I'm alive, but twice last week food tried to eliminate me and I survived. Trust - it was no small feat.
As you know, Mini made tikki Masala Monday night. In typical Mini fashion, she messed up the ratios and the meal was not as soupy as anticipated. It tasted yummy, but the spices were a lot, as the result was, how shall we say, Concentrated?
Mini (a few hours after dinner): Mom, why are you talking like you've been smoking 2 packs a day?
Me: I dunno. I'm a little wheezy. I'll do my inhaler in a few minutes. I just want this done. *the story about what I was working on will be another post
I found my inhaler, which I rarely use (2x a year is a lot, some years - never), took a few puffs and was fine. The next morning when I decided that it was weird that I'd been wheezing - I googled, can spicy food cause asthma to act up, and Dr. Google said yes. Later I told Mini that she was trying to kill me. We chuckled. The end.
Or was it?
Thursday night I had book club.
I thought that I'd missed book club, confusing my Thursdays and believing it had coincided with Curly's graduation. Then I got a reminder email. Kris, the host, texted me and asked if I was dairy free, or just gluten free. She bought vegan/gf cupcakes from a bakery. So sweet. Literally and figuratively.
She lives 20 minutes away. The food was so tasty and lately I'm ravenous even after I've eaten dinner. I enjoyed pineapple, carrot sticks, yellow pepper, beer dip (gf), GF pretzels, prosciutto, and pepper jack cheese before we sat down to discuss the book.
The book - not a fan. The School of Essential Ingredients. In a word: contrived. Hey, some people liked it. To each her own.
After the discussion, I ate a GF/vegan cupcake. I couldn't believe how delicious it was. Then someone asked me where Kay was going to high school. I told them the story of how we found the amazing and wonderful place where she will attend school.
I became short of breath. I was coughing between my sentences, and then between my words. I'm nothing if not committed to telling a whole story without interruption, so I fought through. I'm brave that way.
Kris has a dog, but I hadn't seen it. And her house was immaculate. I'm more allergic to cats than dogs. I'd have to rub my whole face in a dog's furry fluff in order to react, and even then - I haven't reacted to dogs since I started allergy shots.
As people made their way to the kitchen, mingling a bit before departing, I waved good-bye. I'd told the story of Mini's spicy meal making me wheeze.
Me (to another lady): I wonder if the spicy pepper jack is making me wheeze.
Her: Do you have your inhaler with you?
Me: No, but I'll be home in 20 minutes.
I didn't want anyone to know that I was sort of freaking out, but I was. My asthma has never escalated to anything scary, and I was breathing - but really wheezy.
I called Mini on Bluetooth: Is my location on?
Mini: Yeah, why? Are you OK? Why are you coughing?
Me: I'm having an asthma attack. I want you to get my nebulizer machine out. It's under Dad's side of the bathroom sink.
Mini: Mom! Pull over and call 911.
Me: No, I'll be fine. I can do a nebulizer treatment, but I want it ready right when I walk in. I'll tell you how to set it up. I'm gonna stay on the phone though, so if anything happens - you know where I am.
| This was the collection of stuff Mini dragged down from under the sink -- boxes of contact lenses, and eventually the nebulizer machine. It sat on the table all weekend. I was slow moving. |
Me: What? No. A cardboard box from the pharmacy. (it became clear she was under my sink instead of Coach's). Mini - you're under my sink - look under Dad's.
In short: Coach was asleep and Mini was getting yelled at for waking him up. I've never had an emergent asthma attack so I think he was sort of like Whatever when she tried to explain. I kept staring at the GPS and assuring myself I'd be fine, home in 6 min, home in 3 min, etc.
Mini found everything I needed except for the mouth piece /attachment that holds the meds. When I walked in, I did the inhaler with low expectations, because I couldn't inhale much. I tiptoed into my bathroom to find the attachments. When I stood up after rummaging under the sink - I caught a glimpse of myself in Coach's mirror.
I saw RED. As in Elmo. Bright red. My hands and feet were itchy. I knew that - like when I was driving, I think I even told Mini that, but I was locked in on ASTHMA and now that I saw that I resembled a red version of Shrek, I accepted the reality. ALLERGIC REACTION.
*****
History repeating: Long-time readers might remember when I reacted to my allergy shots once, when they bumped up my meds too fast and my airway started closing when I drove home. I had to do a U-turn . Back at the office they gave me epinephrine. This was THAT, but it had registered with me as asthma.
