Gray’s Anatomy

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The most prominent book on my mantle is Gray’s Anatomy, a text I received from a colleague with whom I worked at Man’s Greatest Hospital. After many hours spent working side-by-side in the Gastrointestinal Cancer Center, she felt it was a fitting gift as I embarked on my mission to becoming a physician.

Nearly six years later, I’m an Intern in a Family Medicine residency program, trying to learn how to become the quintessential doctor.

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I spent the first six months of Residency filling many different roles, each of them markedly different from the one before or after. I have been an Internist, Clinician, Gynecologist, Primary Care Provider, Nocturnist, Infectious Disease specialist, Pediatrician, Teacher, Obstetrician, Podiatrist, and Trauma Surgeon. I have also become an even bigger fan of sleep than I ever could have imagined.

The copy of Gray’s Anatomy which I received is a facsimile of the 1901 version, the 15th edition of Henry Gray’s medical masterpiece of the human body. Not much has changed in human biology in the past 113 years, but Gray’s experiences as a physician and lecturer at the Royal College of Surgeons is probably somewhat different from what I experienced in the past six months… or perhaps not.

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Day 1 of Residency I was assigned to our Internal Medicine service, responsible for running around the hospital admitting patients, providing them care, discharging them home, all while hoping I’d done a serviceable enough job teaching them about their medical ailment to prevent a hasty return to the Emergency Department.

Of the services we staff as Residents (service = four-week stint as a physician of a specific branch of medicine), Internal Medicine at my Residency is the most labor intensive, sleep-depriving, nerve-wracking, hair-splitting service of them all. The official name is Clinical Medicine, or Clin Med for short (or Clin Dred when you know the next four weeks are about to evaporate into the ether).

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Somehow I became one of the two “lucky” lottery winners to be a first-year Resident assigned to Clin Med. My partner was a friend from medical school whom I had known since the beginning. We were paired with two senior Residents, who ostensibly had been the highest functioning first-year Residents on the Clin Med service the previous year and were thus chosen to be our medical mentors.

The ensuing four weeks were so busy that I spoke to my friend for exactly 8 minutes and 11 seconds during the entire month (that includes the time it took to type text messages).

I was told being chosen to start on the Clin Med service should be considered an honor… basically meaning that during my time as a student at the same program the previous year, they had come to the conclusion I would not be responsible for the early demise of any patients who would be placed under my care.

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I thought it comparable to being told I would be allowed to be the first person to jump out of an airplane without a
parachute. Low and behold, not a single patient died under my care; or really had any significant downturn in their medical malady.

The days were filled with trying to learn how to navigate the choppy waters of a medical institution and its systems, and the computer programs which allowed me to chart on my patients, along with a physician’s responsibility of percussing my patients’ backs, feeling for pedal pulses, listening to a heart beat while gently pressing along a radial artery, writing perpetually changing orders, and allowing for my own bodily functions to occur when I had a moment.

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VARIOUS

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At the end of the month, I took a deep breath, realized I had survived my first service as a Resident, glanced at the
Gray’s sitting on my mantle, and wondered aloud, “what the hell just happened.”

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After a month of learning on the fly about how to be a functional physician in a fast-paced hospital environment, the following two weeks were a nice respite, a smattering of out-patient visits to social service providers in Columbus, office visits by established patients in our out-patient office… and a couple of shifts in the Gyn Clinic.

My experience as a medical student during the six week rotation of Obstetrics and Gynecology were by far the worst of my clinical training. I only survived it by forming a bond with two other colleagues who were equally averse to the responsibilities therein. After that rotation I spent the next two weeks traversing around the Eastern half of the US, visiting old friends, drinking away the memories on an adventure I called “The Journey to Reclaim My Soul.” Sticking a speculum, or even worse, my sterile-gloved fingers, inside women I had met only moments prior wasn’t exactly why I had decided to become a physician.

