Wednesday, July 30, 2014

from beyond - Doug's on going stomach problem and the VA

"From beyond"  that would be California. Here I am, stomach still a problem and  reading my visa statement, yikes, did I Really spend all that while thinking I was living low budget lifestyle on my travels.  Though, still the stomach problem and my leg and hip are still not 100% but improving.

At one point I tossed my recovery of my stomach issues into the VA's (Veterans admin.) hands and now I better understand the complaints people have lodged against them. It started off well with an appointment date within a reasonable time period. When I arrived for my appointment the nurse and then the doctor and I had a long discussion about my life in Saigon and SE Asia before we got around to stomach talk, then the  usual doctor drill.

She recommended a CAT Scan of my abdomen in the hope of identifying an underlying problem. A few days later someone from from the lab contacted me about an appointment. I found the CAT Scan was fast and easy but the ramp up to it was icky, as I was given a pitcher of what they called Kool Aid, isn't that they called the stuff that took out the folks in the Jonestown massacre, one glass every 30 minutes until the pitcher was empty, then the CAT Scan and different than Jonestown I survived.

So a few days later I called for a follow up appointment with my doctor to discuss my test results and a plan of treatment.  The telephone lady advised me that this kind of thing was handled via phone but I insisted I needed an appointment the tela appointment lady rung off promising a nurse would call within a few hours about an appointment. I knew she lied and so I set the phone down and called the imaging dept to make sure they were open and mounted up for the VA where I had the test. Weird, when I arrived the main entrance was locked so I patiently waited for someone  to come out and then slipped in before the door could close and made me way to their reception desk.  Waited for someone to show up and when someone did I told them I needed the CAT Scan results for Douglas Rice and rattled off my SS number.  Though I was pretty sure the guy I was talking to wasn't my man but I made friendly small talk about the military and life.  Soon an older lady, my age old, showed up asking what was going on,  ah ha, I could tell she was the man and she was.  Within 20 minutes I not only had a copy of the report but a disk with the scan on it.

Sent one copy to my primary care doctor and he called the next day and explained the finding of the CAT Scan to me, still no word from the VA.  Anyway Dr. Fong found nothing of any major importance in the scan but recommended an gastroenterologist.   Meanwhile, I was due for my annual cardiologist visit so l set that up along with the gastroenterologist, man a lot of doctors.

The Gastroenterologist didn't seem impressed with my problem or the results of the CAT scan.  However, he though my stomach wasn't emptying properly, wrote me a prescription to try (expensive) and sent me to another imaging place for a stomach emptying test.  This is an all day test - feed you radioactive egg beaters and every hour slide you into a tube where you hear a bunch of whirring and rumbling that they say are the pictures being taken. When I asked about when the results would be available, the techheto t replied "no news is good news".



Okay on to the cardiologist, reviews the scan and decides this problem I have is not my stomach but is heart egina so on to a heart stress test.   It's a test where they compare the movements of a resting heart to a working heart directly off of your work out on a treadmill. 7 minutes, ending in a phase 3 full uphill run and no problems detected.  With that the good news is that my stomach pain isn't my heart.


So I'm still left wondering about my spending habits feeling good about my leg and hip improving but still the stomach problem.   All this time and money on doctors and tests and the only relief I get is from peppermint oil, Gaviscon and rum and coke but not all together at the same time.    My money issues, still no resolution  but by fall I'll be back in the Thailand /Vietnam region of SE Asia one way or another.
Thanks for stopping by - Doug

