Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta hospital. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta hospital. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 20 de septiembre de 2017

Mi sangre

   La sangre empezó a caer como si hubiera tenido un grifo en la cara. Había pasado de la nada. Momentos antes, solo había estado pensando en mi vida, en cosas varias como uno hace seguido en los buses. El chorro de liquido en mi mano y mi entrepierna me alertó de que algo pasaba. Si mi sangre hubiese sido más sutil, creo que no me hubiese dado cuenta hasta más tarde. El caso es que todavía estaba a unos diez minutos de mi casa, caminando. Esperé como pude, tapándome la nariz, cubriéndome con una hoja de mi curriculum.

 Mi hoja de vida, de trabajo o como se le quiera llamar era lo único que tenía a mano y, para ser sincero conmigo mismo, nunca había sido más que un montón de garabatos escritos en un papel duro y sin gracia. La hoja se consumió rápidamente, como si mi sangre fuese el fuego de una hoguera que carcome todo lo que se encuentra a su paso. Mis pies se movían, la sangre en mis piernas y manos chorreaba al suelo y la gente ya empezaba a mirarme más de lo que resulta cómodo.

 Apenas vi mi parada, timbré unas cinco veces y me bajé golpeándome el hombre contra la puerta del bus. Alguien dijo algo detrás de mí pero no le puse cuidado porque seguro era algo que no me interesaba oír. Con la mochila casi vacía en mi espalda y el papel sangriento en mi cara, caminé los pocos metros que me separaban de mi casa. Tenía que cruzar un parque para llegar, el mismo parque donde no hacía mucho habíamos jugado con una mascota que ahora ya era parte de la Tierra.

 No sé si fue pensar en esa bella criatura o si fue causa del chorro de sangre que salía por mi nariz. El caso es que di un traspiés bastante brusco y caí de frente. No me golpee la nariz pero el papel untado de rojo salió volando. La agitación hizo que sangrara más y fue entonces cuando de verdad me sentí mal. La fuerza de mis brazos no estaba ya y empecé a ver todo como si hubiese un vidrio sucio frente a mi cara. Lo último que vi fue una sombra que me asustó, luego ruidos ininteligibles y luego nada.

 Tuve un sueño muy raro, en el que estaba sentado sobre una silla en la mitad de un campo enorme, muy verde. El cielo estaba casi completamente despejado, con solo apenas algunas nubes blancas y gorditas surcando el espacio sobre mi cabeza. Miraba a un lado y al otro del campo verde y no había nada ni nadie más aparte de la silla y de mi. Quise ponerme de pie pero no podía. Ni siquiera lograba moverme. Era como si mi cuerpo no quisiera hacer lo que el cerebro le decía. Me sentí atrapado. Quise gritar pero tampoco pude. No había sonido.

 Cuando desperté, la cabeza me daba miles de vueltas. El mareo fue tal que, aunque no veía nada, mi instinto me dijo que girara la cabeza a la derecha para vomitar. Al parecer hice lo correcto, pues una sombra pasó corriendo por el lado, como si fuese a buscar a otra persona. Sabía que debía estar en mi casa o en algún lugar por el estilo. No tuve mucho tiempo para adivinarlo pues me desmayé a los pocos segundos. Mi fuerza estaba ausente, completamente drenada.

 Abrí lo ojos de nuevo mucho después. Era de noche, eso sí que lo podía percibir. Mi vista estaba un poco mejor pero todo seguía pareciendo una de las peores pesadillas de mi vida. Los sonidos se aclaraban poco a poco, a veces escuchándose más fuertes y a veces más suaves. Agradecí que alguien, tal vez una enfermera, había cerrado la puerta. No quería saber mucho de lo que pasaba afuera de esa habitación. Ya había adivinado que era un hospital y no mi casa.

 Oí pasos y fingí dormir. La puerta se abrió y se cerró y una forma humana se acercó a mi. No sabía como era su rostro pero sabía que lo tenía muy cerca al mío. Estuvo haciendo algo allí, luego me tomó la muñeca izquierda, se quedó quieto y luego se fue. Por el tamaño de los dedos pude deducir que era un hombre y era muy probable que fuese mi doctor. Tuve ganas de abrir los ojos y la boca y preguntarle que era lo que estaba pasando pero supe que no tendría la capacidad de hacer ninguna de esas cosas.

