When I was little, my best friend/neighbor Rochelle and I wanted to break our arms so we could have pink and green casts put on so our friends could sign them. I guess in our 3rd grade minds we thought it was the cool thing to have. We tried pushing each other down, falling off fences, etc.. but our natural reflexes to brace our selves always got in the way. As of age 25, my dreams are finally coming true of having my first ever cast put on. Not as cool as I had imaged it would be back then.. especially since it's not pink and green.
So it all started this morning when my friend Colleen and I went on our usual early morning run through the magical streets of Gracias. We were about 5 minutes away from being back home when my ankle just happened to roll sideways. It rolled and I tried to catch myself but it wouldn't roll back up the right position so I took quite the graceful fall to the ground. I would like to blame it on the crappy conditions of the roads here but to be completely honest it was on straight up flat concrete….. probably the only flat part of the whole city. Go figure. Colleen thought I had just fallen (which is a normal occurrence for me lately) So she sorta started to help me up and I couldn't get up. I thought I had just twisted it. So I laid on the concrete while she hailed a motor taxi. I decided to take my shoe off to look at it and thats when I saw how awesomely, awful it looked. It looked like my ankle had eaten a tennis ball. Thats when I panicked. I just lost it. Started crying/couldn't breathe. Very dramatic, I know. This sweet little lady came out of her shop..I mean I was kinda sorta laying in her doorway… She asked if I was okay and made sure the motor taxi stopped when one was approaching. So I get in this motor taxi that is the size of my pinky toe and I prop my leg up on the bar so its practically in the drivers face. Colleen is laughing/panic laughing because she didn't know what to do. I'm doing the same. The driver starts laughing at me. I'm saying "OH MY GOSH, WHAT AM I GOING TO DO" over and over while laughing/crying as my foot gets bigger and bigger. I think I was just freaking out since I've never had any serious injuries before and I'm in a stinking third world country so I knew if something was seriously wrong I would have to fly home. Colleen being my hero, carried my inside. All the roomies come out and get me ice and wrap it up in an ace bandage. We decided to go get Julie, the teacher who has been here for 3 years and is good at this kinda stuff. So Julie calls our normal doctor (the one I had to poop in a cup for, yeah, my students dad) but he is out of town. But he tells us to go up to the clinic and there is a doctor there. So we go on up to the clinic. The lady doctor there tells me I'm going to need to go to the hospital to get an X-ray. They give me crutches. I pay 10 dollars to the clinic and we head down to the sketchy public hospital.
First, I want to say I will never complain about waiting in a doctors office or hospital ever again. I will forever be thankful for hospitals back home. We walk into the emergency room, first thing we see is blood all over the floor. Dried blood spots and some wet blood spots. We all just look at each other and all we can do is laugh. This place looked like it could be in a horror movie of some abandoned hospital. Except its not abandoned.. its definitely real life. There were huge holes in the ceiling. A muchacha was pouring bleach on the walls and scrubbing them down with a broom. Everyone is staring at us. No one will tell us where we need to go. There are no signs. Julie is fluent in spanish and is asking people where we need to be for an X-ray. The emergency room literally consists of a stained curtain hanging with 10 beds behind it where the patients are. These beds are about an arms reach away from one another.
We finally figure out where to go sign in and we head back to the room with the beds to wait. The nurse calls my name and points for me to sit down on one of the beds. I look at this bed and the sheet on the bed is covered with spots of blood. Terrifying. I said "no gracias" and stood up while they took my blood pressure and temperature. About an hour later of waiting in a room full of sick children, they took an X-ray of my ankle. The doctor was so sweet and spoke english. He seemed pretty legit. He said it was a type 2 sprain, whatever that means. He said he needed to put it in a cast in order for it to heal properly. The nurse was standing next to him with the plaster wrap stuff and I started laughing hysterically thinking there was no way I was going to be hobbling around with a huge plaster cast on. I asked if they had the removable boots and he said, "Honestly we just don't have those resources here. The boot would be ideal but you'd have to go to Santa Rosa to get it". I asked what he would do and he said "This plaster cast really isn't very efficient and I would buy a boot". But Santa Rosas hospital is closed on the weekends. He said he wanted to go ahead and put the cast on my leg and I could cut it off when I get a boot next week. After the snobby gringa turned her nose up at the bloody bed, they had scrubbed the bed down and put on a new sheet while we were in the "waiting room" area. So at this point of the cast conversation, I am told to lay flat down on the bed and bend my leg while they put this cast on. The bed smelled like the Sugar Creek Animal Hospital where my dog Stucky T goes back home. Not a good smell. It was quite the site. Unfortunately none of us brought a camera to document this fine trip to the hospital. The cast is not quite like what I had envisioned in the 3rd grade. It literally a small piece of plaster on the back of my leg wrapped with gauss. It's SO janky looking, all you can really do is laugh when you look at it.
Quite the experience I must say. Hopefully it will be a lot better in 2 weeks because I'll be traveling with friends after school gets out. The doctor said I have to wear the boot for a month, but I'm hoping I can gimp around with the boot. I am moving to the downstairs of the house tomorrow. The stairs are not my friend right now. So we are kicking the boys out of their rooms downstairs and switching spots. Keepings my fingers crossed we don't get any weird diseases after spending several hours in the hospital today.