Stepping foot inside the Gyn clinic was a bit of a flash-back to days of yore. Days I would rather forget. But, I chose to become a Family Medicine physician because I wanted to experience a full-scope of practice, so I needed to use those memories to help the new women I would have asking me about their privates.

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In the midst of those two weeks, there were a smattering of half-days in the office, where patients would come to their appointment expecting to see me; not some doctor who happened to be available. They had formally been told I would be their physician. It was a bit of a culture shock unlike what I experienced on the In-Patient service, where people arrived in the hospital hoping for someone with a medical background to cure their ails.

This time, they were expecting “Dr. B.” Whether or not they liked me or thought I was helpful would determine if they would think of me as “Dr. Bullshit” or “Dr. Badass.”

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Two short weeks of community clinic visits, office appointments, and speculum insertions were followed by flipping my schedule and going on night-call for two weeks.

It evoked memories of my life for the six months prior to Residency, when I had worked overnight; Except I was traversing the ED, the emotional rollercoaster of my equally sleep-deprived senior Resident, and the perils of septic shocks and intubations at 3am, rather than deciding which return bin to toss some junk into at Amazon.

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It had not started smoothly, as my transition back to nocturnal life stymied my brain’s ability to function on the level necessary for a physician. By the end of the second night (by night I mean at 6am, 12 hours into our shift), my senior Resident, 9 years my junior in age, and I had a tit-for-tat critique of each others performance.

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And when I say “tit-for-tat” and “each others”, I mean, I got my ass handed to me and had to sit there and take it like a man. By the end of those two weeks though, he and I were having a nice breakfast reminiscing about all the crap we had successfully lived through together.

Gray certainly didn’t write anything about that in his book; I checked.

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The first two months of Residency seemed to last forever, but at the same time, it seemed to be over before I knew it. The next two months were spent down the street at the nationally recognized Children’s Hospital, where it is customary for the Interns of my Residency to spend back-to-back months there learning the medical art of Pediatrics.

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I was only starting to get the hang of being a Resident by that time, making the transition a bit of a shock to the system as I needed to learn all new faces and an all new electronic medical record; all while assimilating to the hierarchy of a whole new medical specialty.

The Residents of Children’s Hospital learn the ins and outs of treating babies, children, adolescents, teenagers, and the occasional grown adult still suffering from their pediatric medical maladies… I needed to become one of them quickly. The assimilation process when you are a physician is expected to occur over the course of a couple of hours; not a few days or weeks.

So of course I started on the Infectious Disease service right as a never-before experienced scourge affectionately known as “Asthmageddon” swept the Midwest.

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Asthmagedden was a region-wide exposure to a newly recognized virus, Enterovirus D68, which was causing babies and children of all ages, with and without previous asthma afflictions, to show up in the Emergency Department in Status Asthmaticus, a diagnosis indicating the inability of the respiratory tract to respond to front-line medical therapy, causing a constant difficulty in breathing.

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Enterovirus typically affects the gastrointestinal tract, causing horrible diarrhea and concomitant dehydration, but as evolution has shown us, a few changes to a gene here or there and all of a sudden a new Enterovirus emerges, now equipped to attack the lower respiratory tract.

Children who had never wheezed, the most common sign of asthma, were having their bronchi inflamed by the virus, making it difficult for air to pass. As somebody who grew up with asthma, I can attest that this is a terrifying feeling.

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Some of these children were so sick they were immediately admitted to the Intensive Care Unit to receive the most minute-by-minute care to assure they would not suffocate from a blocked airway. These critically sick children by-passed our normal Infectious Disease unit, but as their symptoms resolved, they would be shuttled to our unit to continue their care alongside the children who were not as severely afflicted.

Of course, a Pediatrics Infectious Disease unit is also full of little tykes with butt abscesses, whooping-cough, diarrheal illnesses, crusty eyes, and non-remitting otitis media (ear infections); and a whole host of anxious parents, who typically become the biggest concern of Residents.