 Resolví dormir de nuevo y eso me sirvió un poco, a pesar de que la pesadilla de la silla volvió a mi mente. Lo único diferente era que esta vez todo ocurría de noche y era mucho más terrorífico que antes. Podía sentir muchas presencias a mi alrededor, murmullos y sombras que se movían de un lado y del otro. De nuevo, no me podía mover de la silla y sí que quería hacerlo, quería salir corriendo de allí y refugiarme en algún lugar familiar. Pero dentro de mí sabía que eso no era posible.

 Cuando me desperté de la pesadilla, el doctor estaba al lado mío. Creo que se asustó porque se retiró de golpe y su bolígrafo cayó al suelo. No supe que hacer en el momento, empezando porque mi sentido del oído había vuelto por completo y el de la vista estaba en camino de estar como antes. El hombre me revisó en silencio y no dijo nada durante todo el rato. Yo quise decirle algo pero no pude. No solo porque las palabras no estaban a la mano, sino porque mi garganta se sentía como llena de pelusa, como si muchos gatos la hubiera utilizado como resbaladilla.

 Estuve en el hospital una semana y luego otra más. Casi un mes completo allí cuando, por fin, me dieron de alta. Tuve que ir a un consultorio para que me dijeran los resultados de todos los exámenes que me habían estado haciendo. Mis padres estaban allí porque alguien tenía que pagar la cuenta del hospital. De resto, se suponía que yo era un adulto responsable de si mismo. Me dio rabia estar allí en ese momento, sintiéndome aún pero de lo que ya me había sentido.

 En resumen, el médico declaró que tenía un problema serio de la sangre y que no tenían claro que era lo que sucedía. Al parecer no era cáncer ni ninguna enfermedad de transmisión sexual. Casi me rio cuando mencionó ese detalle pues hacía casi un año que yo no había tocado otro cuerpo humano. Dijo muchas cosas que no entendí y otro montó que la verdad no quise escuchar. Los médicos hablan demasiado a veces y se les olvida que atienden seres humanos.

 Salimos de allí después de pagar y volvimos a casa. Mis padres me miraban como si tuviera la peste o algo peor. Como si les fuese a saltar al cuello en cualquier momento. Yo no hice nada más sino ir a mi habitación y encerrarme allí. Se suponía que tenía que seguir una dieta estricta y ciertas reglas en mi vida, como no agitarme ni nada parecido. Se me habían prohibido las actividades extenuantes, así que por fin era útil ser un desempleado más de un país en el olvido.

 Estuve varios días en mi habitación, viendo películas y comiendo y no haciendo nada. Se suponía que también tenía que ejercitarme pero simplemente no lo hice. Mi cuerpo dolía demasiado por todo lo que me habían hecho y simplemente no tenía el humor de ponerme a torturar mi cuerpo. Era algo muy idiota pensar que alguien en mi estado se iba a poner a esforzarse tanto de la noche a la mañana y sin más, sin una charla de verdad, sin consejos ni confidencias y nada que me hiciera sentir seguro.

 Pasadas dos semanas, mi nariz empezó a sangrar de nuevo, mientras estaba en el portátil. La sangre empezó a meterse por entre las teclas, manchando mis dedos y dañando internamente el aparato. Y yo solo miraba absorto el liquido medio espeso.


 Quise saber cuanto era necesario para empezar a marearme de nuevo. Quería ver cuanto faltaba para sentirme tan mal como antes. Fue entonces que me di cuenta: yo mismo me había hecho sangrar. No sabía como pero sí sabía porqué. No dije nada, ni llamé a nadie mientras mi cama se iba manchando por mi fuego interno.

lunes, 8 de mayo de 2017

Inside

   Of the first night, I only remember when one of the nurses looked at me and she had this weird expression on her face. It wasn’t really fear but something else. Maybe it was pity or something similar. Anyways, I will always remember her face over mine, looking down on me. I felt I was already on the hole to be buried. You tend to get very dramatic when you’re sick. And that was the first time I was really sick. Doctors would tell me, months later, that I could have died.

