’t even see the fillings. The price was the best thing - 4500 baht, 92 euros or 63 quid - and teeth 14, 15, 16, 24, 25 and 47 are good as new.

So don’t forget to floss, children, and for dental work of any gravity, head off to the airport …