A couple of weeks ago, I boarded the plane to New York. It hadn’t even taken off yet when I realized I was doomed. The captain was saying something, but I couldn’t hear over the sounds of other passengers hacking and wheezing like they were all trying out for the death scene of La Bohème.
By day three after we landed, I was coughing. By day five, I was frightening small dogs and children on the street. At the Broadway show Waitress* on day six, it was clear the woman in front of me regretted the mandatory purse screening that meant she was unarmed and could only snarl threats at me as I unwrapped cough drops which some sadist sold in individual little crinkly wrappers. We will not discuss the flight home, except to say hooray for my two new BFFs, Mr. Drugs and Miss Booze. While we party, here’s a repeat of how to be properly sick—at home, in bed, with advice from Mom.
*[Don’t judge me. We had tickets. To a Broadway show. I wasn’t going to let imminent death stop me from seeing a terrific musical.]
The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while Nature affects the cure.–Voltaire
I have nothing to write about because this is day nine in which I have done ab.so.lute.ly nothing. Unless you count the moaning, of course. When sick, I am a world-class moaner. Back when my children were little, it was understood: mothers don’t get sick. They may have triple-digit temperatures, cough like the death scene in La Bohème, and pop ibuprofen like M&Ms, but as our neighbors in Virginia said, mamas don’t take to the bed. They make chicken soup and do laundry. (Note: see column from 1990 to see how I did it back then.)
But now the kids are grown, I’m working at home, and here’s the thing: I don’t know how to be sick. I tried googling “How to be sick in bed”. Turns out I was supposed to be doing a lot of things the past nine days. Wiki-How’s list includes art projects, crafts, sewing, playing computer games, pedicures, catching up on my texting, watching all the TV programs I don’t usually bother with, making to-do lists, yada yada. I didn’t tick off a single box on that list. My toenails look terrible. As a fairly competitive person, it’s painful to admit that I’m an abject failure when it comes to being sick in bed.
So instead, I checked in with the one expert who outranks Google. I called my mother. Both she and my sister listened unsympathetically as I poured out my despair over being unable to get Nyquil or any simulacrum thereof here in England. I could almost feel them reaching through the Skype window to slap me upside the head. “Have you had a hot toddy?” (Warning: here comes fever-induced digression. I guess I’m lucky there are 5500 miles between us, or I would have been dodging spoons. During dinners as we were growing up, my mother enforced discipline among her ten offspring through judicious spoon flinging. As my sister pointed out, Mother must have loved us, because she never threw a knife. And we knew she could throw one, because it was a skill she’d picked up as a girl on the south side of Chicago. Occasionally she used to show off her technique out in our backyard. These demos left us impressed, jealous, and a bit worried.)
As soon as we hung up, I grabbed the whiskey, lemon, and honey. The smell alone brought back so many memories. Yes! That’s how to be sick in bed. I slept like a log that night. Despite the other occupant of the marital bed’s complaints about snoring that frightened the dog and set off seismographs in neighboring counties, by the next morning, I could tell I was finally getting better. Thanks, Mother!
MOTHER’S HOT TODDY RECIPE
- 2 Tablespoons whiskey. (You should probably put some into the cup too…)
- Juice of one lemon**
- Honey (generous dollop)
- Boiling water to fill cup
**There are people who put in orange slices studded with whole cloves and stir with a cinnamon stick. There are also people who order mixed drinks with little umbrellas. You know who you are.
Hope you are back on your feet soon.
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If I keep up with those hot toddy’s, I’ll be flat on my back sooner.
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Absolutely brilliant post. Hope you’re better x
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Thanks so much! I’m getting there.
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Crafts and pedicures? Hah! If I’m sick enough to be in bed, I’m probably mostly passed out. There might be a tv in the background somewhere set to the weather channel.
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I’m ashamed to admit that for me it’s the music channel tuned to absolutely bland oldies…
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Sounds like your coming out of the woods! Humour really is the best medicine…
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Well… personally, I think the best medicine is a nice z-pack followed by guaifenesin and sudafed chasers, with hot toddy for dessert. But after that a little humor can’t hurt!
