Jo Walton ([info]papersky) wrote,
@ 2006-02-21 16:51:00
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Another @#%$ing Research Experience
So, there I was sitting in a Chinese cafe on Ste Catherine half way through a bowl of won ton soup -- indeed, half way through a won ton -- with a pot of tea in front of me, with absolutely no idea how I got there, and totally convinced that this was in fact a dream.

When I'm dreaming and I suspect it's a dream, I try running through the events of the day so far, because if it's a dream, I'll go back to earlier events, thus proving it's a dream. This has served me very well on the couple of real occasions I've thought something might be a dream, and also in dreams. This time it didn't work. There were no events leading to me being there -- if I was there, which I wasn't at all sure about. I'd never been there before. I could tell where it was because I could see the corner out of the window, Ste Catherine and St Matthieu. Down by Guy.

It was definitely a dream, because it had a choppy staccatto dream-rhythm like T.S. Eliot.

Except that the tea was hot and the ice water was cold, and the soup tasted like soup, which seemed evidence for it being real, despite the haze. There was a plate of shrimp in lobster sauce in front of me, brown, like the one they do in Tchiang Kiang, which didn't seem like something I'd order, and a teapot exactly like my travel teapot, both of which seemed like evidence for it not being real. There were people, eating, who had faces, but realistic people's faces are really normal in my dreams.

I drank tea, and held on to the cup. I was fuzzing in and out. I kept checking my belt pouch and my purse, which kept containing the same things. This wasn't like a dream, except it was. If it was real, how the heck had I got here? There was $20 in my purse, which was both reassuring and evidence against it being an anxiety dream.

If it was a dream, I had nothing to lose by acting as if it was real. If it was real, I wasn't in a fit state to be out by myself and ought to get in touch with [info]rysmiel. My watch said it was 11.52 on Tuesday 21st February. There was a calendar (a Hello Kitty calendar) on the wall that also said February. If it was a Tuesday lunch time, [info]rysmiel could be in work. I could ring work. I found the number in my address book. This wasn't like a dream. I could read. My head hurt. I felt sick. I finished the soup and drank tea.

I got up and went to the bathroom, looking for a phone. No phone. In the bathroom, I tentatively decided it was real, and went to the loo. (I have a strict rule that I never use the toilet in dreams, ever since the time I wet the bed when I was oh, eight maybe? But the quantity of tea I was drinking, I needed it.)

I went back to the table and asked the waitress if there was a phone. The guy at the desk let me use his phone, and dialled for me. I got the voicemail, which was in French. I couldn't understand it at all, which was, I immediately realised, normal for people who had been hit on the head.

I went and sat down and drank tea and tried to work on the assumption I'd been hit on the head. (Had I gone to the bathroom? Had I tried to call [info]rysmiel? Was time going on discretely, or continuously?) Then I remembered falling on the ice, my legs going from under me, and hitting my head. My hat fell off. I hadn't hurt anything except my head. Nobody was near, but someone coming along called to me to be careful, in French, which I hadn't understood (except that I had) because people can't understand French when they've been hit on the head. (It's from the film L'Auberge Espagnol.) I stood up and put my hat on. It was covered in snow. My head hurt front and back. I thought "I should go to Ma-nna, they would look after me" but I couldn't remember where it was or what it was. I thought if I couldn't remember Ma-nna, I should check what I could remember. I tried to remember "O for a muse of fire" because I knew that was what people tried to remember, even though I don't actually know it. (Thank you for that, [info]angevin2!) I then tried to remember "On first looking into Chapman's Homer" and could remember that. Then I tried to remember my name, and remembered the version of my name I used to use when I was a kid, and then that it wasn't that, it was Walton, and then that it was Jo. I couldn't remember my telephone number. I couldn't tell where I was.

At that point, dream-brain must have taken over because I still really can't remember anything at all between that and being in the restaurant. I suspect dream-brain wanted tea, because I saw afterwards that it must have taken me across a road (wahhh!) and past two other eating places. Good old dream-brain must also have ordered (but why that?) and started to eat.

I drank tea. I started to figure out what had happened in a sensible way and to make notes in my notebook. I reproduce the notes, which are long and repetitive and talk much about how wonderful tea is (I suspect I drank about four pints of Jasmine tea) but useful research experience .

"I hit my head.

I fell on the ice.

This is real. This is the first time I've been really confused about dream and real when it has been real. I'm swimming a bit. I came out and got the 10.54 90 to Atwater. I missed a 15, I got the metro to Guy and walked down St Matthieu towards the remainder book place and then fell and banged my head hard somehow on the ice and I thought it was a dream and it is confused like a dream but it is real. I somehow somehow got myself into a Chinese restaurant on the corner of St Matthieu and Ste Catherine and ordered shrimp in lobster sauce. I have never been in here before.

