One of
the other things besides music and computers that I find fascinating
is this whole “Search for Intelligent Life Elsewhere.” Of course,
we're currently running out of it here at home, especially in the US
at a rapid rate, so I think we should quadruple our efforts
immediately in our hunt for some entity that is a wee bit brighter
than a door knob. To that end, I have dedicated some of my computers'
awesome power to SETI@home.
When SETI@home is running, my visitors don't come. The last time they showed up, they pushed around a plate of symmetrically placed clementines I left out for them. I guess they liked them.
Fair
enough. I've picked up 3 rather nice projects and since I know no
borders or recognize no governments, unless they've pissed me off
personally, I have picked up a project from Cambridge in the UK and
one SAT, from Russia, along with SETI from Berkeley, California.
Great, snazzy and all that jazz. I've processed some umpteen
quadrillion petaflops worth of data just for SETI alone. We have our
little glitches now and then, but knowing computers, I can work
around the false-positives from this end.
Their Chamber of Commerce needs to get with the times. This is so 1947.
We just
received a new version of SETI@home. V
7.0 and AVG will register it as a virus. There have been notes sent
to all of us for about 2 weeks. I already knew this, when I saw the
Seti signature in the AVG warning and ignored it. But, some poor
shlubs have apparently decided their Boxes of Magic were infected and
fired off notes to the Admins on the project. Needless to say, the
support team is not supportive. It should be the “flog and
public-shaming team.” They are not all like that, but there is a
low tolerance for anything less than absolute wizardry in all of
these disciplines. Most likely, the users are people who are just excited to be included in something rather cool. I just do my thing
and hide. If something breaks, I fix it. That's why I belong to the
ex-CIA team; those retired old bats up there in central Florida.
Still,
there is a case to be made for approaching the “Box of Magic” as
just that. Personal computers have been around for awhile and part of
the domestic landscape for over a decade. Granted, tons of the
documentation is less than easy to decipher and in fact comes across
as a subset of what I call “Chinglish.”
Step 1.
Please to open box forthrightly, as shown in pictoo. (no picture shown) Step 2.
Please to remove CPU and place in upright fashion near floor, not
wall as see in pictoo too. (picture of a monitor display, with cords) Step 3. Please to
insert cable B in socket D, and cable C in socket Z as display in pictoo fore (picture of a set
of pinochle cards) and so on. Please to go and drink yourself blind as show in pictoo 79.
Yup, that I can do.
So,
maybe it isn't the consumer's fault, but once on the internet, there
is loads of good information available to the informed seeker. The
key word here being “informed.” If your Grandma goes and googles
“Delete Key, what to do with it,” the number one answer with a
bullet is this:
I just started laughing all over again; picturing an Apple keyboard, with only a GIANT DELETE key. Less efficient than what? An electric brick?
I
supported Apple products for all of 5 minutes at IBM; after I
recovered from the terribleness of that experience, I swore off any
and all Macs, and Apple-related gizmos and their stupid proprietary
software. I hate, hate, hate, hate, hate it. Just hate it so much, it
needs to all bleed to death, slowly. I tried to help some nimrod who
was using Word 6.0 for his MAC, so help me God. He had me so
flustered during the call, he asked me what a box was, and I shouted
into the phone of this 47-hour long abortion of a call, “IT'S A
THING SHAPED LIKE A SQUARE!”
There were times I wanted to answer, "ESP Help Desk." There were certainly days when pentagrams, divining rods, crystal balls, and Magic 8-Balls would have been useful. When a customer answers "It's broke," to your query of "And how may I help you today," (prior to open- and close-ended questions) you know you're in for a long, long ride.
Dead
silence; 100 engineers quietly hung up on their own phone calls and
turned their attention to me to see if I was going to catch on fire.
I was standing, and bent over and pretended to tie my high-heeled
shoe. For the ensuing 4 hours of this horrible, horrible call. As
Agent Scully would say, “Never Again.” Give me OS/2 thinkpad platform calls, network,
Windows, Lotus Suite, Lotus Notes, Mainframe calls. Fine. Come at me
with a Macintosh call, you'd better be prepared to be hung by a
headset from the highest cubicle wall (less than 5 feet, so I guess you'd better be really, really short, too.)
