Under Pressure!

In case you need some tunes while you’re reading this rant, here ya go:

Lately, I’ve been feeling that anxious heart racing in my chest kind of thing, and I didn’t know why. Kids have been good, healthy. Work is under control. I managed to wash my hair twice last week. So, what then?!

‘Tis this blogging business.

pressure

I love writing, don’t get me wrong, but good lawdy it can be demanding! There is so much pressure to

  • think up witty, relevant content
  • post every day
  • include/create relevant images so you can
  • pin to Pinterest
  • share on Google+ (what the eff Google reader?! Really screwin’ us…)
  • post on Facebook
  • tweet on Twitter
  • do whatever people do on Instagram

And if you’re a glutton for punishment, there is a whole different level of pressure to

  • stalk  contact companies and websites about getting some of your witty content published
  • write more, original witty content because the companies and websites don’t want the stuff you’ve previously published
  • throw something. You feel better now.
  • take it to the next level and move to a self-hosted blog
  • get out of the house and experience a bit more of life so you have fodder that doesn’t include changing diapers or stray chin hairs (I’m still working on this one…)

Don’t forget about your love of reading and the people whose writing you can’t live without; you want to be sure and

  • maintain the community of writers you’ve come to know and respect
  • read your favorites’ stuff
  • leave a heartfelt comment because you want to
  • not forget you have to work/feed the kids/empty the dishwasher before your husband comes home

So, yeah, blogging is BUSY.

Does anyone else have a dozen different blog-related accounts? Does anyone actually remember the passwords to said accounts? I had to make a spreadsheet, people–a SPREADSHEET–to keep all this stuff organized. Between working online and blogging online, my computer is dying a slow death. But once the PC kicks the bucket, I shall buy the beautiful Macbook my husband says is unnecessary.

What does he know? He wears socks with sandals.

And these, friends, are my random thoughts for the day.

Have I mentioned that this is the last NaBloPoMo I will be participating in?

Did you hear that?

Just my brain exploding. Carry on.

 




Hello, My Name is Angela and I am a Hypochondriac. A Bad One.

Today is the first Wednesday of the month. No, that doesn’t mean it’s the beginning of my cycle, nor is it a Bone Thugs and Harmony parody. It’s when many lovely ladies, including one of my very favorites, Meredith at The Mom of the Year, host Finding the Funny. And I’ve taken the “finding” element quite literally this month. I sought out a gal who has me in stitches with her self-deprecating humor and biting sarcasm on Facebook, and asked if she would write something for me. She’s not a blogger, but she’s wicked smart because she’s a lawyer and she has a great sense of humor because she’s a lesbian and she makes good choices because she has agreed to write for all of my readers. 

Without further adieu, I present Angela, self-loathing hypochondriac…

angela

You would think with all that I have going on (mom, attorney, gay- divorced and gay-remarried, chronic dieter, Facebook addict), that I would have better, more pressing things to do than bounce from one panicked neurotic self-diagnosis to another…. but you’d be wrong.

My hypochondria – which I affectionately refer to as Free Floating Medical Anxiety (FFMA) – can be a real problem once it gets going.  I have not always admitted this, however.  I considered my FFMA as a natural symptom of my blistering intelligence *cough.*  My ex-wife was not convinced.  I remember the phone conversation vividly.

“You’re a fucking hypochondriac.”

“No way.”

“Oh yeah? Well check your last 10 Google searches.”

Silence.

I knew she had me.  The fact that we had been discussing whether or not I could have somehow gotten rabies (having never been bit by an animal) was a bit of a tell.

I hung up the phone in a huff and attempted to continue my day’s work, whilst secretly scheming some below-the-belt accusation that I could lob at her upon my return home (this is why we’re gay-divorced, people)… but the thought of my Google searches plagued my mind.  So, I closed my office door and took a look…

Google

There it was:  Rabies.  Ovarian Cancer.  Appendicitis.  Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma.  Lupus.  Rheumatoid Arthritis.  Anne Hathaway.  Anne Hathaway’s mom.  Celiac disease.  Hell, I didn’t even need to get to 10 (which, incidentally, was a search for a gastroenterologist who took my insurance).  Holy shit, this was a problem.

Still, what if I actually HAD one of these problems?  Boy, then they’d all be sorry.  The soap poisoning scene from The Christmas Story kept playing in my head.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ktzt096mlxs

(YouTube is being difficult; you will have to cut and paste. Thank you kindly.)

 

When I went home that night, the wife was waiting there at the door.

“Did you check Google?”

“Yes, asshole, I checked it.”

“Well?”

“I get your point.”

Worse yet, I imagined back to my last 3 trips to the gynecologist.  The evidence was mounting.  I had gone to the gynecologist because I felt a “twingy, pinchy, non-descript” pain in my boob.  Doc copped a feel, sent me for an ultrasound.  Result = you’re fat and you need to stop drinking coffee.

Next trip to the gyno:  “I’m pretty sure I have ovarian cancer.  Maybe uterine?  Something.”  Result after pelvic exam (horrible) and internal ultrasound (horribler) = you’re fat and maybe (just maybe) have some ovarian cysts.

My third trip was my yearly:  (a) couldn’t you people have taken care of the nasty metal tester shit when my crazy ass was here the last 2 times?; and (b) I’m sure they have a file on me marked “this bitch is cray cray.”  Result = Son of a Bitch!  … a little blue card saying I’m fine.

Following Google-gate, I instituted a complete moratorium on FFMA-related internet searches, reading of the CNN.com Health page, making of doctor’s appointments, going to doctor’s appointments and watching of The Doctors (which, would make any normal person feel like they are terminal).  At first, it drove me crazy.  Then it was sort of liberating – but not in a normal-person kind of way.

Coffin-open-coffins-wood-fancy-nice

I resigned myself to believe that I was actually probably more than likely dying of something.  That, through the shame imposed upon me by a heartless society and my heartless spouse, I would voluntarily relinquish the power to be a pro-active patient and, thereby, succumb to my own inevitable demise.

 

Of course, this research prohibition lasted all of 2 months.  I’m now pretty sure that I have TMJ and maybe Pelvic Inflammatory Disease.  I’ll let you know.