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Never does!
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Reblogged this on anita dawes and jaye marie.
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Thank you, thank you!
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I love your bed pastimes
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Better not let the Hub hear you say that!
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Ha!
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I had that cough without even getiing on a plane! Someone told me it’s the ‘three week cough’. Having gone all winter without catching anything I was rather irked. Hot toddies and ‘Nightnurse’ from the chemist, plus sitting up in bed all night!
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Nightnurse???
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You have to ask the pharmacist who gets it off the shelf behind the counter and gives you a few instructions, don’t take it with anything else. It’s blue/green, thick and tastes strong so you know it’s good.
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Ah. Just looked it up, and you’ve actually done me a huge favor. I haven’t been able to find a UK equivalent for Nyquil and Dayquil, but apparently Night Nurse and Day Nurse are basically similar. Thanks!
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That’s good – I would have had no idea what Nyquil was – sounds more sinister than nightnurse!
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I have to agree with you. Night Nurse sounds like someone’s old nanny, who calls you “Ducks” and provides an endless supply of hot water bottles.
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Hope you are feeling a bit better now, Barb!
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Thanks Sue. The tissue (and okay—drugs and booze) consumption is still scary to behold, but I think things are improving.
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I’d stick with the remedies for a while 😉
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The hazards of flying. At least the cold/flu/whatever didn’t kill your sense of humour. Do you have to be sick to drink the hot toddy? (asking for a friend)
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Well… you have to be pretty sick to drink it with the crap wiskey that’s all you have left after your last party (several years ago). When you feel better, you’ll want to use the good stuff!
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I hope you’ll be into the good stuff soon. xo
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I hope the hot toddies do their sguff and you feel better soon, Barb.
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stuff. But maybe it becomes sguff if you have enough of them 🙂
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I thought you’d done it on purpose. Stuff with a stopped up nose after three hot toddies becomes “sguff.”. LOL
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I’m definitely aiming for sguff!
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Barb, only you could make being sick sound funny. Hope you continue to feel better!
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As Mary says, after judicious hot toddy application, getting better doesn’t seem so urgent.
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Night Nurse does a bangup job of knocking a person out (available in the UK.) And I got in the habit of taking surgeon masks with me on long-haul atlantic flights – I looked like a weirdo, but a weirdo who didn’t catch it! Glad you’re finally feeling better and sorry it hampered your NY trip. x
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I’ve noticed that a lot of the (obviously smarter than me) Asian ladies go for the surgical mask travel approach. Clearly you all have the right idea. And I’m definitely hitting up the chemist for some Night Nurse! Who knew?
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I guess Asian ladies have it figured out! (I’m American too, but after getting sick on about 50% of those flights I got fed up!) Good luck with the Night Nurse 🙂
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The things we suffer for art… You are braver than I am my friend. 😉
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Did I mention Ample HIlls Creamery in Brooklyn? (Arguably the second best ice cream on the planet.) One is willing to suffer much to achieve Salted Crack’d Caramel.
https://www.amplehills.com/flavors/salted-crackd-caramel
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Alas, that is no temptation to a vegan. 😉 I used to live in Brooklyn however, that was in another life…
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I heard recently that Glasgow was voted (by PETA) the most vegan-friendly UK city. You should come visit!
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That would be lovely. Is that deep-fried vegan? 😉 Scotland has long been on my list and another blogging friend said to let her know when… A good friend, now living in London, is from Glasgow. Perhaps it will happen. My maternal grandfather was in the 72 Seaforth Highlanders so there are some roots there. 🙂
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PS My son has just come back from a flight to London to see Waitress and now has tonsillitis. Flying definitely seems dangerous to health.
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Apparently, so is seeing Waitress. PLUS you’re left with craving for pie. Very dangerous.
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Hahaha. Thanks for the recipe… I mean Rx… and the laugh. Feel better soon.
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Ooo, the hot toddy looks inviting. Nine days is monstrously long. You are the poster child for “laughter is the best medicine.”
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