Day 17: My “Dressy Mask”

“My new look…it ranks right up there with overgrown bangs and a barn coat!”

Yesterday was filled with good news, but it got a slow start. Mr. FixIt had an appointment at 9:00 which means he woke me at 8:00. Which means I’d had a solid two hours of sleep. I just haven’t slept much at all since I started feeling bad. I’d lay there and wonder if it was coronavirus. I would surreptitiously take my temperature every hour on the hour. I could not turn my mind off.

When I had trouble waking up, my sweet husband lovingly offered to let me sleep and he went off to his appointment by himself. They wouldn’t have let me in the room anyway so I couldn’t have been much help. I was asleep before he left the house.

I had an appointment to follow up with this parathyroid issue and the scans they did. When I arrived, this time I had to tell the medical staff at the makeshift desk in the lobby that I’ve been having some symptoms that could possibly be attributed to coronavirus. This time I was ushered to a room with a young woman in full hazmat regalia and carefully questioned. The really good news is…the nurse practitioner is convinced my symptoms are a combinations of severe allergies and the parathyroid issues. I’m trusting she is right. Also, it does not appear to be cancer. However, I still have a parathyroid tumor that is causing hyperparathyroidism and that has to be addressed with an endocrinologist in June.

I had to make a run to the pharmacy to pick up some meds. Yesterday was the first day I have gone out with a mask. Partly because I was concerned I could possibly make someone sick. Partly because I didn’t want to get sick from anyone else. As I stood in line at the pharmacy, a woman turned and asked where I got my mask.

“I bought it last summer to mow the grass. I have asthma and I can easily end up with really bad bronchitis and have to be hospitalized for it, so now I wear an N95 mask. They came two to a package. I have one of them hanging on the riding mower to remind me to wear it. This one is my “dressy mask” for going out.”

“The all new Easter Mask for your spring ensemble!”

She hesitated a moment then we both broke out laughing at the absurdity of a “dressy mask”. I told her it was soon to be all the rage. People will be adding glitter and sequins and ruffles before long. It made for a lighter moment in a scary situation. If you would have told either one of us last Thanksgiving that, before Easter, we would be walking around wearing masks and schools would be out and people would be working from home, if they were working at all….we would never have believed you.

I honestly felt more comfortable being out in the mask. And, I could see why the medical experts are concerned that wearing a mask would give people a false sense of security and they wouldn’t take the other precautions as seriously. When I was in x-ray school, I had to learn about maintaining a sterile field. The average person doesn’t have a clue how to maintain that. It isn’t easy and is totally opposite of what we normally do in our daily living.

The good news is, we are learning new skills. And we will continue to learn them because we are a resourceful species.

The very best news is, Mr. FixIt has met with all the specialists he needed to see after his stroke in February and he has been given a clean bill of health. We are so very grateful to get another chance at this beautiful life.

Oh, and today is Daughter #2’s birthday. She turns thirty today…a monumental time in a woman’s life. And, she’s doing it during a pandemic…on a day where it’s supposed to snow. This gal has been knocked down so many times by life and she keeps getting back up…time after time. It’s a heck of a way to ring in the Big 3-0, but “resilient” is her middle name. Happy Birthday, Moon Pie…I love you to the moon, eleventy-seventy-teen times and back!

❤️

“For I will restore health to you, and your wounds I will heal, declares the Lord…”

Jeremiah 30:17 ESV

2 thoughts on “Day 17: My “Dressy Mask”

  1. So glad you were able to be reassured of your symptoms. I’m ahving really intense post- nasal drip, so clearing my throat a zillion times a day. My voice is hoarse. But I feel ok just a little blue. Hard to be doing all this solo. But I’m doing my best and staying HOME. My brother belongs to a coop , and gets groceries at a specified drop from the big truck. Saves tons of gas used up running into the nearest town with grocery stores(40 miles) Thinking of doing that myself, for the long haul.

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