Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Art and Medicine
This is one of two so-called "shell huts" in Lower Grosvenor Gardens, a park near Victoria Station that I walked through on my way to the hospital yesterday morning. They are quirky little buildings decorated with shells from France and Britain, and a site called "The Londonphile" has an article about their unusual history. I thought they were perhaps Victorian, because the Victorians loved their shells (remember the shell grotto in Margate?) but they were actually built in 1952 when the gardens were re-landscaped after World War II.
One of them is used to store garden tools, and I saw a gardener working from it, but apparently the one above is kept locked.
I also walked through Upper Grosvenor Gardens, an adjacent park that features this sculpture, "Lioness and Lesser Kudu" by Jonathan Kenworthy. It's a relatively recent installation, from June 2000.
The hospital where I went for my capsule endoscopy was right behind Buckingham Palace on Grosvenor Place. I couldn't see the palace -- only the well-fortified walls topped with barbed wire encircling its trees and gardens. I was there at 8:30 a.m., ready to get this thing over with.
I was taken for a preliminary CT scan, to make sure the test capsule was no longer in my system (it wasn't, and I told them that, but whatever) and then given the real thing by a nurse. It really is a little miracle of science, a half-clear capsule with blinking lights inside. I was surprised by the lights, but of course it would need some kind of light source. After all, it's dark in there. So while I went about my day, that capsule was strobing away and my innards were partying like it was 1999!
I had to wear a padded belt and shoulder harness for the unit receiving the transmitted images from the capsule. It was comfortable enough at first, and the image recorder was no larger than a Walk-Man (if you remember those). After swallowing the capsule I had to walk up and down a hallway for a while, to get my gut moving and set the capsule traveling on its way.
The hallway was decorated with these bright artworks by Leon Polk Smith from 1968 and 1973. I'd never heard of him but I guess he was known for these sorts of hard-edged, colorful graphic images.
They're very '60s, and therefore I like them.
I know you're all wondering whether I was able to watch the progress of the capsule. I saw some initial images, because the recorder had a display screen and the nurse activated it to make sure the capsule was moving along. I could see inside my stomach and the beginning of my small intestine, but honestly it didn't look like much -- just a pink-beige tunnel. The screen didn't stay on, and I was scared to try to push any buttons to activate it later, so that was the only time I saw any pictures.
I was sent home around 11 a.m. My jacket covered the recording unit, so I wore it home on the tube with no problem. The rest of the day I spent lounging around the house, because I wasn't supposed to do a lot of bending or stooping. I couldn't eat until just after 2 p.m., and even then only a tuna sandwich thoughtfully provided by the hospital. (Hospital food at home -- yum! Yes, that was sarcasm.)
In the afternoon I watched "Fortune and Men's Eyes," a 1971 movie about prison life with gay themes. I'd read about it somewhere and it sounded interesting as a sort of cultural time-capsule, which it was.
But by this time I was feeling pretty terrible. The thing about capsule endoscopy is that it disrupts life for about 72 hours -- my diet the preceding two days had been bland and then liquid, and even after my tuna fish "snack" at 2 p.m. I felt like hell. (I wasn't able to have any coffee yesterday, probably my chief complaint.) It's much less invasive than a colonoscopy, and capable of seeing more, but man, including prep time it takes forever to complete.
Finally, around 6 p.m., I could eat normally. Hallelujah! And at 9 p.m. I could take off that infernal belt, which I had slowly come to despise.
Today I have to take the recording unit back to the hospital and then, assuming this all shows no abnormalities -- which I won't know immediately -- I will be glad to get on with my life!
You may be wondering about my friend the spider from the previous post. Last night when we went to bed it was tucked up next to a wooden molding by the window. I looked up a couple of times during the night and it was still there, which enabled me to sleep soundly, but this morning it was gone. It's a harmless house spider (Tegenaria) but I'd still rather not touch it and I hope it has disappeared for good into some dark hidey-hole.
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The shell house...inspired by Victorian shell grottos. Something different in a park!
ReplyDeleteInteresting procedure..and at least you didn't have to stay in the hospital all day.
Well done on not squashing your new household companion!
You actually slept with that spider in the room.....brave!
ReplyDeleteHope that the results from the camera are all good.
