Doctor’s Office Entertainment – How to Make Waiting Easier

Doctor’s Office

When you get to be my age you spend a lot of time visiting various physicians. I go to doctors for my eyes, my feet and every part in between. It’s not that I’m sick all the time, thankfully I’m not. It’s just the maintenance of getting older keeps me running from one appointment to the next.

Think of your aging body like a car. The minute you drive it off the lot you begin to depreciate. Over the years you get routine tune ups but as the years roll by these visits to the repair shop (doctor’s office) become more and more frequent (and more expensive).

Navigating the medical maze isn’t easy and it’s always time consuming. What it usually is NOT is entertaining. Most of us immerse ourselves in our cell phones but after so long even technology can’t keep our attention. Sometimes we just sit and endure.

When people spend hours together in a waiting room they begin to develop a sense of camaraderie. After all, we’re all suffering the endless ticking of the clock together so we start to bond, or at least two of the ladies in the waiting room with me did today. I kept my nose in my cell phone and tried to mind my own business.

At first they discussed various family members (they weren’t related and in fact had just met today) who had died from lung cancer. This was after they had both been outside for a smoke. Then they began talking about people they knew who had other medical issues.

“I had a friend who was born with two wombs,’ said one lady. “She gave birth to her first child out of one womb and then the next time she got pregnant she gave birth out of the other one. After that they took one womb out.”

I thought it best not to ask if she got pregnant again. That would have brought me into their circle of conversation and by this time I was fairly sure I wanted to remain on the sidelines.

“My great-grandma had six toes on one foot,” the other lady said.

Okay, I’m thinking, this is not anywhere nearly as strange as the two womb story.

I was wrong.

“She got the toe cut off, put it in a jar and set it on the mantle.”

I just about fell out of my chair.

She continued on, “I remember walking by it when I was a little girl and begging her to hold me up to where I could see the toe in the jar.”

At this point I had to leave the waiting room and go out in the hall.

Everyone has interesting relatives who march to the beat of a different drummer. And lest anyone think I am making fun of these two ladies, I am not. They made sitting in the waiting room a lot more interesting. I just had a really hard time trying to imagine someone’s toe in a jar on the mantle, but hey, it was her toe. If she wanted to put tiny antlers on it, have it mounted and hang it on the wall that’s her right.

This incident reminded me of something that happened years ago, another moment that left me speechless. I had gone in the sheriff’s office to pay taxes and my sister-in-law happened to be in there paying hers. There was a line and she was talking to a gentleman behind her. I don’t know why but suddenly he told her he had a glass eye. The next thing I know he had popped the eye out and held it in his hand to show it to us.

What do you say at times like that? I guess when you don’t know what to say or do you walk out in the hall until you can compose yourself.

I learned one thing from today’s experience. If I ever go in someone’s house and there is a jar on the mantle you can bet I’m not going anywhere near it.

doctors office

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10 Comments

  1. Happy New Year! Oh Yes! Eyes, Feet and dermatologist doctor visits, in addition to a primary doctor and dental visit every 6 months. I like to read, so I always bring a book or I read the magazines in the office.

    I worked as an RN in a city hospital for years and I saw it all, heard it all, and try to forget much of the crazy things…lol

  2. Great post! I remember hearing stories about people who saved body parts in jars, but I never came face to face with that story teller. And now as we age, I stay very silent about my MD appointments! I think waiting rooms should be free of TV’s, maybe just play quiet music and have lots of magazines that are UP TO DATE. I also think you should not have to WAIT more than 20 minutes. Dreaming, I know.

    PS The waiting room is a great time to prepare your list for the doctor. ALWAYS HAVE A LIST.

  3. Ha! I’m glad I’m not the only one eavesdropping in offices! Many folks are loud and have no filters…it’s awkward to ignore, uncomfortable to be engaged. Most recently an older woman kept harassing her sick husband that he should have done this or that to stay well, poor guy was miserable but just nodded. I wished for someway to draw her attention like “nice boots” or “I like your scarf” …but there wasn’t a thing I could think of. I did catch his eye and smile. The best part was when the nurse called him back and suggested his wife stay put! Made my day!LOL Fun read, Teresa …hope you’re getting good reports from doctors!

  4. Bahahaha…you must look like a great listener!!! I think the oddest thing someone told me was when I was just starting teaching beginning computer courses in the early 90’s. To introduce Word Processing I was having my class get ready to create a resume that we would create together as a class and talk about how Word Processing works. One woman in my class kept insisting that she just had nothing to put on the resume. When I pushed her a little saying that she must have something, she blurted out — “I’ve been a stripper for 10 years and I can’t put that on my resume!” The teacher in me responded without hesitation, ” Becky, I bet you have great people skills!”

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