10 years ago...

6/25/2008 08:51:00 pm BenefitScroungingScum 13 Comments

Recently a couple of people have tagged me to complete various me-me's. As half the blogosphere has already completed them I don't want to bore people by reading similar posts everywhere, so I thought I'd bore you all with something else instead. One of the me-me's starts with a question about what the responder was doing 10 years ago, which coincides nicely with some posts I've been planning for a while.





I'd been plagued with minor illnesses during my final year at university, various infections meaning I'd missed almost the whole academic year by the time I sat my exams. I was so unwell during the exam period I hallucinated all the way through one paper. It had been a difficult and unpleasant year, but I believed what I was repeatedly told by family, friends and medical professionals. That there was nothing wrong with me and I was just weak and lazy. I had no reason not to believe them, it was what I had been told my whole life.


A GP had happily declared me as fit and well for the required medical, supplied me with a course of antibiotics 'just in case' and a flea in my ear about the dangers of 'unnecessary' tonsillectomies, so as soon as my exams were finished I flew out to the USA to work as a camp counselor for the summer. Despite having been babysitting for as long as I could remember, as well as having experience teaching swimming and army cadets, the prospect of being responsible for the welfare and entertainment of teenagers for a whole summer was a daunting one!

The summer started with a week long course before any children arrived, at the end of which we would all be fully qualified open water lifeguards and able to instruct in a variety of watersports.
The weather was unusually cold for the time of year, so swimming in a deep lake, learning how to do tasks such as deep water spinal boarding was physically incredibly demanding. Tasks made more difficult by the general standard of swimming being too low to meet the demands of the course. I was one of the stronger swimmers so despite struggling with the cold I found the course easier than many. It was a week of long days and long evenings sat around campfires under the stars as we all tried to get to know each other and how to work together.

I had only been there a few days when I had my first accident*. We had been cleaning the toilet and showers and I had picked up what I thought was a generic version of some sort of bathroom cleaning spray. It was in amongst all the other cleaning products so I thought nothing of it when I picked it up. I set to covering all the areas to be cleaned with spray before starting to wash them down.

After a few moments I felt a little strange, and thinking I'd been
a bit daft to stand inside a shower cubicle spraying a cleaning product I headed outside to get a breath of fresh air and have a smoke before continuing. By the time I reached the outdoor deck I was coughing and spluttering. Trying to take deep breaths only made the situation worse and I rapidly found myself in a terrifying situation where I couldn't breathe properly and just choked and gagged every time I tried. My throat felt as though it was on fire all the way to my lungs and people had started to gather around me.

Very few of us were completely familiar with the camp and it's layout, so someone decided to walk me up to the medical centre, about 1/2 a kilometer away. I was finding it harder to breathe and ended up being half carried half dragged by two of the lads whilst someone ran ahead to find a nurse. By the time the nursing staff reached us we'd pretty much made it to the medical centre where someone phoned poison control to find out what was in the cleaner I'd been using. Meanwhile I was coughing and choking and generally feeling worse by the second.

The advice came back that the product I'd used should only be used with proper protective clothing in a well ventilated area, not an enclosed shower cubicle as I'd stupidly done. It turned out to be a product used for sterilising operating theatres, and I was later told no-one knew how or why it had got into the bathroom cleaning cupboard.

By this point I was pretty scared, partly I think by the delay in seeking medical help. The camp was miles away from anywhere, so instead of an ambulance being called, I was bundled into a van and driven to the ER. It took a good 15 minutes to get to the nearest medical facility, a tiny little emergency room with only a couple of staff. The drive was bumpy and despite the efforts of the others in the van, not being very heavy I got thrown all over the place-just what I needed when breathing was such hard work!

I vaguely remember being carried from the van into the emergency room, and through to a cubicle. Being British and aware there was no NHS I was terrified and through coughing attempted to give insurance details. Funnily enough they were not required until later, when I gave details of my own insurance as instructed by one of the camp's senior staff. There was subsequently an almighty row about why Worker's Comp** had not been contacted.

I was put on a nebuliser, and given a variety of medicines whilst the medical staff ran their own checks on the cleaning product. After a period of time I was able to breathe more easily, although I would still be coughing and feeling the effects by the time camp had finished all together.

A few hours in the emergency room were enough to get my breathing safely settled and I was taken back to camp to stay in the medical center. The following day I was taken to the pediatrician the camp used for all their staff and prescribed inhalers and some sort of codeine containing cough linctus. I was back doing my lifeguard course that afternoon, although it took a few days before I was able to go back into the water. It wasn't until the water had properly warmed up weeks later that I was able to get in without a massive coughing fit, despite which there were times I would be the only lifeguard in charge of the children.


* Is anyone surprised there were many more to come?!
**Worker's Compensation as I understood it was a form of medical insurance covering injuries in the workplace.

13 comments:

gemmak said...

Hell fire woman, it's no wonder you were scared! I'm impressed you had the courage and fortitude to carry on such a demanding course after that. I await the next chapter with er 'baited breath.;o) Seriously,I was hooked on every word.

Anonymous said...

Wow. You have been through so much. I have yet to get my degree. Seems either me or M gets really sick and I can't keep the classes going. It is beyond frustrating.

Anonymous said...

BG

Everything about this post simply screams EDS at me.

The physical struggle to get through college, the parental disbelief, the 'normal' medical verdict, your determination to prove your metal, and the medical emergency.

You gotta friend in me!

Anonymous said...

Why do i just keep imagining a cross between Baywatch and Carry on camping lol
jurid xx

Gemma: Well, it was a choice between finishing the course or having to go home. Finishing seemed the obvious thing to do, though in retrospect ;)
I genuinely believed though that there was nothing wrong with me hard work wouldn't fix...again hindsight ;)

Marla: I totally understand that frustration. TBH I don't think I would have managed to complete a degree course now, and I'm not sure how I did then! Hope you are feeling better by now x

Steph: Doesn't it just! Funny thing is, I didn't even know I was bendy back then...just assumed everyone could do such things! It really is good to see that things are starting to change for us bendy's.
Hugs from your bendy friend x

Jurid: Because you'd be right!! Except less carry on camping, for the counselors anyway...the 'kids' were all at it! x

Trixie said...

oooo, I can't read what happened next! I always wanted to work in an US summer camp!

James Higham said...

If anyone asks you to do a meme, you should run them through with a skewer. Best way, Bendy Girl.

Casdok said...

A camp full of teenagers! You are one brave woman!

But what a scarey experience.

Trixie: I think camp is one of those experiences that seems so exciting from films/books etc and in reality is just hard grind!

James: I shall remember that excellent piece of advice ;)

Cas: Yep, not sure I'd go back and do it again!

I did a summer as a counselor in a day camp between my freshman and sophomore years of college. It's amazing I didn't make the papers, as the little bastards made me crazy...

I like kids in general, but I like them even better for short periods of time.

MrN: I completely know what you mean ;)

Dave said...

Why the tiny piccy BG?

Dave: Well spotted that man! Tiny, because it's of me!