Laughter’s the best medicine, but a cocktail is up there
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ROBERT GARDNER
The Corona del Mar Centennial Committee interviewed a bunch of us
old-timers a few days ago.
After I left, I was trying to remember some of the early
businesses in Corona del Mar and came up with the two markets -- the
All American, now an Albertsons, and Coast Super, where the Health
Emporium stands.
We always shopped at the All American and continued when it became
Albertsons. One day, however, I went into the Health Emporium,
thinking to save myself several blocks of walking. There in front of
me was a long aisle of intriguing products.
“What’s all this?” I asked the clerk.
“Vitamins.”
Vitamins? I ran for my life. A vitamin almost killed me once.
It began when I commented to my daughter that I got cramps in my
legs at night.
“You need potassium,” she said. While her degree was in English,
she fancies herself quite the medical expert. “Bananas, or even
better, a vitamin-mineral supplement.”
The next day, there was a bottle of vitamins on the breakfast bar.
I opened it and took out a very large pill, which I swallowed with
water, or tried to swallow because it stuck in my throat. I swallowed
more water, but it didn’t move. I tried coughing to bring it up. No
luck. It was stuck. Not only that, it was like a sponge enlarging. It
felt like I had a golf ball in my throat. Soon, my throat would close
completely, and I wouldn’t be able to breathe.
I called my daughter, but she wasn’t home, so I called a cab and
was whisked to the emergency room at Hoag Hospital, where I rushed to
the admission station. The woman there was amazingly calm considering
the circumstances. She took my information and directed me to a seat,
where I waited.
And waited. Until my daughter trotted in.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
“What’s wrong?” I said. “I have one of your damn vitamin pills
stuck in my throat.”
“What are you doing here?” she asked. “This place is for
emergencies. Everyone who comes in here with a bigger problem, which
means everyone who comes in here, will get in ahead of you.”
This showed that neither she nor the emergency room personnel
recognized an emergency when presented with one; however, tired of
waiting, I went along with her plan to take me to the walk-in, where,
unlike the so-called emergency room, they recognized an emergency
when they saw one and ushered me right in. Or maybe it was because no
one was waiting, but anyway, a solicitous doctor poked and prodded
and pried and then pronounced, “The pill has dissolved. It’s gone.”
“Oh, no,” I told him. “I can still feel it.”
“That’s because your throat is probably a little bruised. It
should go away in a day or two.”
What an absurd diagnosis. A little bruised. There were undoubtedly
major lacerations, which is what I announced as I got back in the
car. It was amazing I could even totter into the house with such an
injury, but I made it, and after such a traumatic day, I decided to
take my medical treatment into my own hands.
I poured myself a rum and Coke. I took a sip, and wonder of
wonders, the pain in my throat disappeared. Why hadn’t the doctor
thought about this?
So here’s my suggestion for the medical profession: prescribe more
cocktails and fewer vitamin pills, and the world will be a healthier
place. Or at least a more cheerful one.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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