So, maybe I still should cut the people who post on the bulletin boards
at SETI@home for help some slack, but
they could at least read the damned notes. I've spent so much time
around computers, that I think in Boolean logic. I'm certainly more
comfortable around them, than some people. Trying to guess if people
really mean what they say is a pain in the ass. Having lived with 2
people who were masters of mind games (one of whom was my mother, the
other an ex-husband) has done nothing for my personality. Oh well. It
is what it is.
Today, I
went to the Byrd Center at USF, designated by the Parkinson's Foundation as a Center of Excellence and saw Dr. Deborah Burke, a Movement
Disorder Doctor. She spent a lot of time with me and explained to me
why she is not entirely convinced that I have Parkinson's Disease,
but she is going to send me off for a DaTScan. My tremors have always
been the least of my set of symptoms. Admittedly, I think because I
spent so many years playing the viola, I have much stronger hands and
forearms and a very strong right arm (my shoulders are broad for a
woman, too) that I am able to work around or through the tremors, although they are slowly worsening.
What
I've experienced is this; a lifetime of depression, starting at a
fairly early age (around 16.) Ulcer surgery at a young age, 29, and
bad choices. Father, an alcoholic, although not mean or abusive to my
mother. He always had a job. My mother was manipulative and abusive
towards me. I left home as soon as I reached my majority, but that is
just escaping a bad situation; I had never developed any coping
skills and continued to make bad life choices. In essence, a lot of
crap, and I'm lucky to still be alive. Fast-forward to last year,
after having been in yet, ANOTHER abusive situation, this one
physical for a change, and I fought back. When JC and I settled in,
all of a sudden I couldn't sleep. My father had died in his sleep,
and I guess I had it in my head that this was going to happen
imminently. Go figure. It didn't, but I woke up in the mental ward of
St. Joseph's Hospital, having lost a month and found out I am bipolar. Oops.
I told
Dr. Burke all of this and she nodded. We worked through the medications I'm on and nothing jumps out as a trigger, so we went back to my social history. Dr. Burke observed, “Kind of the chicken and egg
scenario. We don't know where the egg and the chicken and then the
alcohol and...” I started to laugh and she did, too. Neat lady and
a terrific doctor, too. I can tell. Having worked in a teaching hospital for 5 years was a real gift. Doctors who wanted to teach and answer questions and didn't care who asked them, med students or music majors.
So, she launches into the mechanics of
how dopamine is produced in the substantia nigra, that is located down deep in the old bean-aroo and that the main
symptoms of Parkinson's Disease are caused by dopamine's non-production. The
DaTScan will tell us this. However, if there is dopamine present,
then we have to look elsewhere, for the cause of the essential tremor. Bear in mind that fully 35% of all Parkinson's patients never have any tremors. It is a truly elusive disease. The only other way to find out is by
doing a biopsy of the brain. The good doctor said, “Unfortunately,
you wouldn't know the outcome, because you would be dead.” I
thought this was hilarious. I'm not too sure if she found my mirth
amusing or disturbing.
The lizard part of my brain kicked in ironically enough, because the substantia nigra part of the brain is located in that general vicinity, when I heard the words "brain tumor." I still pulled it together in time for my uproarious response to the idea of a brain biopsy. Neither fear of mortality nor the idea of morbidity shall deter me in my constant search of mordant humor.
The lizard part of my brain kicked in ironically enough, because the substantia nigra part of the brain is located in that general vicinity, when I heard the words "brain tumor." I still pulled it together in time for my uproarious response to the idea of a brain biopsy. Neither fear of mortality nor the idea of morbidity shall deter me in my constant search of mordant humor.
Imagine this in a 3-D form, and you can see how embedded the Substantia nigra is within the brain. That little sucker is responsible for making our dopamine, the overall "governor" of our autonomic functions.
The
thing she is puzzled by is the fact that I no longer have any sense
of smell, I drool (have been doing so, for about a year) and my voice is really
hoarse and it's like some kind of weird anti-puberty. If I had just plain, old essential tremor, I should not have these other symptoms. Again, not everyone has the same PD. "Designer Disease," I call it. I used to have
a pretty deep voice for a woman. Now, I'm not sure what it is. It gets squeaky at times, then, sometimes it's very hoarse. I will stutter when excited, and my diaphragm has become somewhat weakened, which makes it hard for people to hear me at all.
