Committed

Posted February 3rd, 2010 | Filed Under: Blog, Essays

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Probably the worst thing about being a hypochondriac is the incessant feeling that my penis is bleeding.

Why, I wonder, couldn’t that thing be like the rest of my organs, tucked safely away with other viscera in the hollows of my mid-section, swathed in warm blood and protective skin. It could still behave like it always has, popping out to say hello at inopportune moments. But inside, it wouldn’t be at the mercy of broken zippers or rough denim — the nemeses of the functionally insane. Instead it just dangles there, outside my body, exposed and fragile.

Dana and I were out to dinner the other night, and she noticed me lifting my hands from underneath the tablecloth and casually turning my fingers in the flickering candlelight light, as if to quietly examine them.

Here?” she whispered across the table, “Do you have to do that here?

She swiveled her head to see if anyone was watching, while I tried to explain for the 5,000th time in our relationship that I had just returned from the bathroom and could have sworn the zipper on my jeans had behaved in a really untoward way, and so I had to inspect for damage.

Dana put her fork down and leaned across the table.

“You know those people who put their fingers in their armpits and smell them?” she whispered.

“Oh yeah, those people,” I whispered back, shaking my head, “Jesus, those people are freaks. Anyway, why do you ask?”

Being a hypochondriac is difficult enough. Being an obsessive compulsive hypochondriac is downright frustrating. Because I never check on my penile condition just once or twice. If I believe some calamity has struck my under-regions, well, let’s just say paying so much attention to your pants in public can be a bit embarrassing.

The good news is I can usually make it through the first course by sheer will power, but by the time the second course arrives, I’m normally beginning to feel dizzy, sure that I’m silently bleeding out under the table. If I don’t check by the time dessert arrives, I’ve already moved on to goodbyes and the administration of wills and testaments. I start to sweat. My hands become twitchy.

“I’ve always loved you,” I’ll intone across the table, “I just want you to know that, if … you know.”

Over the years I’ve come to realize that the rest of our relationship must be something really special, because Dana has apparently decided that sacrificing things like romantic candlelit dinners and any semblance of pride is worth it.

“Oh fine,” she’ll mumble, dropping her dessert menu to the table in defeat, “Just check already.”

It pains me to imagine what other diners are thinking should they happen to glance over and see the tablecloth rhythmically dancing up and down, while my wife buries her head in shame. I always want to say something, maybe offer a clever bon mot to clear the air. But what can you say in a situation like that?

“Oh I’m not masturbating, I just think my penis is bleeding!”

“Don’t mind me! I’m almost done!”

Usually I find it’s best just to ask for the check and our coats, and then make for the car as fast as possible, being careful not to move too quickly lest my zipper becomes angry. Because then we’ll have to spend the next 10 minutes repeating the whole process on the sidewalk.

When I’m not bleeding to death through my urethra, I’m usually having a heart attack. So it’s fortunate that our house is located only two blocks away from a hospital. When we bought it two years ago, our Realtor went over things like neighborhood schools, walkability and access to public transportation but I stopped listening at “hospital,” my mind swimming with the possibility of an MRI machine mere minutes away.

“We’ll take it!”

At Thanksgiving, I ran over to the emergency room before dinner, just like someone might run to the grocery store for a forgotten pie.

“I’ll be right back,” I said, checking my pulse on the way down the stairs.

At the hospital, the doctor assured me that the nervous sweats, rapid pulse rate and unbearable chest pain were nothing more than a sprained ankle.

“Don’t you want to perform an EKG just to be sure?” I asked, while the doctor informed me that any damage located near the Achilles tendon is probably not a coronary event.

A “coronary event.” That’s what he called it, as if it was some party I had not been invited to.

Yet.

I cursed him on the way out, wondering how he’d feel if I collapsed in the emergency driveway. I imagined a coterie of nurses and emergency personnel rushing me back into surgery, my gurney passing under the doctor’s nose just as my heartbeat faded to a strained bleating on a machine.

“If only,” I’d wheeze at him, “If only you’d ….”

At this point, I usually pass out in a dramatic fashion, my eyes lolling to the side just so, and I think the doctor and I both know who’s to blame.

