Shot Therapy
I have always been a magnet for stepping on sharp objects. At five, I had a nail go through my foot. I’ve impaled my toosties on more pins than I care to remember, and once skewered a toe (accidentally) with a sewing needle. The family joke when something sharp is lost on the floor is, “Where’s Lou? She’ll find it!” And I will, painfully.
One Halloween my little brother, Bernie, was playing with toothpicks on a woven rug. As luck would have it, I stepped on one. It hurt quite a bit. I turned my foot over to yank it out, because it felt like something was there, but to my surprise, saw nothing. I gingerly poked around, but really couldn’t tell if anything was in my foot or not. The only evidence was a painful dimple on the ball of my foot and, after a few days, a little pus and swelling. Being a die hard Trick or Treater, I made the usual candy rounds anyway, limping from house to house laden with candy. By the end of the night, my foot really hurt.
Six days later, on my eleventh birthday, convinced that something was not right, my mother took me to the Dr. for an x-ray, which proved nothing. The Dr. agreed that something was probably in my foot, and so we set up an appointment with a surgeon. Three days later I was laying on my stomach in a surgery clinic reading a Soup book, trying to distract myself from the fact that they were about to slice open my foot and go digging around. The nurse prepared the anaesthetic, putting it in a needle that I am certain was as thick as my finger, and then jabbed it into the ball of my foot with sadistic glee.
At this point in the story, my mother’s version and mine vary dramatically. At the time, I was certain I merely squealed into the pillow as tears ran down my face. Soon after the procedure, my mother informed me that I probably scared away patients in the waiting room because I screamed so insanely loud people in Nebraska could hear me. At any rate, it hurt like you wouldn’t believe. There are billions of nerve endings in the bottom of your foot, and everyone of mine were on fire and ready to jump ship. The nurse kept wiggling the needle around saying that when I couldn’t feel it any more she would take it out. After a minute or two, either the numbness set in or I had gone to a happy place where I no longer felt pain, and they sliced open my foot. After several minutes of not finding anything and threatening that they might just have to close it up and try again next week, (as if I would have showed up for that!) they extracted an inch long piece of toothpick.
This event marked a major turn of events in my life. Up until this day, I had always been a trooper when it came to shots. I didn’t like them, but I was a tough kid and handled them pretty well. Here, at the wellsprings of my adolescence, that ability to cope with shots was completely destroyed. It took five nurses the next year when it came time to receive my MMR booster at school. Two to hold me, one to get me orange juice and a donut because I was lightheaded, one to stare directly into my traumatized face and talk me to distraction, and one to poke me. Every shot became an anxiety attack waiting to happen. I thought I would never recover. They don’t make a twelve step program for shot phobias.
Or so I thought. Nine years later I was married and expecting my first child. I went into pre term labor and landed in the hospital for seven unending weeks, during which time, my daily medications included three to six shots to keep the contractions at bay. I admit, the first few days were pretty rough. I was worried about my baby, worried about being in a hospital all alone, an hour and a half away from home, and the constant stream of shots didn’t help my stress level any. But, humans are adaptable creatures, and within three weeks I had gone from biting my cheeks and trying not to cry to laughing my head off at the entire situation.
Whenever a new nurse would have the job of administering my shots, she would inevitably ask which arm I wanted it in. I usually rotated arms, so I’d pick which ever one wasn’t used last. The nurse would roll up the sleeve to my hospital gown, and it never failed that I there would be an audible gasp, and the occasional profanity, at the sight of my completely black and blue upper arm. The nurse would always ask, “Are you sure you want it in this arm?” To which I would always suggest that she use the other one if she preferred, since it really made no never mind to me. So she would go for the other arm, which was just as abused as the first.
This kept me entertained for weeks, and often got me extra desserts when the nurses really felt badly for me. They also turned a blind eye when the pizza delivery guy showed up. After seven weeks of shots, I had a healthy baby boy and was completely cured of my shot hang up.




you are a trooper and deserve a ‘most shots received’ award.
Here it is.
. . . . . . .
Get it? shots? ha ha aaa
Comment by Liz — February 13, 2006 @ 6:05 pm
My sister the same thing. When she was young she had double pneumonia and chicken pox. Well, the nurse was new and apparently my sister has slippery veins. 4 times that nurse tried. Two on each arm. The nurse litterally tried to follow the vein while the needle was in my sister’s arm. *shudders*
Comment by Chandra — February 13, 2006 @ 7:04 pm
and I think my yearly flu shot is bad.
Comment by Shelah — February 13, 2006 @ 7:19 pm
I had a toothpick stuck in my foot, too, when I was about 10 years old. It sort of broke, and was sticking out of my foot. Even though it wasn’t super-urgent, we didn’t have to stay in the waiting room for long when my mom carried me into ER looking like that. They don’t like to make the folks in the waiting room look at someone with something sticking out of her, I guess.
Comment by Elizabeth — February 13, 2006 @ 8:24 pm
My brother stepped on a dirty gross fork outside once. My other brother pulled it out and they vowed to not tell because they were playing in a field that they weren’t supposed to play in (because of the dirty gross forks, lol) he got really sick because of some mold on the fork. My mom asked why he didn’t tell and he said he didn’t want a spank and a shot.
Comment by Linsey — February 13, 2006 @ 8:45 pm
UGH! I feel for you! I have such tiny veins that they can never get an IV in good when I need one.
One time this lady was just digging and digging, and I’m very squeamish. So she tells me, “It’s just like trying to thread a piece of spaghetti.”
I almost fainted and puked at the same time!
And when I was a kid, I grew up on the Chesapeake Bay. We were always walking around in there barefoot, and one day I stepped right on top of a rusty nail. Didn’t go all the way through my foot, and no one took me to the doctors but somehow I survived, lol.
Comment by Dawn — February 13, 2006 @ 10:45 pm
Ouch. My sister had a needle go up her foot one time and they had to go in and take it out. I have a big fear of needles, but you girl, you are amazing with those needles.
Comment by Rachelle — February 14, 2006 @ 2:37 am
As a nurse, I totally appreciate your humor!!! I would have been the one laughing with you behind all the others’ backs’!!!
Here from Misty’s, love your blog!
Comment by Alisha — February 14, 2006 @ 3:28 am
My thoughts upon reading this post?
First: WOW
Second: OUCHY!!!!
Third: Man, my thoughts are SO interesting I must post them!
Comment by Lawanda — February 14, 2006 @ 5:59 am
OUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Comment by Adrienne — February 14, 2006 @ 2:23 pm
Happy Valentine’s Day, Lou!
Comment by Dawn — February 14, 2006 @ 6:00 pm
We always tease my husband because like you, his feet are magnets for anything sharp. His big story is that once he jumped off a stool after brushing his teeth and came down on a darning needle, which went all the way through his foot. He’ll even show anyone who asks the scar…
Comment by Sheri — February 15, 2006 @ 4:04 pm