After seeing all of this, I’m re-thinking my plan of having children one day, if at least so I don’t need any psychotropic medications when my kids get sick.

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NCH night call

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The first three services were a whirlwind of cognitive adventure, psychological daring, and physical extremes. When I hung up my scrubs on the last day of Pediatric Infectious Disease, it was with the knowledge I was only a quarter of the way through Intern Year.

Gray’s Anatomy… continued

Nine Lives… part II

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[Pieter Bruegel’s “Landscape with the fall of Icarus”, ca. 1558]

In case you missed it: Nine Lives… part I

To recap Lives 1-4…

#1: Pneumonia-induced bubble boy survives on Atari and Jell-O

#2: Asthma and Animal Allergies combine to nearly suffocate my ascendance into teenagerhood.

#3: Tracheitis can nearly kill me, but it can’t keep me from dancing with a Debutante.

#4: Semi-Survivor… German-formulated Panzer tank (aka The Ghetto Sled) prevents death on the highway.

 

Life #5: Ended at age 22. After surviving four years at an alcohol-soaked university and burning through two lives, I spent the summer between undergrad and grad school living in Cincinnati. Due to my desire to avoid returning to Lexington for three months, my buddy Gib had offered a bed in his folk’s place as a way-station between earning my Bachelor’s degree and an attempt to go into even Higher Education.

 

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After cozily sleeping til 11AM, one morning I awoke to find that I was having trouble breathing, but this was unlike anything I had experienced in my previous four lives.  I quickly ran through my routine of airway-saving measures, but nothing alleviated the difficulty I was having.

Alarmed by my obvious distress, Gib and I hopped in his car and went to the nearest Urgent Treatment Center. The young doctor manning the office took one look into my mouth and his jaw hit the floor. With his pupils dilated to the size of nickels, he immediately insisted I rush to the hospital; he’d never seen such a large tonsil.

 

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I tried to calm him down as he attempted to convince me of my imminent doom. He provided a pen-light and mirror; I could then see my left tonsil was so swollen that the back of my throat was barely visible. I continued my insistence for not wanting to rush to the hospital. He looked at me incredulously. But I was so relieved it was only a pulsating tonsil, not a swollen trachea, bronchi, or alveoli causing his (and my) concern.

He eventually relented and gave me some antibiotics and an appointment to see an Ear, Nose, and Throat (ENT) doctor in two days. And a stern warning that if I began feeling worse that I HAD to go to the hospital.

 

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On Monday I went to my appointment, where the nurse echoed the young doc’s assessment: I had the grand-daddy of pulsating tonsils. The ENT doctor entered the room, asked me to hold on to the arms of the chair like my life depended on it, and grabbed a needle which he plunged into the swollen mass.

He retracted it, looked puzzled, and admitted he had expected it to burst. But only a small trickle of blood had exited. Disappointed, he gave me a different antibiotic prescription, some pain medication (Codeine), insisted that I go on a liquid diet, and asked for me to return the following Monday. And also provided a stern warning that if I began feeling worse that I HAD to go to the hospital.

 

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Gib and I stopped by the pharmacy and filled my prescriptions on the way home. The Codeine knocked me out cold. So much so that I spent the next week sleeping on the couch in the TV room. In the same clothes. Every day. I couldn’t even make it up the stairs to the bed because I was so drowsy. Our friends would come over and ask if I was dying.

Each day, Gib would run out to Mickey D’s and grab me a vanilla milk shake. It doubled as a vehicle for my antibiotics and Codeine, as well as a cooling force against the warm pulsations. After quietly sucking it down, I would roll back over, and go back to being nearly comatose.

 

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When the following Monday finally arrived, Gib’s mom offered to take me back to the ENT. With my appointment at 11AM, I rolled off the couch at 10AM, stumbled upstairs, took a quick shower and changed my clothes. As I clumsily made my way downstairs in a Codeine-induced haze, I felt like I needed to cough.

So I reared back and tried to clear my throat as if a hair ball was waiting to be expelled.