But this never happens, of course. I make it out of the hospital door, past the emergency driveway, down the block and back home. A rational person would probably pause for a moment and think it silly. After all, how many people suffering from an actual heart attack manage to walk themselves to the hospital? And then back home again an hour later? But by the time I get home, I’ve usually forgotten about my failing heart and am too busy stuffing my hands down my pants over and over again. Hospital gowns are so rough.

Years ago, after I dropped out of school and started work as a professional reporter, I had a series of panic attacks that sent me to the hospital. I said I couldn’t breathe and the doctor gave me an inhaler. A few hours later, I returned and said the inhaler made my heart race. So he prescribed a sedative and a few hours later I returned yet again, complaining that the sedative made it difficult to breathe. It was a cruel cycle that went on for hours, and it occurred to me that the doctor had probably just diagnosed me as a hypochondriac, prescribed placebos and sat back with his clipboard to enjoy the show. Then I wondered whether too many placebos could be fatal and went back for the fourth time that day, only to see that asshole doctor doubled over in laughter.

By the time I finally arrived home, Dana welcomed me into bed, lifting the covers back so I could slip in, and then she rubbed my forehead until my chest relaxed and I fell into a deep, peaceful sleep.

It sometimes makes me feel guilty to think of her tenderness. I get a cold and call in the World Health Organization, shouting into the phone, “I don’t care if there’s an outbreak of leprosy among orphans in the fucking ‘Pacifique Occidental’ — just send Sally Strothers now!” When I contract any sickness that’s actually serious, I park myself on the couch, coughing and wheezing demands for juice or soup or blood transfusions. Dana hardly ever complains of sickness. Sure, she’ll moan over an occasional cold or gripe that a cough just never seems to go away. But she handles these things with a measure of fortitude, as she’s never been on WebMD only to discover that yes, the common cold can be deadly. She reminds me of a prairie wife, made of stronger mettle, and I imagine her on the farmstead bravely coping with small pox because the nearest doctor is a three-day covered wagon journey away.

“Oh who has the time for that?” she’ll ask, reaching her hands under the cow again.

I get the flu and start ordering hospital beds, mentally rearranging the furniture. Dana starts to cough in the morning and by the evening I’m asking, “Jesus, still?” The limits of my patience are tested easily, while Dana’s appears boundless.

So when she does come down with something serious and suggests that maybe she should go see a doctor, a lightning bolt of panic shoots through me, and it makes me realize how fully dependent I’ve become on another person. In a few years, I’ll have known her for half my life, and sometimes my selfishness frightens me. She gets sick enough to seek help, and I wander around in a momentary daze, lost and wondering, “What would I do without her?” If a measure of true love is discovering someone’s weakness and remaining anyway, isn’t it also knowing you’ve been made a better person by the other and your world would crumble without her?

People get married and take vows about “in sickness and health” and probably have visions of occasional ailments or some distant time when one of them trips, breaks a hip and starts yammering on about how “That Matlock — he really gives it to ‘em.” Probably no one signs on for daily heart attacks, bouts of bleeding penises and a constant need for reassurance that no, hangnails cannot kill you.

Half my life. How can one person be so lucky, and another so cursed?

A few hours before a date night last week, with the sitter on the way, I could bear the pain in my chest no longer. I thought it must be a cold passed on from our daughter, but I didn’t have the same coughing and wheezing, and so naturally I checked in with Dr. Google and the prognosis was dire.

“I’ll be back in a bit,” I shouted over my shoulder, grabbing my coat, while Dana started a bath for Emmeline.

“OK,” Dana shouted back, “Hey, grab some milk home on your way back, huh?”

I ambled down the sidewalk, checking my pulse at the same time — grateful I had at least decided against jeans. On the corner, waiting for the light, I grabbed my chest and doubled over. If this actually was the Big One, you can bet passing traffic was going to hear about it.

At the hospital, I greeted the receptionists by their first names and fell into an ongoing, casual debate with the triage nurse about which Law and Order franchise was the best, while he stuck the EKG octopus tentacles to my naked body.

“Normal,” he pronounced after a few minutes, “OK, well, see you next time!”

Neither Dana nor I had called the sitter to cancel, and we ended up seeing a movie that night. I think we both assumed I’d be back in under an hour and life would resume as it had that day and the day before and the day before that. On the way home, stray beams of moonlight hit the sidewalk under my feet. The sound of slow footfalls on the concrete matched the sound of a measured, healthy pulse echoing in my ears. I couldn’t help but feel depressed.