 It was the fever that prevented me from remembering anything from that first day. But as time went by, I started remembering more and more things. For example, I know for a fact that on the second day, a male nurse came and stared at me for several minutes. I think he thought I was asleep or in a coma or something. I knew he was there because of his reflection on the window. It was very creepy. Maybe he did something to patients or something. I would know about it later.

 They gave me actual food only a week after I had entered the hospital. Before that everything had to get in me through an IV. I felt miserable, weak and fearful that so many things could happen. I was scared they would discover something in me that might mean then end of my life. I thought that stay in the hospital would be the death o f me and, again,  I don’t think you can blame someone for being overdramatic in a hospital. Awful things happen in those places every day.

 Luckily, with time, I was able to recuperate. It wasn’t fast at all but at least not every single bone in my body was aching. The pain started to go away and I was just so grateful that it was all coming to an end. I felt it was going to be going on for many more weeks but thankfully it didn’t. They did not discover anything strange, rather the opposite. What they did tell me was that I wasn’t eating well and that I should be trying to eat more regularly and more types of food.

 True, I had been neglecting my meals before getting sick. I had lost any interest in food or in anything that wasn’t going to give me what I really needed in life. I became obsessed with achieving one goal and it was then when I became ill and couldn’t even continue achieving that goal. I wanted to be successful and finally prove myself and others that I was worth something. That drive lasted shortly, as my stay in the hospital just changed everything for me. I didn’t do what to do, again. I was confused and relieved at the same time, it was pretty confusing.

 One month after leaving the hospital, I had to go back for a check up. They wanted to verify everything was ok. I had all the time needed because my ambition had been cut short and now I had no idea what to do, how to proceed. Unfortunately, I fainted in the waiting room, just as the doctor was preparing to receive me. They laid my body on a stretcher and gave me something so I could sleep for a couple of hours. Somehow, they knew I hadn’t been able to do it by myself for weeks.

 That time, they did found out that I had some sort of disease, a condition as they said. It’s very difficult to explain what it is and the name is even stranger but the point is that thing makes me weaker as time goes by. It has been inside me for a long time and now it will live in me forever until my death, which might be caused by it. Not directly but the weaknesses my body have will enable diseases and other awful stuff to just come through and attack my body in the easiest way.

 I was put in a room again and stayed in the hospital for a couple of days. I remember I cried a lot that time, because I felt I finally knew when and where I was going to die. Of course, I didn’t know for sure but it was pretty obvious that I would have to deal with something that most people have no idea about. If I had ever wanted to go back and try again l my failed attempts to be successful, with those news it seemed my world had ended and there was no way to turn it back on.

 I didn’t know what to do. When I saw my parents checking the prices of the pills I would have to take for life, I felt even more like a leech, useless and pathetic. I can recognize that I thought about killing myself but my body or something else wouldn’t let me. I found myself to feel not only weak but empty. I had nothing left inside and couldn’t even fathom the possibility of feeling anything ever again. I was in my lowest point ever and only a miracle could save me.

And it did. As it happens, I had been taking pictures and putting them online, for several years actually. I had many followers but they rarely commented. One of them was the male nurse that stood by my bed that time I got sick. I ran into him this one time, when I went for another check up. He reunited the courage to tell me he was a huge fan of mine and that he would love if I accepted to have coffee or something with him. Feeling so down, I said yes only to keep walking and reach my doctor’s office. I even gave him my cellphone number.

 Days later, he called and told me he could go near my house if I preferred. The point is, he is the most charming person in the world. We have been talking for a few months now and I think his interest and original take on everything that is happening to me, helps a lot in making me feel less sick of myself and more proud of the few things I’ve done. He makes me feel good when we’re together and that’s the best. He likes to hold my hands a lot and hugging me is a apparently a hobby for him.


 My disease is still there though and sometimes I can almost feel it moving through me. I feel like a bomb about to go off but no one knows exactly when, not me, not the doctors, not my family. But one day. The important thing is, it’s now right now and that’s something.

lunes, 24 de abril de 2017

No one

   The floor was cold and the room was very humid. No light entered the tiny space where he was trapped. He had forgotten his name long ago, maybe because of the many beatings he had received or maybe because it wasn’t something that was important anymore. A name didn’t help anyone survive such a horrible thing. Then again, he wasn’t sure he wanted to survive. He just wanted his awful situation to change, one way or the other, it didn’t matter at all.