The result was a barely audible pop accompanied with a release of pressure; I could only assume it was my tonsil exploding. Almost instantaneously, I could feel the now-former contents of my left tonsil pouring down my throat.

 

 

The feeling induced my gag reflex, so I ran into the kitchen and grabbed a little Dixie cup, and promptly filled it with the pus-blood mixture from my tonsil.

The Mum (aka Gib’s mom) still insisted she take me to the ENT to make sure I wasn’t in need of some sort of surgery and stitches from the explosion. Thankfully, I wasn’t. But the doc still poked another needle into the tonsil, hoping for a secondary explosion, which did not occur. Apparently my hack-cough had expelled everything into my stomach or the Dixie cup.

[Note: Obviously, this End of Life wasn’t as traumatic as #4… however, I did have left over Codeine from this experience, which I subsequently used one night about a year later while drinking beers with a girl I was “dating” named Jasmine. My body could not handle this volatile mixture. Medically, no one’s body should be able to handle this volatile mixture. It felt as if every orifice of my body needed to expel whatever contents were within. Based on the sounds coming from my bathroom, my roommates could have only assumed I had contracted Ebola and would need to be scraped from the tile floor in the morning… Life Lesson Learned: Never, Ever, mix alcohol and prescription pain meds… Or date women whose name will automatically make your friends think you met her at a strip club.]

 

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[P.S. Note: Remember, say NO to drugs. And women with stripper names.]

 

Life #6: Ended at age 28. While in the midst of applying to medical school, my girlfriend of 3.5 years, who doubled as my best friend, decided that spending the rest of her life with me wasn’t going to make her happy any more. It was completely unexpected and obliterated the limits of my coping mechanisms. The aftermath was not pretty. I spent three months living by myself in the duplex we had shared, leaving incredibly early in the morning and returning only to sleep. The time between was filled with work, exercise, and wanderlust, leading me into random neighborhoods of Boston.

 

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However, the break-up itself wasn’t the reason Life #6 ended… though it did represent the meta-physical end to a life I expected to lead.  More so, Life #6 ended because the person who emerged out of the depths of those three months was a new “me”.

Those three months, which were book-ended by her departure and my younger brother moved in, were best characterized as “Hepatitis and He-Man.” With my life suddenly devoid of its biggest asset, I would spend Friday and Saturday nights indulging in the company provided by my friends or the Enormous Room in Cambridge. These shenanigans would be off-set by the legendary-in-my-own-mind workout sessions I found myself completing at the gym on the subsequent day.

 

 

On a Saturday or Sunday afternoon, I would often slowly begin to rouse myself, eat a light meal, and pack my bag for the gym. When I got there, I was a beast. All of the carbohydrates (and pain) I’d ingested overnight were begging to be burned away. I obliged by conducting my own personal indoor triathlons (torture sessions) over the next several hours. I had never so effortlessly pushed my body to its limits. Using the elliptical machine as my run, a stationary bike, and swimming laps in the pool, I escaped from my world of heartache and hepatitis. The endorphins I felt kept my mind at ease. The fatigue I usually felt after an hour of exercise never arrived. The sore muscles were completely absent. The willingness to quit had evaporated.

 

 

Things that had previously limited me, in mind, body, and spirit were no longer present. And I felt like I could accomplish anything I put in front of myself. This belief and the limits I overcame have served me well in the subsequent years.

 

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And from that experience, emerged Life #7… which thankfully, by my count, I’m still on. It’s been good so far, filled with medical knowledge and clinical skills, amazing adventures in the Caribbean… Miami… Boston… Chicago… nYc… Columbus, countless new friends, and a life full of opportunity.

 

 

But I must say, in the future it would be nice to avoid any future brushes with absent airway induced death. And vehicular assaults. And soul-crushing misadventures of the heart.

Especially since I only have two lives left after this one.

