Letters From Heaven
Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely, but rather to skid in sideways yelling "YAHOO! What a ride!"



Cascokat


"When I am no longer here and can not comfort you or touch you or wipe away your tears, remember that my soul will gently caress your heart through the soft breezes of springtime."
P. Schultz








   

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Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Mother's Little Helper

I have alway had an extremely high tolerance for drugs.  Some people can take one or two Advil and it knocks them out (Tom); Give them half a Tylenol PM and they're gone for at least eight hours (Tom);  A Vicodin will erase a entire day (Tom); And just sniffing the bottle that held Ambien will be enough for those butterflies to flutter about (Tom).

When I had dental surgery years ago, the surgeon didn't want to take that last minute chance that I wouldn't be knocked out so we "experimented" with a few different drugs in the weeks prior to the surgery.  I already knew from an "experiment" in high school that Seconal made me sicker than a dog so we crossed that off the list right away.

First we tried Valium. It did nothing.
Next came Xanax. Nada.
Ativan ... nope.

Finally, we tried Halcion.  The instructions were to begin with half a tablet, wait thirty minutes and if nothing happened, take the other half. At this point, I should be in la-la land but in case I wasn't, I was to wait another thirty minutes and repeat those steps until I was. 

Saturday afternoon.  I took the first half.  And waited.  Took the second half.  And waited. Repeated the process.  And waited.  After the third full round, I remember thinking "this is ridiculous" and walking into the living room to make some phone calls.

That's all I remember until the next morning when I called the surgeon and said "I think we have a winner!"  When he asked how many I had to take and I told him, he was amazed.  He told me that one whole tablet would have knocked out a full grown man. Two would have put an NFL linebacker out of the game. Three ... well, I seemed to have the constitution of a horse!

I don't remember the surgery later that week, but apparently I had a great time. I was insistent that I needed no help walking up the stairs even though my feet were no longer connected to my brain. In the middle of the procedure I insisted that I had to use the bathroom (which was outside the office and down the hall).  I jumped up out of the chair, strolled through the waiting area, blood and saliva dripping down my chin, cheerfully greeted the waiting patients, and whistled my way down the hall.

Since I haven't had a full nights sleep in so long, I've been wondering if Halcion is still on the market.  But after taking half a Vicodin last night for a headache and sleeping almost all night, maybe I should forget it.

I have a feeling my tolerance level might have dropped a bit.  From what I (don't) remember though, that Halcion was a lot more fun!


Posted at 08:24 am by Cascokat

Monique
October 14, 2006   01:35 PM PDT
 
Hahaha, this is too funny... and coincidentally, I wrote earlier this week about my son's adventures with meds prior to surgery, and his included a hilarious bathroom trip as well. :)
Tammy
October 11, 2006   05:36 PM PDT
 
Yep... Me, too.

I have a high tolerance level, too.

Dana
October 11, 2006   11:41 AM PDT
 
Pain pills do me no good either,must of been the under the counter stuff I used to do that messed me up! ha
chrysalis
October 11, 2006   05:43 AM PDT
 
Wow, you ARE tolerant of meds! I'm generally not, but after taking Vicodin for chronic pain for two years, one doesn't do anything and two might work or might not. And Tylenol PMs? HA! Nothing will get me to sleep (see my entry of October 10th)!!
Deirdre
October 10, 2006   11:12 AM PDT
 
Woah Nelly!
 

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