Proprieting
“Am I dead?” he wondered.
He told the muscles of his eyelids to lift open and they did. He spent 8 minutes telling his body to sit up but it would not.
He started to wonder if he was paralyzed, “ No, I can see my fingers moving. Look at my leg, can I move it too?”
He could see his left leg, which he threw up in the air causing him to roll out of the bed onto the floor. He cried out as he knocked his head against the cherry-wood nightstand that sat next to his bed. This action knocked him unconscious for 2 hours, until the driver of his work carpool group came to see if he had slept in. He had previously worked as a systems analyst for 12 years at Microsoft, where he was confined to a cubical for 9 hours a day on weekdays and attended swanky parties on weekends. He was 3 years away from a promotion and a pay raise of $5,673 per year. None of that would matter anymore.
A strong, antiseptic smell was the first thing he sensed upon waking at 1:00 in a hospital bed in Seattle, his eyes only opening after he willed them to do so for an entire minute. He laid in bed for 3 months while doctors worked him over attempting to discover the problem.
“You have lost your sense of proprioception. This is the ability to know if your body is moving with required effort, and communicates to your brain the knowledge of where your body parts are located in relation to one another. This condition is very rare, only a handful of reported cases in the entire world are known.” Dr. Singh looked sympathetic as he explained the gravity of the situation to
“Is it reversible?”
The Dr. paused a moment before looking over the tops of his glasses at him. “I am afraid we do not know enough about it to give you a reassuring answer concerning the reacquisition of your proprioception.”
2 years and 63 days later
“Congragtulations!” He told his sister awkwardly (he felt awkward every time he spoke to anyone).
“I know you are going to object, but please hold him for me,” his sister sweetly asked.
He started to object, but she looked so tired and frail that he knew he could not refuse. It took him 12 seconds to lower into the nearest chair by glancing behind himself to see when his body and the surface of the chair would meet. The nurse seemed to recognize him (for he was famous throughout the hospital) and she gently laid the blue bundle into his arms, standing by to assist him if he should need it. He resented her closeness. He looked down as the baby hiccupped softly. Jealousy welled up inside of him. In many ways, he hated this baby for possessing something that he no longer had. That baby started to wail, and the nurse came and took it away.
As he hurried through the hallways of the hospital, he nearly bowled over a bald, sickly looking girl in a bright pink robe.
“Merry Christmas!” She smiled up at him, handing him 3 mini candy canes.
It was then that
The next morning
3 comments:
I like this version much better than the previous on you posted. The references to times reminds me of the narrator on Pushing Daisies, but also makes the disease seem worse because it quantifies the time for things that most of us don't ever even give a second thought.
Hope you got your A.
gji7
one... previous one, not on.
duh.
gji7
Thanks Anon! I hope I get an A too, I will find out in a few weeks.
I am really glad that I portrayed the "times" references how I wanted to, you got the EXACT message out of it that I was trying to convey.
Thanks for reading, and for sharing your feedback. I plan on posting more in the future.
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