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

photos - walk through dist 1, Sai Gon - police to dog meat

Sai Gon is  so interesting, so many things going on, like an onion you peel back one layer and you find another view.  It is the kind of place, let your senses guide you and you won't be disappointed.Hotwire US


ao dai (traditional Vietnamese dress) clad young women



vanishing french agriculture

Add caption

we got donuts

roundabout dist 1
push cart recycler

push cart recycler

we got wires -  Pham Nhu Loa backpackers area

hem (alley) dining and street vendors

dist 1 street side vendor serving  rush hour traffic






flower on my balcony 

chop stick dryer

Hem (alley) eatery specializing in  omlets
Team - mobile fruit vendors
omnipresent police
Ben Thanh market flower sellers 
recognise this
pagoda
another night motorbiking in Saigon
yup, got a hunger for dog - here you are
20 years - curb side fixing 
polices prisoner transport truck - ref. no ac in the back
Bin Tham Market
shoe shine boys - strategy session




















xe om driver looking for a fare
old and new dist 1


thanks for stopping by - Doug

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Sai Gon - Get your motorbike on -

Get your motorbike on



motorbike salesman
                                                 
highway patrol Vietnamese style




take a nap
Saigon is crowded, a little grimy around the edges, air is chocked full of exhaust fumes and the noise of motorbikes, truck and bus horns along with the ambient sound of 11 million or so people going about their lives.  At any one given time you'll see Rolls Royce’s, Bentley's, big, high end 
Mercedes and BMW's along with push carts, bicycles and so many motorbikes that they overflow onto the sidewalks.  Most piloted by steely eyed,expressionless drivers moving at such a sedate speed that it’s not uncommon to see motorbike drivers chatting with each other between bikes. Adding to the crazy, surreal traffic scene - pillion riders (passengers) holding large panes of glass, plumbing pipe, animals, fish tanks including water and fish, plants and trees, televisions and assorted computer components. Often you will see solo motorbike guys balances all sorts of cargo on the bike, propane gas tanks, bottled water, cases of beer, gallon containers of cooking oil, bunches of bananas, of course refrigerators, fans and air-conditioning units, mega bunches of empty plastic bottles for recycling, pigs 
get  your motor running


boutique motorbike shop
and chickens and just pretty much anything that has to be transported.

An example of this was at one of the places I stayed, they had a new refrigerator delivered and it arrived riding pillion, the driver steadying it with one hand and operating the bike with the other.  As I've mentioned this is a common way of delivery but what I hope isn't common is that when the driver got the frig inside he lost his grip, recovered but ended up setting it down on his toe and I'm sure those standard issue flip flops weren't much help against the impact. However, those Vietnamese are a tough folk, saw him wince but no sound was uttered, just lifted it off his toe, pulled out the old frig, slid the new one in, carried out the old one out and positioned it on the back of the seat on 

modern motorbike food vendor


old style food vendor
his bike, slid in front of it, all the time steadying it with one hand and his free hand to drive off.

No matter how many times I see some of these events I'm never failed to be amazed.  The number one example is the bike carrying a large sheet of glass or mirror steadied by the pillion rider and I'm talking large, like three foot wide by four foot or so high. The sheet sitting on the passenger's lap with his outstretched, bare hands holding the edges of the pane.  

Then you have the one where a pillion passenger sitting in the seat backwards holding the handle of a two wheeler, like used in warehouses to move freight, and strapped on it is tank filled with welding gas as they move through traffic. Then there is the friend helping his buddy with a non running motor bike by driving his bike and pushing the other with his outstretched, flip flop sheathed foot and keeping up with traffic.


motorbike pickup


Yes,  its mind boggling the kind of stuff motorbikes transport but even crazier is the way they have been modified to do special things, adding a trailer hitch to carry additional cargo in cargo trailer, the addition of two wheels in the back for handicapped drivers, racks built over the back part of the seat to hold bottled water or propane gas and only the imagination limits the modifications and uses of the commonly motorbike that is the USA are called scooters.    
Thanks for stopping by 
Doug
                                              

Tuesday, July 01, 2014

Sai Gon in photos part 2

nap, nap, nap - nap on
not Saigon but I like the photo

wires, we got wires

and more wires

traffic watching cops

alley shot


one of many street side fruit markets in Saigon

vegetable picking at the market
trimmed down coconuts for drinking

my friend Van at the new tunnel entrance with Saigon's new
skyline raising up in the back ground


in with the new
once again not Saigon but like the photo


23-9 park