Today, I was at the Pharmacy trying to pick up some medicine. There's always got to be some idiot, who wants his shit NOW!
Today, I was at the Pharmacy trying to pick up some medicine. There's always got to be some idiot, who wants his shit NOW!
The hospital would have made a wonderful amusement park for this jerk. Wheelchair rides, physical therapy pools and the food is great! Whee! Dumbass!
There
are 80 people it seems in line and I'm trying to talk over this
asshole. He was talking to one of the other pharmacist's assistants,
who had already told him his meds would be ready in 20 minutes, but
he's still jabbering at her in Spanish, which she doesn't speak. I
had been waiting and was told my meds were ready. So, I'm trying to
make myself understood and talk over him. I finally lost my patience
and said, “Sir? I'm trying to talk here. Do you see this cane? I
may not have a strong enough diaphragm to speak over you, but I am
sure strong enough to beat the shit out of you!” Standard Viola
Fury response in public when assholes are present.
The guy
said, “Uh yeah,” and scampered off. The pharmacist's assistant
was a new girl and she giggled. I said, “you'll get used to me.
I've been coming here for over 2 years.” I winked at her. The other
pharmacy people asked me, “When is JC coming back to visit us? We
miss him?” I said, “Pretty soon now. He's getting stronger. He
misses you, too.” So, it was a pretty good day. I still don't have
a diagnosis of PD, but I have the ear of a wonderful doctor, and I
believe whatever this is, we'll figure it out, together. Last week, I
walked a mile to the grocery store. I can't be that bad off, can I?
4 comments:
Thanks for posting this, Mary. I've been thinking about you & your visit to our "Center of Excellence." I am so glad it was a positive experience overall! :)
Cyn
I'm here from ROW80 and what a ride you give your reader. Aliens. Medical stuff. Humor. Computer-geek talk (and a wild look in my eyes as I try to explain to my husband where the ANY key is). Tenacity. Hope you beat the demons.
@Cyndee,
It truly was a very positive experience, and I'm willing to commit myself to Dr. Burke for the long haul. Thinking it over, I believe that one of the reasons it may seem confusing, is that while I display more of an essential tremor type movement in some cases, I do have some typically PD-like tremor movements. It's a mixed bag and I believe it's because I've spent 35 years playing viola and am still quite strong. And as you know, lack of sense of smell, drooling and now, this lovely voice are very typical of PD. But, I also understand her wanting to be sure, thus the DaTScan.
Cyndee, Dr. Burke is one of the most insightful and compassionate people I've met in a long time and as a doctor, she asked some really probing questions. I really appreciated that and I am going to be blogging about the one that is so obvious, that stumped me speechless (like, once in a blue moon that's ever happened, lol) but in thinking it over, I can't answer it simply, so it's a good topic. Thank you so much for your support. I really appreciate it. I feel like I'm getting somewhere. I went in with no expectations, because there's always some hassle with insurance. I have to start over with a new ophthalmologist, which is going to be a major trial, as my surgeon does not take my supplemental. I'd love to keep him because it's SOOO complex, but I can't afford 125.00 every time I walk through his door. Thanks again, Cyndee. You are a bright light in this world!
@Beth,
You're a brave one, my dear! No, I just write about things I know quite a bit about, or fact check, fact check, fact check. If I write a post and I have Abe Lincoln driving a cadillac, that's some sloppy research right there. Even if I second-guess, I fact-check. Music and computers and higher math I can whip up, because I've done all of those thing and I have the memory of an elephant, when I'm not in dipshit mode. The medical stuff is serendipitous. I can't believe how much I picked up from my 5 year stint at the University of Michigan Teaching Hospital, which is a very fine school of medicine and the tons of opportunities I had to learn from the ever-willing professors there. Now, were I start writing about carrier pigeons, or Ultimate Fighting, JC needs to call 911 because I know nothing of those things and would probably hate researching those things. Or not. Anyway, I was just happy to write a post today. Thanks for reading Beth! You're a champ!
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