Part of me always holds onto a glimmer of hope that maybe there’s something seriously wrong — that maybe this time it’s not a false alarm. I don’t want to suffer. God no. And as much as I’d like to point a finger and gloat — “See?” I’d be able to say, “And you said this one wasn’t serious!” — the rest of me just doesn’t want to feel so god damn crazy all the time, wracked by phantom ailments and guilt for being so weak.

I make it home and gently unlock the door. Our sitter is waiting on the couch. Dana is in the living room, gathering her purse to go out for the night.

“Well,” she says, “Are you going to make it?”

And standing there in the foyer, moonlight coursing silver and luminous through the window, I nod silently, feeling all at once exposed and fragile and grateful for more time with this woman.

Half my life, I think — it is not nearly enough.

“Come here,” she finally says, opening her arms and quietly folding them around me.

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53 Comments

Well…thank you.

This is hilarious and tender and so damn true. I’ve never met Dana, but I do know you and I think you are probably both quite lucky to have each other. I keep thinking of that line from the otherwise depressing-as-fuck James Blunt song: “There must be angel with a smile on her face / when she thought up that I should be with you.”

Seems appropriate and far less depressing in this context.

Now…I think you owe that woman something spectacular for Valentine’s Day.

Posted by: Jessica Ashley (Sassafrass) on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:00 am

Isn’t it amazing to be so lucky to have a partner who can be that patient? I thank my lucky stars every day, like you.

Have you considered button fly?

Posted by: debinsf on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:09 am

Thanks, I needed to read this today. Perhaps you won’t have to worry about your penis being the victim of a rogue zipper when you are a senior and can wear the pants with an elastic waist!

Posted by: mamabird on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:15 am

Button fly! Do you even realize the pinching power of those things?! And then there’s the snapping aspect of elastic.

(Thanks, Jess!)

Posted by: mike on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:19 am

Can’t you just be like all the other moms and wear yoga pants?

Posted by: Karen Murphy on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:20 am

Fabric burns …

Posted by: mike on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:21 am

I was in Abu Dhabi over the Holidays and spoke with a local about his dish-dash (you know that long white night shirt looking thing they wear)…anyway he said it’s great because you can “free ball” and the air circulation is fantastic! A man dress with no zippers or buttons or anything…could be nice! :-)

I agree with Jessica, Dana definitely deserves something fantastic on V-day!!! ;-)

Posted by: Kat on February 3rd, 2010 at 10:41 am

And here I thought this was going in a totally different direction. I am in love. With Dana.

Posted by: Karen on February 3rd, 2010 at 12:29 pm

I feel ya, mike. I think really smart people are victim tp stuff like this. I remember being in upward bound in high school-kind of like gifted camp-and how we would all sit around and compare our neuroses. And then I became a nurse! And you know what? It overwhelmed my ocd and being a hypochondriac to the point where it just burnt it out. now since working Peds I have survivors guilt and slight munchausens, lol, but that’s much more manageable. And I wear scrubs that are elastic in the dback but tie around the waist. If you’re interested.

Posted by: tifRN on February 3rd, 2010 at 3:12 pm

Mike, you absolutely crack me up. And you had my husband crying at work (and again tonight at the dinner table as he re-read this post) laughing so hard. Which I thank you for. All I could think was it’s a good thing you can’t get pregnant. With all the heart palpitations, blood pressure hikes, (my blood pressure today was a little high 138/90 and my pulse the other day was at 118 - normal is around 80) you would not make it I’m afraid. :) Which may be why women are the child bearers. :) Take care Mike. We love you just the way you are. Keep on laughing.

Posted by: Marcy on February 3rd, 2010 at 5:00 pm

Ummmmm … yeahhhh. There are no words really. Dana better be getting roses this year for sure.

Posted by: Ted on February 3rd, 2010 at 5:59 pm

Dana’s reaction exactly, Ted.

Tif, you had me at munchausens. Scrubs. That is a workable idea, I think.

Marcy, you really, truly do not want to know my blood pressure — probably the only thing I’m not imagining. And thanks!