Ooh, the camera capsule sounds like a lot less fun than I thought it would be. Glad you’ll be done with it today and you can get back to normal activity. The shell hut is charming. I wonder what’s (who’s) locked inside. Here, it would be a chapel.
ReplyDeleteThe spider may indeed have entered a dark hidey-hole, pursuing the mini-starship to its ultimate conclusion.
ReplyDeleteI'm OK with spiders if they don't move, once they move I'm gone, stupid I know, but can't help myself.
ReplyDeleteWell done and good to read it went all smoothly. We have a distant cousin of your spider in our downstairs bathroom and I told him all about your one. He was not moved, rather stoic.
ReplyDeleteI've been having faint flashbacks of that 60's movie "Fantastic Voyage" about a submarine crew that was shrunk and then sent into a human body to repair an organ. I don't quite remember which one but I think it was the brain.
ReplyDeleteThat whole procedure with the hospital was fascinating to read. I have had a colonoscopy and an endoscopy, but never something like that. I am glad that this is behind you, and hopefully you will get an "all clear" medical report. I am impressed that you managed to photo things in the hospital and along the way to the hospital. I would have been so preoccupied with what was going to happen at the hospital!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad the photo shoot is done. It was more complicated than I'd expected. Thanks so much for the art photos. I really like them, and they look familiar. I think I've seen them as greeting cards.
ReplyDeleteI don't know if I'd want to look at my insides on a little TV on my belt but I was intrigued by the capsule and it's blinking lights; that's kinda cool and scary!
ReplyDeleteFirst thing when I woke up this morning I thought, "I bet Steve's magical journey pill has done its work!"
ReplyDeleteWhat an amazing thing. I really had no idea that technology had come this far.
Now go eat some broccoli, you crazy guy!
Also- I love the shell hut. I won't say what I think about those pieces of art because I would be revealed for the ignoramus I am.
That's fascinating. I'm so amazed at what medicine can do (and see!). But I can see why that might make you a little grumpy after that long. I'm guessing you pass the camera, like you passed the dummy pill -- all those winky-blinkies going down the drain with whatever else you could get out after hardly any food or drink (at least the good stuff) for a bit. I hope the results don't take too long. The art is different than most I've seen in the hospital (I tend to see florals and landscapes.) I think I like it.
ReplyDeleteThe shell hut is beautiful. One of the most intriguing rooms at Basildon Park was a shell room with bezillions of shells, beautifully displayed. Must have been quite the hobby!
I loved the magic schoolbus reference yesterday. I'd forgotten all about that. But as soon as I read it, 'Mrs Frizzle' popped into my mind, and now I know how Mr. Shife came up with that name for his dog! (confessions of a dumb white guy).
ReplyDeleteYou've made it through another adventure in modern medicine. I bet you are very happy to have it over with. I'm still dealing with my heart monitor and I'll be glad when this is over. At least I don't have to wear a belt or carry a recording device.
ReplyDeleteI love the artwork in the hospital. I feel like I've seen some of his work somewhere before.
I've never seen those shell huts. Those are interesting.
Thanks for describing your procedure so thoroughly, Steve. It's good to know and it will be interesting to read the results. Hopefully, all is good.
ReplyDeleteI like those pictures but whenever I see art like that, I think, "I could do that!" Maybe I will try some today in my art journal. ;)
I understand how annoying the harness and transceiver can get having had to wear a heart rhythm monitor for 24 hours and another for a week. at least you didn't have to sleep with it. I wonder how much that little marvel of medical science that got flushed down the toilet cost.
ReplyDeleteI've been thinking about giving up caffeine (mainly because the only way I get caffeine is drinking Dt. Sundrop), but I'm worried about how bad I'd feel. You're situation isn't making me feel better about it either! Hope it shows nothing awry!
ReplyDeleteThe marvels of modern medicine. Less invasive is best. If it works to improves our health and wellness, it is all good.
ReplyDeleteNext...a great full meal and coffee whenever you like.
I've watched colonoscopies and marveled at how pretty and pink the colon is, when it's empty:) I hope there's nothing wrong and life can resume as normal. The prints in the hospital are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteFascinating process and procedure for sure. Thanks for being so forthright in describing it for us. Be kind to that spider, spiders are our friends, we'd be up to our necks in other insect if it weren't for them! Cheers!
ReplyDeleteThat was very interesting. Thanks for documenting it. The shell houses are a nice touch to the garden.
ReplyDelete