There is too much detail for a dream, also there is taste. No taste in dream. Tea, life-giving tea, which is in a pot like my plastic travel pot. Too real. But I am missing a bit. How did I get here, how did I order? I tried to call [info]rysmiel but got G's voicemail and did not leave a message. Nobody can understand French when they hit their head. I need [info]rysmiel. I need somebody. It's 12.03. I can't trust myself to get home. It was snow on ice. I may be concussed? I drank the soup. I went to the loo. I tried to phone. Let's keep as much coherence as possible here. The shrimp in lobster sauce -- why the heck would I order that? -- is the same as in Tchiang Kiang. It's 12.06. If I caught a 10.54 bus there's an hour, say 20 minutes to Atwater -- at least half an hour missing. This is real. If it was a dream -- less consistent. If Heaven, why shrimp in lobster sauce, and why the tea getting too strong? No, real. I'm sure. I could believe Heaven as a Chinese restaurant, but. This is so weird. I don't think I ever lost time before. I don't remember, and I lost coherence. I'm OK now, I think.

Went to the loo again. The bathroom was the way I remembered it. Food has taste. I'm not tracking so well though. I need someone. I could be concussed. I could easily be concussed. I need to keep track. Tea, blessed tea, tea is helping. Even unconscious I get myself to tea. That's a good thing. I just saw the menu go by. I recognise them, or from dream. Wow, I ordered while unconscious. Thank Healing Apollo is/was tea here.

More and more convinced this is real the longer it goes on. Also, I don't have my pen -- this pen is always in bag, the other one, which in dream I would have, is on the desk. tea is hot, also all gone. Water is cold. This is real. How interesting. She's getting me more tea. I tried to ring [info]rysmiel but no answer. I could email from Guy. If could get to Guy could get home. But maybe concussion? Should I be checked by doctor? (A Chinese restaurant in Heaven would have chopsticks. They might be 5 feet long or something, but they wouldn't be forks. Even the Chinese people have forks here. This is real.)

More tea. No dream, going on too consistently. New tea hotter. Now 12.22. I think I remember everything pretty much.

Just confided in the waitress and explained that I hit my head on the ice. I remember picking up my hat, but like a dream. I told her the tea was helping and could I stay a minute and drink it, and she said it was fine. I wish I could call [info]rysmiel. I've asked -- well, she offered -- to have the shrimp etc to go and she's brought it in a bag. This is real, real, real, and I can't quite believe how long I was unsure.

Ah. A fortune cookie. It says "Relax and spend more time with a loved one". If it had said "Fooled you, this is a dream" that would have been weird! I think I'll be OK. Can I get home? Should I go to the doctor? That fortune cookie didn't taste of anything! But then they never do. I'm tracking. I'm fairly sure I'm tracking. I can remember my proper name and my phone number, which I couldn't before. I couldn't remember how to get to Ma-nna. I didn't know where I was. I thought if I didn't have that it was a dream, but also the thing to do was to sit down and have tea, which it was. I'm quite surprised with my spinal reflex's ability actually.

Well, this is a research experience and a half.

Oh my god, I must have crossed a road! Well, I'm OK. But luck, thank you kind Hermes, luck only.

Just now a tall Chinese guy came in, saw a table of his friends. Him: "Ca va?" Them: long and incomprehensible answer in Chinese.

If it gets really full, I'll have to go. I told the waitress, but even so, it isn't fair. There's an empty table for four still. It's 12.37. Do I dream all the time that I am ordering lunch in Chinese restaurants, such that I can do it while unconscious? I suppose I might. I was going to go to IGA. if I'm OK, I should, because food.

OK. I'm OK. So, Guy metro, then Atwater, IGA, food for dinner. I remember what I wanted. Tell you a weird thing, I remembered that I ought to check who I was before I remembered who I was. I also said "O for a muse of fire" before realising I didn't know the rest of it at all, even when coherent and failed on the telephone number but did remember "On first looking into". But I'd have to be beyond a zombie not to remember that! That before my real name. Well, that's me, hey? OK, onward!"


I'm now home, and [info]rysmiel is here and we've decided that I am in fact OK, despite still having a gap in memory, so don't anybody worry!


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I am VERY glad you got home okay.
[info]magentamn
2006-02-21 08:45 pm UTC (link)
That said, I think you definitely should rewrite this a bit, and send it to Strange Horizons. It's all the rage to confuse fact and fiction anyway, keep people guessing. And this is the most interesting thing I've read in quite some time.

(Reply to this) (Thread)(Expand)

Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay.
[info]tournevis
2006-02-21 08:49 pm UTC (link)
I agree.

