My Grandmother's Shoeless Life and Walking Through My Own Morphine Dream.
"All God's children need traveling shoes." ~ Maya Angelou
I woke up this morning thinking of my grandmother. One story in particular. My mom said that my grandfather would never allow my grandmother to have shoes. And that when one of my aunts, when she was a teenager, gave her mom some of her own shoes, my grandfather was enraged. The story makes me so sad. My grandfather was never around and so my grandmother had no one to rely upon to feed her enormous brood of kids. They all sharecropped; it's all a woman and kids could do in the 1930's. I can't imagine what picking cotton would be like without shoes. I don't know why I woke up thinking about that. It could be I was dreaming about her, I suppose.
Last night, I had decided to talk about my experience with morphine in the hospital. I was watching a television program about methamphetamine addiction and it reminded me that I thought a lot about addiction during the first couple of days after surgery.
I was a teenager in the 1970's, a time when all kinds of drugs were around in college and when lots of kids used them for a variety of reasons. I don't think I ever knew anyone who had heroin or used heroin, though I can't be sure about people using. I always knew that heroin would be the death of me. I was always hypervigilant and revved up. The possibility of letting go and relaxing was very inviting. Too inviting.
I never used heroin. After my surgery, though, I had morphine to control the pain. It never controlled the pain, though. I remember thinking, "Why do people like this stuff?" It just made me feel mentally sluggish. I phased in and out of consciousness, making it difficult to carry on a conversation or focus on any activity, including eating. Of course, I'm sure I wasn't using as much morphine as recreational users.
When they made me get up and walk around the nurse's station, I was on a combination of morphine and dilaudid. I kept passing people who commented on how I looked like I was feeling no pain. It really made me angry because I was in excruciating pain. It just wasn't reflected on my face.
I'd get about three-quarters of the way around the circular open hallway, thinking that I was straight in front of my room. It never failed. Then I'd look at the room number and realize I was still a long way from my room. I only made the trip a couple of times before they discharged me.
When the nurses told me I was going to have to get up and walk the third day after surgery, I shook my head at them. I just didn't think that was going to be possible. As nurse after nurse kept insisting I was going to have to do it, I gradually managed to wrap my mind around the reality of the situation. "It'll be okay," I said, "I have a high threshold for pain."
The first day I walked around the nurses station, I encountered the nurse to whom I had made that comment. She looked at me with a lot of compassion in her face, smiled and said, "You're doing good. High threshold of pain." For some reason, that felt very comforting. Far more comforting than the morphine ever was.
posted by: rosietulips (reply)
post date: 02.23.07 (10:56 am)
I cannot imagine being forbidden to wear shoes! I can't imagine being in excruciating pain either. I admire your strength.
posted by: rosietulips (reply)
post date: 02.23.07 (10:56 am)
(and your threshold for pain) :-)
posted by: doeeyed (reply)
post date: 02.24.07 (8:01 am)
"dilaudid"
My husband had surgery for a very large kidney stone a few years
ago and dilaudid was his friend.
I know how much pain he was in and it helped him.
If the combo of morphine and dilaudid wasn't holding your pain
at bay and you were walking, yes, you have a high threshold of pain.
I've missed you.
posted by: FinalyFree (reply)
post date: 02.26.07 (10:07 am)
I also can't imagine someone not allowing another person to have shoes. I mean what's the point? Did he fear she'd be able to walk further? Like, possibly to run away?
I've never understood the addiction to pain medicine and I suppose that's because it doesn't affect me like it does others. After my surgery in April I was given Fentanyl (I'm allergic to Morephine) and I can tell you my experience was much like yours, I was still in a lot of pain!