 All the days were the same so remembering each one individually was difficult and also useless. There was no point in having a good memory when the schedule every day was the same: early in the morning he would be woken up by a plate of water sliding towards him or by cold water coming out of a hose. It apparently depended on the humor of his captor. Then, he was kept there all day unless his captor wanted something else from else, usually to work for him in the most awful way.

 He would knew it was a “work” day when an old mattress was put inside his cell, alongside the water plate and also some food. The food was never good, some sticky stuff that looked like mashed potatoes, but wasn’t exactly that. He ate it anyway but his stomach always complained. Those days, he would have to wait all day until his captor’s client would come. It was and excruciating wait that didn’t get better after it all ended. Of course, he wouldn’t see any of the money the client paid.

 Actually, he had never seen the face of the man that had kidnapped him and kept him there. He always wore a ski mask, so he had no idea what his face was like. But what he did know was that he was a very strong individual. After many beatings, using both punches and kicks, the captured had learned how heavy the captor’s body was. He had an incredible force in his arms and legs, probably because he exercised a lot. But the man was losing his eyesight living in the dark, so he could only go by what he felt was the truth.

 The beatings took place randomly. It was the only thing in his cell life that changed and, of course, it wasn’t something he would look forward to. When it happened, it almost felt like part of a sick and awful routine that had survived for far too long. The man in the cell knew he had been there for a long time but he had no idea how long that was. More than a year? Probably. Five years? Maybe, he didn’t really know. What was true was the fact that the violent man would never use him as the clients did, which the captured always thought was strange.

 But that was only when he wondered about his situation, which was really that often. Instead, he loved to sleep. It was the only way his body felt actually rested and, when he managed to sleep long hours, he was able to dream. Even when nightmares slipped in, it was a good thing for him. After all, he had forgotten what having an imagination was like and seeing all those images that make no sense inside of his head was a sign that there was still hope for him, in a very sad way.

 In the dreams, he was sometimes free. Not every time and that was very strange. One would think that his obsession was to be free in the world. But a recurring dream happened to be a redecoration of his cell, with more light and nice furniture, as if he was restoring his childhood bedroom, which he didn’t really remember anymore. When he dreamt of freedom, it always ended on a stark note, like a remainder that he wasn’t really free and that he might never be free again.

 What he did want, at least judging by his dreams, was to be able to talk to someone. Once, he did have the chance to do so, when another person was locked in a cell beside him. He had thought for long that he was alone wherever he was and that discovery was the best for him. Except the other person was not very interested in talking, instead crying and demanding an explanation to why they were there. Soon enough, their captor moved that other person somewhere or who knows.

 Voices were rarely heard. In their daily routine, not the captor or the captured would talk, even when one would pull the other by the hair or when the beating was especially brutal. No words were heard, as it was an unspoken rule to actually say something. It was better not to taunt danger, not more that was usual. So words were something inside their brains, wondering around and trying to get out in any way possible. He was afraid he would forget how to talk and behave.

 Many of his dreams and nightmares were an exercise on precisely that, trying not to forget every single thing about himself. He would sometimes remember, for example, the faces of his family. He knew who they were but not their names. It didn’t matter because “mother” was “mother” not matter what. So were “father” and “sister” and “brother”. He would normally wake up soaked in tears when he dreamt about all of them but, in a certain way, it was worth it. Because he still remembered, which meant he hadn’t been completely broken down.

 A day came in which his captor did not come. For an entire day, the poor man was locked in that cell with no water or anything that would indicate the presence of another human being. It felt pathetic and sick but he wanted the man to come and, at least, smack hard. At least that felt real, it felt as if it was happening. But having no one, deep in the dark, was very cruel, even more than the usual. That happened for what seemed like an eternity, but were actually five days.

 Then, someone did open the door. He would normally raise his head and wait for the captor to get close but he couldn’t do that anymore. He was too weak, feeling sick and preferring to sleep and dream about something less depressing. With his eyes tightly closed, he dreamt about an enormous bird carrying him to a magical land that was made of many colors and shapes. He hadn’t dreamt hat before and it was the happiest moment for him in a long time, as he felt loved, in way.