(Reply to this) (Parent)

Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]papersky, 2006-02-22 01:58 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]carandol, 2006-02-22 04:09 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]papersky, 2006-02-22 05:23 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]carandol, 2006-02-22 05:28 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]intelligentrix, 2006-02-22 05:57 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]papersky, 2006-02-22 06:32 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]packbat, 2006-02-25 09:35 pm UTC (Expand)
Re: I am VERY glad you got home okay. - [info]papersky, 2006-02-22 06:21 pm UTC (Expand)

[info]hobbitblue
2006-02-21 08:49 pm UTC (link)
Despite the disclaimer I'm tempted to worry, because you write it so well I really got wrapped up in your confusion and I'm concerned at what an eery experience that was. Though I guess I'm glad one part of you can safely order food and tea when in dire circumstance... take things gently?

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[info]dd_b
2006-02-21 08:50 pm UTC (link)
That sounds like an experience with considerable unpleasant potential. Sounds like the physical aspects (like crossing the street) and the state of your head have worked out okay, though; I'm *highly* in favor of your head and the rest of you being okay. And a fascinating account of it, thanks for posting it.

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[info]arielstarshadow
2006-02-21 08:51 pm UTC (link)
I am thinking that it still might be a good idea to go and get checked out. Wowsers!

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[info]nancylebov
2006-02-21 08:55 pm UTC (link)
If there's a chance you had a concussion, you should probably get it checked.

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[info]pameladean
2006-02-21 08:56 pm UTC (link)
I always knew that poetry had basic practical uses.

I am so glad you are okay. I'd feel better if you went and got your head looked at by a doctor. And it's very chilly in this office, so why don't you put on another sweater?

*hug*

P.

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[info]papersky
2006-02-22 02:01 pm UTC (link)
If you put that -- the poetry bit -- into a novel though, people would think it was precious.

Fortunately, life does not have these high standards of plausibility.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]daegaer
2006-02-21 08:59 pm UTC (link)
Ack! I'm glad you're feeling ok, but maybe you should get checked out, just in case. Ow. Your poor head!

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[info]thomasyan
2006-02-21 09:02 pm UTC (link)
Geeze, I'm glad you seem to be okay, but like others, I recommend going to a doctor to get checked out.

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[info]akicif
2006-02-21 09:02 pm UTC (link)
Aargh. You're seeing a doctor soon, I hope?

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[info]baratron
2006-02-21 09:04 pm UTC (link)
Glad you're ok. Might be worth getting checked out? I don't know much about head injuries. I guess if you managed to type all that out you're probably okay, but it's pretty scary!

And I think regarding it as a research experience is definitely the best way forward :)

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[info]saoba
2006-02-21 09:06 pm UTC (link)
Yet another mother for global worrying, suggesting you at least ring your doctor's office and ask if you should be looked at. Because concussions can take a while to become evident (as my ex and I learned while on an SCA trip, shudder).

That said, it's reassuring to know that even when knocked for a loop you can get tea.

When I knocked my head really badly I checked my memory with Puck's speech from the end of Midsummer's Nights Dream. 'If we shadows have offended, think but this and all is mended' is oddly soothing when disoriented.

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[info]pnh
2006-02-21 09:08 pm UTC (link)
Please see a doctor. Untreated head injuries frequently lead to gotchas that nail people months or even years later, often entailing unwelcome personality changes.

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[info]pickledginger
2006-02-26 04:40 am UTC (link)
Or to serious cases of waking up dead. Not good - and Google, wonderful as it is, does not provide the tools for diagnosing possibly lethal conditions that might have resulted from a fall of sufficient severity to cause a gap in memory.

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[info]kate_schaefer
2006-02-21 09:10 pm UTC (link)
It does sound like a mild concussion, and you're probably okay, but just as if you were not accustomed for years to leading your life without benefit of advice from complete (physical) strangers on the other side of the continent and in another country, I, too, think it would be wise at least to call someone in Canada's excellent health service and have that someone say, sure, fine, don't worry about it, but watch out for X, Y, and Z, which would be reasons to worry.

(And how is it that we can become involved in caring about the lives and injuries of people we've never met, whom we know only through very public and occasional words? What a good feature of human communication this is, the extension of empathy beyond those we can see every day.)

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[info]papersky
2006-02-22 06:38 pm UTC (link)
I think of the net as meaning my selection of friends is not limited to those people in physical proximity -- and consequently gets me a much better chance of finding people I like, all over the world.

What a wonderful modern world we live in!

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[info]juliansinger
2006-02-21 09:11 pm UTC (link)
My dad had a similar experience, last year. (Only his was sort of a mini-stroke, but he had the whole "waking up in the middle of something" experience, is my point.) Very disconcerting. He didn't describe it nearly so well, but then, he's a physicist and you're not.