Posted by: mike on February 3rd, 2010 at 8:09 pm

Holy freaking hysterical. It was with childlike excitement that I clicked on the link in my Reader that brought me to your page, and I was not disappointed. Hope you (and your penis) live long enough to blog again…and again and again and again!

Posted by: nej on February 3rd, 2010 at 8:14 pm

This is funny and sweet and way, way too much TMI. But I know what you mean. Everyone forgives another their freakishness, if they’re really lucky. And it looks like you are!

Posted by: jilly on February 4th, 2010 at 7:55 am

you remind me of my mother. she calls me at least three times a week to recite what she had to eat so i’ll know what caused her death.

Posted by: gorillabuns on February 4th, 2010 at 11:51 am

I am dying. But fortunately not in a weird way like you. You can die from laughter right? I seriously love this one.

Posted by: Lilsmom on February 4th, 2010 at 1:43 pm

You had me at penis.

Posted by: Zel on February 4th, 2010 at 2:47 pm

Best ever opening line in a post.

Especially since I was a bit sleepy when I clicked on the link to your blog and forgot I was going to your page and thought I was going to a 25-year-old girl’s page. Whaaa? bloody penis? But how???

Uh. Okay. Nevermind. It’s Mike’s page…

Posted by: gilian on February 4th, 2010 at 4:37 pm

Okay, not to further your fear, but our son had an incident with his zipper at age 6 that caused meatal stenosis (have fun looking that one up). This resulted in surgery. Oh yeah - and we were told this condition was “normal”.

Posted by: April on February 4th, 2010 at 4:43 pm

By the way, I like Dana, too. Does she have a blog? (i.e. my life with Mike) hehee

Posted by: April on February 4th, 2010 at 4:45 pm

She does not, alas, have a blog. But one day. Hopefully. Maybe.
(A long time ago she threatened to start one if only to tell all the behind the scenes crap that goes on, but once I started writing about my penis fears, she decided it wasn’t necessary anymore…)

Am googling meatal stenosis now, April. Our local ER and our insurance company thank you.

Posted by: mike on February 4th, 2010 at 6:55 pm

Over from the Haiti auction and am glad I clicked over. You remind me of my mom, too! And me. So thanks for reminding me of my mom. Honeslty, this had me in tears. Funny ones.

Posted by: Hillary on February 4th, 2010 at 9:40 pm

Best. Opening. Line. Ever! (Best blog opening line, I mean — not pick up line, because I don’t think that would work.) Hilarious.

Posted by: Cass on February 5th, 2010 at 1:51 am

I wasn’t planning to think about your junk all day, but it looks like I will now. So, um, thanks?

Posted by: Rachel on February 5th, 2010 at 6:19 am

Rachel, I think it should be on everyone’s mind all the time, don’t you?

And Cass, I would love, love, love to see someone use that as a pickup line.

Posted by: mike on February 5th, 2010 at 7:10 am

I would have probably gone for that pick up line. Young people take note!

Posted by: Lilsmom on February 5th, 2010 at 10:20 am

I’m pretty sure that you could get arrested in a couple states for that pick up line. But yes, take note.

Posted by: mike on February 5th, 2010 at 10:22 am

My husband yelling from the shower “Hey what’s so funny?” me “Mike’s penis” - him “Is there a picture?” which made me lose control - yes a picture burned in my mind, never to be erased - thanks?

Posted by: Cindy on February 5th, 2010 at 11:20 am

Between the loofah and the sponges, the shower can be a very dangerous place. I hope he is careful. And you’re welcome.

Posted by: mike on February 5th, 2010 at 3:44 pm

I shudder to think what your response will be, but um… Would not a pair of underwear solve half your problem?

Not sure that underwear will do anything for your heart, but at lest your penis would be safe-ish. :)

Posted by: Kevin on February 5th, 2010 at 4:48 pm

Huh, why DON’T penises retract all the way inside your bodies when not in use? Testicles too, for that matter. I understand there are temperature control issues, but they’d be a lot less prone to injury tucked safely inside. Serious design flaw, God. I’m glad my reproductive bits and pieces are not exposed to the elements.
At least you don’t run to the hospital every time you think you have a penis attack as well as heart attacks. Your reception might become a lot less friendly.

Posted by: EdenSky on February 5th, 2010 at 5:46 pm

That has got to be the best opening line ever and I had no idea where it was going to go at the end but was pleasantly surprised. Love it.

