I had heard from others who had been to visit that dad was improving now. The doctor had confirmed last week that the new stent had been fitted successfully, so he could eat soft food. He was now off the oxygen and was a feeling better.
According to the nurse, he was sitting up chatting in bed the morning after the stent and much improved.
I'd booked a weekend away with my 5 fabulous cousins in a cabin in the Forest of Dean. We booked it in October last year. The same 6 of us have been away twice before for one or other of our big birthday celebrations and always have a lovely time. I walked 20,572 steps through the forest on my first full day there, 11,489 on the 2nd day and 8087 on the last day. We walked for miles and when we got back to the cabin we all had a vino or two in the hot tub and a chat and a laugh under the stars. Perfect. I'd intended to take my mind off the situation at home, and to be fair, by request, we spoke very little about it, which suited me fine.
However, the day I came home, I had to go visit himself in hospital. I went to town first to get a pack of 2 men's pyjama bottoms in Primark, having ignored dad's advice to 'Just take a quick trip to M&S to get me some pyjamas.' I suspect he had not bought pjs in M&S since they were £5 a pair.
I collected Ant and we got to the hospital at 7.30pm. We found dad on ward C7, having been moved that day from B6. On seeing us he said 'Ah. Right. Have you spoken to the doctor?' I said I'd spoken to her on the phone. He continued, 'You know I've just had to wait 37 minutes for someone to bring me one of these.' He held up a hospital disposable male urinal bottle thing (the cardboard ones). It was one of 4 on his bedside table. He went into minute detail on the time he'd asked and how many nurses he'd asked and he carried on moaning about how he shouldn't be expected to wait that long. It was ridiculous, he said. Next he went on about his washing and how the nurses wanted to change him every day and that too was ridiculous. Next he started on about when he was going to have his 'street' fitted. That, he said, was also ridiculous; that they'd sent him to the other hospital to have it fitted but they could only put a camera down and because the doctors were all training from home, there weren't enough people to fit the street, he said, as they needed seven people, and one of the doctors, working from home, had children who of course were running around and creating dust, which, of course, he said was bad for street fitting...
Eh?
I reminded him it was a STENT, and it had already been fitted. 'Yes,' he said. 'But they can't fit a street if they're not in the hospital.'
What?
I repeated they'd told me it was already fitted. He looked at me, highly irritated by my apparent stupidity and lack of understanding and creased his face into an exaggerated eye-roll. Then, while playing the air piano, and with his eyes closed so he didn't have to keep looking at the irritation in front of him who clearly didn't understand, despite him talking to her in an agitated tone with loud simple one-syllable words, each delivered in a verbal bullet point and with a crash of the air piano keys, 'Yes, but they need more people to fit the street you see. I keep telling you that.'
When he'd said his piece, he opened his eyes and clocked me daring to look out of the window with the MOST bored expression I could muster. He'd already explained the minutai of his 'street requirements' many times since I'd arrived. Each word I dared to utter was met with an irritated scowl.
'Your STENT was fitted last Thursday.' I told him.
'My... something went where?' he said, looking at me as if I was simple.
'Dad. Your STENT is already fitted. The doctor told me and as you so clearly don't believe me or don't understand me, I'll go ask the nurse to explain.' I managed to find a lovely nurse, a petite lady with a no-nonsense yet gentle attitude and a strong African accent, who agreed to explain. She went in and told him straight. He argued with her and she gave up and left. I apologised - he didn't appear to listen to women, but thanked her for her time.
The conversation followed its usual form, him sitting in bed acting like everybody was there to serve him and him telling us YET AGAIN, everything that was wrong with him in the tiniest detail and what needed to be done to put it right. He didn't ask how we were, how was the family, how was my weekend, or anything else about anything outside. He never does.
He truly is the very epicentre of his very own little universe. His mansplaining is off the scale. He now mansplains everything he's already told me twice, everything I have already confirmed to him and then he mansplains a summary. Now he is mansplaining a fantasy imagined world, albeit one where he is still the epicentre. He then mansplains why I should listen to him and mansplains why he is mansplaining - because he doesn't know what I have listened to.
As end of visiting approached, he said. 'Look we all agree that it's of the utmost importance for them to get my street done, so I can eat, then I can get stronger, then they can do my cataract and I can see again and then I can come home. At least we're all on the same page as far as that's concerned!'
Are we though?






