First a trip through
the garden…
And the sunflower that came up, planted by some unknown critter.
Green tomatoes among the marigolds, planted by a known critter. Weeding, well, that's another story.
Zucchini flowers on the left, cucumber flowers on the right.
The egg-a-day ladies of the farm.
And the temptation of the meal worm bag.
Ah ha! I did it. El Yumo--and now I figure all red bags ought to contain meal worms.
Then a hop into a #hyperbaric chamber to get
pumped up with Oxygen.
Thus beginneth
the day.
I was a tad bit apprehensive about being enclosed in a cylinder for an hour,
but decided to do it anyway.
Long ago I participated in a consciousness
raising process where I crawled through tubes large enough for two people to
squeeze through with each going opposite
directions.
That wouldn’t have been so bad except that there were a few hundred people participating in that process, and more
than there ought to be in the tubes.
If someone in front of you didn’t
move you could either wait or crawl past them, that is if one or two of you
didn’t have too much body fat. (There was a goal, of course, but first you had
to get through the tubes.)
I learned a lot about crowds in that experience
though, that people are mushable. You can slip past them in tight spaces.
However, in the tubes if there was someone in front of you, someone behind, and if there was someone trying squeeze past
you from the other direction, well, let’s
say the trapped panic I felt I never want to experience again.
So you can see that I might be somewhat apprehensive
about entering another tube.
Except, this tube was a cylinder. It was roomy. I was alone,
and it was like being in a quiet comfortable pup tent.
I laid on a memory foam mattress, had a pillow beneath my
head, wedges under my knees and a blanket over my body.
I breathed pure oxygen through a nasal cannula, had a window beside my head, a call
button, and someone outside looking out for me.
The cylinder was
a hyperbaric chamber in which you crawl into,
they zip you up, and pressurize the cylinder. At first you feel as though you have gone to the deep end of a swimming pool.
You clear your ears, then it is smooth
sailing into bliss for a comfortable hour.
Later when the pressure returns to normal, your
ears crackle like popcorn on a hot stove, you return to normal, and it’s over.
Easy.
Drink 64 Ounces of water said the attendant for
you would be detoxing.
I
scheduled another appointment, it’s good
to do a follow-up, they said, and I was
on my way to the rest of the day.
This treatment came to my attention when my
husband researched it for a friend with a traumatic head injury. Hyperbaric treatment is purported to be beneficial in
head injuries as well as many other life challenges. Burns, soft tissue infections, radiation tissue damage, skin grafts-- are often covered with insurance, under a
doctors prescription.
Autism, cerebral palsy, Lyme disease multiple sclerosis, near drowning, sports injuries, and stroke, are not covered under insurance, but believed to be helped by the treatment.
You may know of a hyperbaric chamber from the
use for SCUBA divers. If they ascend from the deep too fast they can get bubbles in their blood. The chamber allows
them to pressurize again, and with a slow
return to sea level, their blood normalizes.
I found there are three places that house hyperbaric chambers in Eugene, two in hospitals, and one—where I went, that anyone can simply make an appointment.
Under normal circumstances, oxygen is transported throughout the body only by red blood cells. With Hyperbaric treatment, oxygen is dissolved into all the body’s fluids, the plasma, the
central nervous system fluids, the lymph, and
the bone. It can thus reach all of the damaged tissues and the body can then
support its own healing process.
Why did I go into a hyperbaric chamber?
Well, first you don’t have to have a reason, for
it is claimed to help a number of body situations, inflammation, wounds, infection, and promote general well-being.
I did have a focus,
though, I was hoping it would help the circulation in my legs. I had sat too long at the computer and
thus had restricted the circulation in my legs.
I was hoping it would assist my recovery, as
well as well as a thumb injury.
It had become infected—I had taken an antibiotic, something I hadn’t done for
more than 30 years, the infection cleared up, but I will still probably lose my
nail.
I wanted to accelerate the
healing process.
I drank my water, and that night I went to bed
at 9:30 (that’s early) and slept like the cat that decided to crawl in beside my husband and me.
Morning found me zipping around
ready to begin another day.
P.S. www.livewild747.blogspot.com is getting more hits than wish on white horses, and I haven't advertised it. Who doesn't want to life wild? Remember the 747, though, livewild is someone else's blog.
Ta Da!