Posted by: Joanne on February 6th, 2010 at 7:01 pm

Just wanted to add my vote for scrubs. I’m a nurse and they would work just fine for all your many problems, :)

Posted by: Jane on February 8th, 2010 at 3:44 am

Freako.

Posted by: MOjo on February 8th, 2010 at 12:37 pm

This does make me wonder, what kind of, you know, underwear do you wear? Or not? I just don’t see why this is even a problem, although it does make for fantastic reading. The closest I ever come to problems is in the shower with those weird cable-y shower head cords. Never fun to shower with. Anyway, this made me laugh out loud. Thanks.

Posted by: Bryan on February 8th, 2010 at 1:43 pm

I hope you have a low co-pay!

Posted by: Denise on February 8th, 2010 at 2:48 pm

Pajamas. Pajams all day long. It works for me! Although I don’t have anything that dangles out there, exposed. I’ve been reading through your archives and may have to stalk you now. ;)

Posted by: Jennifer on February 8th, 2010 at 3:56 pm

I just saw a thing on yahoo about jeans that double as pajamas. I think my issues have finally been solved!

Posted by: mike on February 8th, 2010 at 8:11 pm

Classic.

Posted by: Allie on February 8th, 2010 at 9:01 pm

A friend emailed this to me and i just about died from laughter it was so shocking. I am snooping around in your archives now and loving life so thank you. I’ll be back for sure.

Posted by: Joanna on February 9th, 2010 at 5:10 am

Over from the Haiti auction (great pants!) and just had to say you owe me a computer screen. This is too funny and totally reminds me of my aunt, the “crazy” one in the family.

Posted by: Elli on February 9th, 2010 at 7:15 am

Dana deserves more than a medal. I hope you remember that Valentine’s Day is right around the corner. I almost said VD but that would be sooo inappropriate. LMAO!

Posted by: Catherine on February 9th, 2010 at 10:42 am

This well-written post brings to mind the funniest thing I’ve ever known to have been written on a tombstone:

“See? I told you I was sick!”

Posted by: D52R on February 9th, 2010 at 3:04 pm

I am forever having coronary events and now I can point this out and say see! I’m not the crazy one! Seriously, this is fucking hilarious. Can’t wait for more.

Posted by: Ryans on February 10th, 2010 at 12:21 pm

Oh, I see the tombstone comment above now. It still works. Nice one d52r.

Posted by: Ryans on February 10th, 2010 at 12:24 pm

[...] this is both embarrassing and vindicating all at the same time. Just a day after I hit publish on this post, I had to go to the doctor because something actually was wrong with my penis. On the one hand, it [...]

Posted by: dailyphoto.mikeadamick.com » Blog Archive » The penis lottery on February 10th, 2010 at 2:17 pm

I’ve been thinking about that tombstone for a few days now, chuckling every time. I love it — thanks D52R. It made me rethink donating my body to the FBI crime scene people.

Posted by: mike on February 10th, 2010 at 3:24 pm

Couldn’t you just buy an athletic cup? It would serve as protection (less worry about your penis) and would sort of work like those Victorian collars for dogs who keep scratching themselves…keeping your hands away and your wife happy.

Posted by: Cindy on February 10th, 2010 at 7:19 pm

Or maybe just a giant waist collar? Hmmmm. I think that might work.

Posted by: mike on February 10th, 2010 at 7:54 pm

Oh geez. How can you weave bleeding penises and a love song together so damn effortlessly? What an ending..made me teary. Such amazing imagery of you standing in that doorway seeing her. Awww….you guys are awesome.

:)

Posted by: Lee of MWOB on February 11th, 2010 at 12:02 am

This reminds me of a relative too! Unfortunately I’m married to him. I feel Dana’s pain and wish her the best of luck!

Posted by: Joy on February 11th, 2010 at 10:46 pm

I too am amazed at how you managed to pull off a bleeding penis into something so sweet. Happy valentine’s day! Now stop checking web md!

Posted by: roozoo on February 12th, 2010 at 1:08 am

I am DYING here from lauging so hard! Sorry about your penis, but this is absolutely making my day — thank you!!!

Posted by: Katie on February 28th, 2010 at 10:27 am

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