 

 

 

Nine Lives… part I

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 [August 21, 2001]

On Friday, June 13, 1980, at 9:11PM, in Wichita, KS, I was born. It was 110 degrees. And my parents misspelled my name. The fact that I’m still alive should be surprising to anyone who believes in bad luck. Or knows my parents.

Being born on a Friday the 13th is supposed to elicit some sort of black magic voodoo. Maybe it’s black magic voodoo that kept me kicking inside my mom for an extra two days past my due date of June 11; maybe if I’d been born any earlier or a few hours later, I would have succumbed to one of the several biological insults I’ve encountered in my 33, almost 34 years of life.

 

 

Of the members of the animal kingdom, cats are typically most associated with luck. Bad luck, that is. But in order to offset their inherent bad luck, the cosmos also blessed them with Nine Lives. I’m sure one of these lives is automatically deducted for having to survive in our world and the dangers we cause. This basically leaves them with eight lives to negotiate their own existence.

 

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The bad luck I was blessed/cursed to be born with would make me a logical choice to be a kindred spirit to cats. But I’m allergic to cats. Cats love to cause me allergic reactions. Kindred spirits we are not.

This being the case, I’m more of a dog person. I grew up with them in my house my entire life. But guess what, I’m even more allergic to their dander than cats’. Yet, it didn’t dissuade my parents from keeping them around. A lot of them.

So like the cats who dabble in bad luck, I’ve channeled my dark voodoo magic luck into Nine Lives. Let’s see where I stand…

 

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Life #1: Ended at age 4. Frolicking in Lake Michigan while pretending to be a pelican is a good way to have a bunch of microbe-infested lake water go pouring into your lungs. The next morning when I awoke with a death-rattle wheeze and sky-high temp, my parents rushed me to the nearest hospital. I spent 5 days living in a plastic bubble (yep, I was a bubble boy) while the doctors and nurses pumped me with antibiotics to crush the pneumonia that was trying to suffocate me.

 

 

During my hospital stay, I developed a disdain for Jell-O (it was the only thing I was allowed to eat), which grew exponentially by the day and has been maintained throughout my life. Thankfully though, this developing hatred was off-set by my introduction to video games, which I was allowed to play all day long.

Atari. Centipede. Bye Bye Pneumonia!

 

 

Life #2: Ended at age 12… when I had my last major asthma attack. Right around this time, I became sentient enough to realize the main cause of the nearly dozen Emergency Room visits and two hospitalizations I had sustained over the last 7 years were the dogs living in my house. I was constantly grabbing my inhaler, trying to breathe over the dander infesting every square inch of our home. My parents knew I was allergic, as I’d received numerous shots, been put on oral corticosteroids causing me to gain 20 pounds of fat in two months, and was constantly having fits of eczema, which left me physically scarred to this day. [I dare you to take a bath in betadine with open wounds all over your body… I was screaming for days.]

Before this time, I simply wasn’t smart enough to realize why every time I played with my dog I started itching, wheezing, and sneezing. Once I had this ah-ha! moment, I tried to be more cautious… but that was pretty much like running through a cabbage patch full of land mines when you have five dogs at home and one of them sleeps on your bed.

 

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[Note: I’m also allergic to horses. Maybe worse than dogs. Ok, definitely worse than dogs. But my parents made me go to horse shows and be around horses my entire childhood too. I’ve concluded they were trying to thin the herd in our household. Well guess what… survival of the fittest! All of those animals are d-e-a-d. And I’m not.]

 

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Life #3: Ended at age 20. I was on Christmas break from college and only two days away from attending the Debutante Ball with my good friend Katherine. I was in Lexington, staying the night at her parents home, when I started feeling like my allergies and asthma were acting up. I tried all of my normal tricks to make myself feel better: anti-histamines, albuterol inhaler, hot shower, fresh air, etc, etc. But I still felt my difficulty breathing increasing. I didn’t dare try to sleep. I simply sat up in bed, trying to gulp in air when possible, puffing on my inhaler every hour, but to no avail.

