Bending
over, a guest at the Georgian felt stabbing pain in his back. He could barely
move.
Acute back
pain usually doesn’t last long, so, over the phone, I assured him that he would
be disabled for a day and then gradually improve. I was not anxious to make
this visit because it was 4 p.m. I would be driving to Santa Monica and back
during the rush hour, a tedious experience. But he wanted a visit.
It was a
tedious drive, not improved by the sight of immobile traffic on the opposite
side of the freeway. The guest answered the door himself, always a good sign in
someone with back pain. I examined him, repeated what I had said over the
phone, and handed over pain medication; it was an easy visit.
Returning, I
settled into the rear of a nearly motionless stream of cars. I was in no hurry;
it was suppertime, but I wasn’t hungry. After ten minutes, my phone rang. A
guest at the Crowne Plaza in Beverly Hills asked for a doctor. His wife was
vomiting.
I often delay
visits, but people who are vomiting hate to wait. This would normally be a
quick drive because the Crowne Plaza was only five miles away, and I was headed
in that direction. But it was the rush hour. I left the freeway and crept for
thirty minutes along Pico Boulevard to the hotel. The visit went well, and the
drive home was tolerable.
2
ReplyDelete