Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Turning it around

21 Comments

Yesterday I had a follow-up appointment with a doctor in a town about 30 minutes north of me. An easy appointment, not one to worry about. But the day before I’d had a related appointment with a specialist, at a major university an hour south of me. And that appointment had resulted in a perscription that I wanted to inform my local doctor about.

But, of course I can’t remember the name of the perscription. So I figured I’ll pick it up at the pharmacy before my follow-up appointment. Simple. The pharmacy, located about 10 minutes south of me, opened at 8. My appointment, about 30 minutes north of me was at 10.

Somewhere in between I needed to take a shower.

I arrive at my pharmacy at 8, and wait in line behind a woman picking up multiple perscriptions, all of which seemed to have some kind of issue. And then she wanted to pay for a cart full of other stuff while she was there.

No problem, I had time.

When it’s finally my turn I provide my name and birthday and the clerk tells me there’s nothing for me. I tell her I received a phone call the evening before indicating it was ready for pickup. She looks again. Nope, not here, she says, but it’s at the drugstore in the town north of me.

Uhhuh.

I go home, jump in the shower and then head back out around 9, which turned out to be a good idea because the town north of me is repaving their roads. One lane is open in either directon, but even that is periodically closed as equipment is moving around. So there are multiple places where people with hard hats and stop signs ask us to wait as we manuver past dump trucks and hot new pavement.

It takes a very long time.

But I’m not worried, I left early! When I get to the pharmacy I still have 30 minutes until my appointment on the other side of this town. I wait behind 2 people. When I get to the front of the line the clerk says there’s no perscription for me there.

Unhuh. I explain again. She looks again. Oh yes there is!

With perscription in hand I head to my appointment. I still have 15 minutes. But I don’t want to go back through all that construction so I choose another route, longer, but open. I’ve never gone that way before and I get lost, turned around on country roads, not sure whether the doctor’s office is north or south when I finally emerge back on the main road.

I have a 50/50 chance of guessing correctly, left or right. I go right. I was wrong. I turn around in another construction zone glad there isn’t much traffic, and buzz back north toward my doctor’s office, sighing at every red light.

It’s OK, I tell myself, I still have time.

I arrive 5 minutes before my scheduled appointment, like I planned it that way. I sit in the waiting room concentrating on my breath, trying to calm myself down. The day before, at the appointment in the big university setting, my blood pressure was ‘slightly elevated’ which is not normal for me. I really didn’t want it to show high at this appointment.

Helpfully the receptionist doesn’t check me in for another 15 minutes. When I finally get into my appointment my blood pressure is perfect.

Go figure.

I guess it just goes to show that even if you have a lot of obstacles to drive around you can still get to where you’re going on time, and with enough breath control to have a good outcome. I’m glad I’m done with doctor appointments for a few months.

So that’s my going to the doctor story. I’m almost finished with the photos from my camping trip in northern Georgia…those are coming up next.

Promise.

They’re bound to be more entertaining than going to the doctor.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

21 thoughts on “Turning it around

  1. I am sorry you kept running into these obstacles, but as to getting to the correct address in the town to the north – where was your GPS in all of this? I’m not sure how I survived in the years without one – other than sitting with a map (before MapQuest) and very carefully planning my route, making notes as I went.

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    • I used to live up there and thought I knew all the roads, but one of the country roads didn’t go where I always thought it did. I’d never been on it and assumed it intersected with another road, and it didn’t. So I kept going in the direction I knew the main road was, but then didn’t know for sure where I was.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Great job riding the wave!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. The Governor’s campaign was “Fix the damn roads.” But now that all the work is happening it should be, “Damn! They’re fixing the roads!”

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I’ve had days like this, too, where you feel like you’re going in circles and getting nowhere fast. I’m glad you made it to your appointment on time, and I hope everything went well. Doctor’s offices can be scary places with lots of question marks.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. My goodness, what a time you had!

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  6. I feel for you. So frustrating to deal with doctor appointments and prescriptions and pharmacy techs and traffic. I hate being late for any appointment, but unlike you I’m sure my blood pressure would have been through the roof.

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    • At the appointment the day before I was surprised it was high. Usually it runs low and they take it a couple times before they accept that. To be high was very abnormal for me. But at the second appointment, when I had all the trouble getting there I figured for sure it would be high! And it was normal. So go figure!

      Liked by 1 person

  7. I will be glad when we have less than six appts a week! Hope yours all turned out okay!

    Liked by 1 person

    • That’s sure the truth isn’t it. To not have to check the calendar each morning to remember where we have to be, to just have a few days, maybe even in a row that are normal, boring days would be a gift.

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  8. Golly gosh, I hate how difficult it is to get to doctor appointments these days, and yet how difficult it is to MAKE an appointment these days. My primary care physician is accepting only visual/online appointments, NOT office appointments. But I have demanded an appointment in person, and she finally accepted. But then if you need to factor in road construction … well you are doomed. I’m sure glad you made it through Dawn. Here’s to health! And happiness. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    • I have the opposite problem. The doctor at University of Michigan offers video appointments and my next one would just be a follow up to see how I’m doing on the perscription, so a video makes sense. But they don’t have any video appointments available. So I, at this point, have to drive over an hour down a freeway under construction to the university, then find a spot in the overstuffed, crowded parking deck and then walk through two different hospitals that are connected together to find elevator 10 to take me up to my appointment. It’s a lot, especially when all I need to do is say whether or not the perscription is working.

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  9. That morning adventure would have gotten my pressure up. Happy to hear it worked out. Looking forward to the camping trip pics.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Construction is everywhere and on a lot of surface streets too these days, but to combine that with your other fits and starts, I’d be mad too. I went along Fort Street today and suddenly it was down to one lane from three and orange cones were everywhere, with traffic bunched up. On WWJ’s traffic reports they don’t always mention construction on the roads, mostly expressways, so I’m glad it was after and not on my way for my 9:30 COVID shot appointment. Also, it amazes me how many people are driving on weekdays. It used to be, years ago, if I was off during the week, there were hardly any vehicles on the road – now it’s always busy, not just trucks/work vehicles.

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  11. Sounds like a frustrating day! My blood pressure probably would’ve been through the roof, lol. I have trouble calming my BP in the doctor’s office, even though it is usually fine at home!

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