 

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Eventually, her father woke up the next morning at 5AM and between gasped breaths, I asked if he would mind taking me to the hospital. Obviously, he obliged.

In the Emergency Department, the doctor diagnosed me with… tracheitis… solving the mystery of why my inhaler and other tricks weren’t working. He pumped me full of antibiotics and inhaled steroids to decrease the swelling and discharged me by 11AM. I rested the entire day and made the Debutante Ball with no one the wiser.

 

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[Note: So by age 20, I’d had the alveoli (the little sacks at the furthest reaches of your lungs) get infected and inflamed causing my pneumonia. I’d had my bronchi (the muscular extensions branching off into the individual lungs) get consistently irritated from allergic insults and cause my horrific childhood asthma. And now my trachea (the air pipe that leads from your throat to the bronchi) get infected somehow and slowly close off my air passage… Friday. The 13th. In. Effect.]

 

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Life #4: Ended at age 21. Only nine months after surviving some bizarro bacterial infection that threatened to cut off my oxygen supply, I was driving east on US-70 outside of Kansas City when I was struck by a semi-tractor trailer traveling  35 mph. Luckily for my brother and I, we were encased in my 1983 Mercedes-Benz station wagon. [See image at the beginning of this post.]

We had left KC only 45 minutes earlier while a slow, misty rain was falling on the highway. My brother and I were heading back to Ohio, where we were about to begin school again after spending some time in Kansas visiting friends. He was sleeping in the passenger seat, his head resting on the frame of the door.

 

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As I drove along the two-lane highway, I could see traffic was stopped ahead of us and the right lane was clear because an ambulance had maneuvered its way to a small collision 300 yards in the distance. As I came to a stop in the left-hand lane, with the right lane completely devoid of any traffic, and with a red truck stopped only a half car-length ahead of us, I ever-so-slightly turned my steering wheel to the right… I reflexively peeked up into the rear-view mirror… only to see the grille of a semi smash into the back of my pseudo German tank. All hell broke loose.

 

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When all was said and done, my brother and I were alive… But the scene was chaos. The Ghetto Sled (as I affectionately termed my car) had jettisoned into the right-hand lane, barely clipping the red truck in front of us (rather than being smashed accordian-like into the bed of the truck). The front passenger-side of TGS smashed into the retaining wall of the overpass, spilling transmission fluid all over the road. (Yes, we were on an overpass… from which we could have flipped over and onto the traffic below.)

 

 

My brother, asleep at the time of the accident, had violently smashed his head into the frame of the car, causing him to seize, and me to believe, that he had died. (He had to be removed from TGS with the jaws-of-life and air-lifted to the nearest hospital.)

 

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I instinctively turned off the car, swung open the driver’s side door, and climbed out. My body was completely numb, but I simultaneously felt as if every bone in my body was broken as I stumbled towards the driver of the red pickup. I then looked at what was left of the TGS, my brother seizing in the passenger’s seat, and the smashed grill of the semi behind us.

Thankfully, the EMS responders who were tending to the minor fender-bender ahead of us had seen the entire accident unfold. They threw the ambulance in reverse, and due to a clear right-hand lane, were tending to my brother in a matter of seconds.

Somehow, I came away from the whole scene with only minor lower back musculoskeletal damage and some wicked whiplash. My brother spent the night in the hospital, was found to have no grave cranial or neurological damage, and was released the next day.

[Note: When we went to the junk yard to collect whatever was left of our belongings from TGS, I recovered a few meaningful mementos. But most importantly, in the pocket behind the driver’s seat was a picture of my second cousin Eddie, a dashing and handsome man, dressed in a tuxedo while flashing his million dollar smile. He had been killed at 31 years old when a semi-tractor trailer operated by an intoxicated driver barreled through a turn and demolished his car. I don’t believe in God. But I believe in Eddie.]

 

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If you think a semi is my last brush with death… you ain’t heard nothing yet… If you’re feeling lucky, come back for Nine Lives… part II.