 He woke up several more days later. When he did, it was very dark, like in his room, but he realized he wasn’t there anymore. There was a machine besides him making a sound and he was lying on nice mattress, with clean covers and sheets. He saw the light from a corridor near him but, as his head felt too heavy to bear, he fell asleep again. The last thing he would hear were the steps of several people passing by his room. Or that was what he thought it was, he wasn’t sure.

 When he woke up again, it was day. A thick curtain diminished the light, which was a good thing because the sunlight felt like acid on his skin. He felt very tired but also dry and clumsy. A nurse came in and brought a drink in a bag with a straw. By the flavor, it was obvious it wasn’t water but it didn’t taste bad at all, so the formerly captured man drank it all. The nurse didn’t say a word the time she was there. And he wanted her to tell him something, anything at all.

 However, he would have words to share the following days as doctors and policemen visited him. The first group told him what his physical state was. To sum it up, it wasn’t good but he would be able to recuperate in the future, he just needed to be patient. Go figure.


 The second group, the enforcers of the law, explained to him his captor had been killed by one of his clients and that crime had led them to the cell. Apparently the client was mad because the captor hadn’t let him stay with the man in the cell when he wanted. He never understood that part.

sábado, 7 de enero de 2017

Accidents happen

   The pain in my legs was, for lack of a better word, horrible. Any movement caused me awful pain, so I had to learn to be still or to move only from the waist up, twirling that part of my body like a gummy candy. The bed they had assigned for me was, thankfully, larger than myself and very comfortable. It even had a sweet scent that I couldn't point to but that I found really interesting and soothing. I think it may have been vanilla or something very similar because it reminded me of my past. For some reason, that smell help me calm down whenever my legs would start to make me feel as if I was in front of the devil in the depths of hell. It was that bad and, looking back, I can easily say it was one of the worst moments in my life.

 The accident had caused me to stay in that bed for months, in that hospital located in the middle of nowhere. The number of patients changed dramatically during my time there. At one point, I could swear we were not more than twenty people. Later on, it felt like a filled up prison holding more than a thousand inmates. And I talk about prison because that's how it felt like sometimes and the building really did help to that effect. It was one of those relics from some war long ago and they had tried, without much success, to convert it completely to a hospital. Apparently it had also been a mental house, a school, an orphanage and even a place where alcohol would be hidden from the local authorities.

 The history of the place, without a doubt, was very interesting. But during my stay I could only think about when I was going to be released. The doctors told me, through a translator they had called only for my case, that my recovery was going to be so difficult that it was best if I stayed there for several months. All in all, I stayed there for around five months until I was finally released. The doctors and the nurses were not the most loving or soft people in the world but they were very good at what they did. Maybe I didn't see them smile very often but I know that they did the best they could with my case and thanks to them I was able to recover. Of course, my legs still have some moments of "weird behavior", but I have learned to live with that.

 After all, only centimeters and seconds had separated me from being dead. Everytime I think about the accident, I understand everything a little bit less, if that's even possible. Because I have no idea how I got to be fighting for my life, my legs covered in blood and my body just aching with pain. I have no idea how I endured after all of that but here I am, I guess. It happens often after I shower that I sit down on a chair in my bedroom and I look down to them and I see some of the scars, still visible below a not so thick layer of hair. I am thankful to be alive and walking around because I have no idea how the hell they did it, how they made my legs work as if nothing had ever happen to them. It's just amazing.

 I am not a religious person and doubt I will ever be but, during my stay in the hospital and even recently, I have found myself praying somewhere in my house. I had never done that before but I guess that when death has been so close, you just want to cover your bases. And besides that, I really think it was a miracle that I could walk again. I don't think it was the Lord or anything like that that helped me recover, but I cannot find a proper way to understand how it all came up to this. to me writing about this, here and now, as if had been nothing. It just amazes me every day and I think many people that know me and that know about what happened to me, are just as amazed by all of it as I am.

 Even the stay in that dreadful place is something I will keep forever in my heart. Because in that place I learned to love myself for who I am and not for anything else. I learned to settle down, to calm down even and let things fall into place before I rush into anything. I had many sleepless nights, many moments of reflection during days in which I didn't do much. I even met some great people and, towards the end, I also had a temporary lover who helped me in more ways than one to pull it off, to survive what I was going through. It wasn't easy and I won't, ever, forget that it happened because it is one of those pivotal moments in someone's life. It had to be that bad to get a slightly better with time.