I won't echo everyone else on the doctor thing, because they already said it.

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[info]kinzel
2006-02-21 09:16 pm UTC (link)
Jo, Jo....Glad you feel OK.

This is a non-trivial event. Please check with someone with superior medical credentials, soon. If that's too scary, at least check in with Yog/MacDonald for his advice...

...and tea is good.

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[info]kalmn
2006-02-21 09:19 pm UTC (link)
you! to the doctor! what's the use of socialized medicine if you don't use it when you bump your head? (um. i'd say that would make more sense after the headache goes away, but no.)

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[info]redbird
2006-02-21 09:29 pm UTC (link)
Wow.

Your coping mechanisms seem fairly good--and tea and food are good basic instincts. Your unconscious may have ordered something you wouldn't have, but it's something you can eat.

One more vote for please getting checked out, from someone who waited a day to have her own concussion looked at. And mine didn't involve any unconsciousness.

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[info]carandol
2006-02-21 09:30 pm UTC (link)
Sheesh, that doesn't sound like fun. But like a lot of the bad things in life, it does make for a good LJ story. And it's definitely good research.

I know you're not overly fond of doctors, so here's the NHS Direct page on head injuries.

http://www.nhsdirect.nhs.uk/en.aspx?articleID=465

It's probably worth looking at the bit about symptoms that may crop up later, which ones aren't worth worrying about and which ones mean "hie thee to a hospital."

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[info]coffeeandink
2006-02-21 09:34 pm UTC (link)
I am still worried and nth the doctor suggestions.

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[info]arcane_k
2006-02-21 09:39 pm UTC (link)
In a slightly more humourous vein: Get your head examined!

Seriously. Please go get yourself checked out. Wouldn't want you turning into Hunter S Thompson or anything.

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[info]elisem
2006-02-21 09:42 pm UTC (link)
PLEASE go to the doctor right away. Make sure there's no swelling or bleeding in your head. These things can show up delayed, so DO NOT PUT IT OFF, EVEN IF YOU FEEL FINE. That is verbatim from Mr. Ford, and from me. (I had a head injury once that caused a lot of trouble.)

GO THOU TO THE DOCTOR NOW. DO NOT GO TO SLEEP UNTIL YOU HAVE BEEN CHECKED OUT AND PRONOUNCED OK.

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[info]elisem
2006-02-21 09:45 pm UTC (link)
Get medical help immediately if the person:

- becomes unusually drowsy
- develops a severe headache or stiff neck
- vomits more than once
- loses consciousness (even if brief)
- behaves abnormally

DO NOT TAKE ASPIRIN! (If there's a brain bleed, aspirin will make it worse.)

GO TO THE DOCTOR.

(Reply to this) (Parent)

(no subject) - [info]juliansinger, 2006-02-21 10:39 pm UTC (Expand)

[info]medievalist
2006-02-21 09:42 pm UTC (link)
Go see a doctor any way; very small falls can have major consequeces. I'm speaking from personal experience, so please, go.

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[info]nineweaving
2006-02-21 09:57 pm UTC (link)
n + 1: do please have that looked at. Soonest.

Oddly enough, there was a piece in this week's New Yorker about amnesia: an Englishman "woke up on the F train near Coney Island. He had no idea who or where he was. There was a swimsuit in his knapsack, but it was cool and rainy out...He could sign his name--a left-handed scrawl--but he was able to decipher only the 'D.'" And when asked about his old love of West Indian cricket, he asked "Is it a drink, or some kind of insect?"

Relieved as I am (we all are) that you found your way home, and wrote of your experience so well and eerily, I'd be reassured by a doctor's certificate.

Nine

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[info]dichroic
2006-02-21 10:01 pm UTC (link)
That's very scary - especially the fact that I couldn't tell if you were telling about a dream or real life until well into the notes.

Like your deduction that you had nothing to lose by acting as if it were real, I think in this case there's very little to lose by being careful and taking all the good advice here.

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[info]niall_
2006-02-21 10:02 pm UTC (link)
You're in Montreal. You may have CLSCs, but they're better than nothing. Arm yourself with patience, try to gamble on a non-busy time, and avail yourself of free check-ups.

As was said, if you had a memory loss, it's not trivial. There will probably be complications that must be checked. That's their job.

This said, fascinating insight! And tea-drinking really is at the core of your being, as are Chinese restaurants! That's when you know what's really important to you. Tea! It works for the Doctor, it works for you too!

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[info]niall_
2006-02-21 10:05 pm UTC (link)
Ack, Elisem above has the piece of advice I can't believe I forgot: don't sleep until you've been examined. This is crucial in concussions, which you have had if you had memory loss.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)(Expand)

(no subject) - [info]elisem, 2006-02-21 10:37 pm UTC (Expand)

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