*****
Mini appeared in the doorway of my room. Took out her phone, and I said - DON'T CALL 911 - JUST DRIVE ME. Coach sat up in bed, and I told him Mini was taking me to the ER. He asked if I wanted him to go and Mini and I both said NO. Mini didn't have to caddy until 1:00 pm, so she could take me. He gets up for work before 5.
On the way to the ER 16 minute away, I started to panic. I've heard of 'I didn't know I was having a heart attack' stories, and the like. What if this was something else? I had what felt like an air bubble in my chest - like behind my breast bone. I yelled at Mini to drive faster. We were on a road with no traffic - residential. 11:00 pm. I ordered her to go thru the stop signs - the town was like a ghost town. 'Go FASTER!' I was whimpering, staring again at the GPS, counting down the minutes.
I hopped out at the ER entrance, and told her where to park. I fumbled inside, leaned on the desk, and panted: I'M HAVING AN ALLERGIC REACTOIN. I NEED EPINEPHRINE.
Hospital staff: Name and date of birth, please.
I told her, and she found my profile. They put me in a wheelchair. My nose was stuffed and we had no tissues in the car or in my purse. Mini ran in after parking, and couldn't believe I was not in the back yet. I was like "KLEENEX." She found some. Then she waited at the double doors, and whenever they opened, she begged the staff: CAN SOMEONE HELP MY MOM? (Yes, I've apologized to Mini a dozen times for traumatizing her).
They assured her they were clearing a room for me.
The time I'd returned to the allergist office, they hit me with a dose of epinephrine a few minutes later. Now I had to wait for a doc to come in. Details. They put me in a room, in a gown, on a blood pressure cuff, and gave me an IV. I was insanely thirsty.
The doc: Is this your normal color?
Me: Nope. (wanting to say, this is only Elmo's normal color).
They gave me the epinephrine, Zyrtec, Benadryl, and a steroid. A minute later, I had to puke. This might have been the worst part, because my chest was so tight, It was really painful - 100% that was the bubble that had been making me crazy. I let the nurse know that I, er, might poop my pants.
Nurse: I'm sorry, but we can't have you up and walking around until you are more stable.
Mini: Mom, just go in your pants. No one cares.
from tenor
Me: Mini, I'm wearing my white jeans. (Yes! The ones I wore graduation weekend - the same ones that Jenny in FL commented about, surprised I'd wear white jeans with my GI struggles. Jinx, much, Jenny?)
I waited, but the waves of pain in my tricky left side were pretty intense. The meds gave me a horrible case of the shakes.
**I re-enacted the scene for my folks: fear of soiling my white jeans, Mini remarking that maybe it was weird after all that Coach hadn't brought me, the lady taking my name and DOB while I squinted at her while gasping for air with snot running down my face, Mini running stop signs at my request, and my most obnoxious case of shakes - chattering teeth so loud. My dad had to wipe tears from his face, he was laughing so hard. So, know that you are missing the overall dramatic flare that this story delivers in person.When the shakes had calmed, Mini searched for a nurse to unhook me, so I could go to the bathroom. Couldn't find her. Coach called, and Mini video chatted him, to see if he could help her figure out how to unhook the IV, etc. Remember, waves of pain, fear of soiling my pants. *sigh* Finally, she found the nurse. I got unhooked, and I went to the bathroom. Literally, everything inside of me was determined to make an exit.
I had to stay for 3 hours from the time I got the shot, which was 11:40 p to be sure the reaction wouldn't return. I'd arrived at 11:20, so I'd waited 20 minutes to get the meds.
Well, the 3 hour business sucked. I slept for an hour and Mini sat in the chair in a blanket. We paid our bill and got home at 3:15 am. I knew when I went to bed that I'd hear the damn garbage trucks at 6:35, and I did, but I also knew that I could go back to sleep. It was Friday - my day off.
I got up and peed after the garbage wake up call. Then got back into bed and like clockwork - jackhammers. They started tearing up the curbs - right under my window - on our street that morning. I texted Coach: IT'S ALMOST COMEIDC.
I saw my allergist Friday. Having food allergy tests Tuesday. Anxious to figure out what I'm allergic to. All the food I ate is food I've eaten before. What gives?
* Guess why I puked - the cupcakes weren't GF and vegan. Just vegan. The host felt awful - they misinformed her.










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