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So I spent last night at the mental hospital

The PolyBlog
January 16 2015

Hah, click bait worked again! Except it’s not really click bait. I did spend last night at the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre. Sometimes called the Royal (mostly by them, it’s their brand). Sometimes called Royal Ottawa. Sometimes called the nuthouse by insensitive twits.

I was there for overnight observation, which will generate curious thoughts from some readers, worried thoughts from some close friends, and relief from some of my relatives. Like my brother Mike, who’s probably thinking, “Finally! I’ve said it for YEARS!”.

When they find out I left in the morning as scheduled, everyone will be confused. Sorry to disappoint, but I wasn’t there for anything “psych” related, at least not really. Instead, it is one of the centres in Ottawa that does sleep tests, making use of the beds overnight and hooking you up to innumerable electrodes. And heaven knows I need a sleep test — it was on my tracking list for this year. I sleep like crud regularly, often waking up multiple times in the night, often having insomnia in the middle of the night, only to hit a perfect deep sleep about 20 minutes before I have to get up in the morning. So I went and got hooked up.

I shouldn’t say innumerable electrodes, because there were seventeen to be precise. Two on my shins to see if I have restless leg syndrome and kick a lot at night. Two more on my shoulders. About five more on your chin and under your throat to see if you grind your teeth in the night (I do, but they didn’t detect it last night). About five to seven across your forehead and beside your eyes to tell if you’re in REM, when your eyes are open, etc. (they basically monitor eye movement by measuring the muscles around the eye twitching and convulsing when you move your eyes). And three to five more in your hair, although I have no idea what they were doing.

Sleep test

Most of the test though is to see if I have apnea — which is the lovely condition where you stop breathing and your body fights to overcome it, thus waking you up. It’s quite common with pregnant women (tied to weight gain), although oddly enough, Andrea’s sleep apnea was improved by pregnancy, not worsened. I told them up front I didn’t have it, because I never wake up gasping for air nor jerk awake.

For those who have never done a sleep test, here’s the deal — if you didn’t have trouble sleeping BEFORE the sleep test, you’re guaranteed to have it during the test.

First, no caffeine after 4:00 p.m. Not a big deal for me (well, I was thirsty a bit right at 4:00 by coincidence, but not after that).

Second, there were restrictions on smoking and alcohol which didn’t apply to me, so easily ignored, but hard on some.

Third, you have to arrive between 8:00 and 10:00 p.m., and get hooked up to all the probes/electrodes. The list of 17 above? They all come with wires too. So it takes time and you’re not the only patient. They have six beds, and two technicians doing the monitoring. You can stay up and read or something after they hook you up, but you’re not going to be doing very much else, so I decided it was easier to go to bed.

Most people who have trouble sleeping have compensated by going to bed later than average — making sure they’re actually tired so that they don’t fight for as long falling asleep. Falling asleep has never been my problem, it’s staying asleep, so I thought, “Might as well turn in early.” So I was in bed by 10:05 p.m. First time in a LONG time. They test the equipment, turn out the light, and then monitor your sensors plus your body position through an infrared camera. Oh, and you have an oxygen nose plug in, taped to your face and looped over your ears. With the 17 electrodes all having wires, plus the nose plug, plus four other wires running off straps around your chest and abdomen, it’s not exactly “comfortable”.

But you’re in bed, ready to go. As I was. Then at one point I was REALLY warm, so I wanted to take my socks off. Which meant I had to press the call button, she had to come in, make sure I didn’t disconnect anything, and good to go again. That was around midnight I think. Oh yeah, no clock in the room, and more importantly for me, no radio to fall asleep to. Plus you can’t take your own pillow. Did I mention they basically remove any of the existing coping techniques you have been using so that you’re guaranteed to have bad sleep? The bed wasn’t made of nails, but maybe they haven’t thought of that yet.

Then at 2:00 a.m., she came in and told me that I apparently do have sleep apnea. Bad from her perspective. So she wanted to try the CPAP — no, it’s not a gynecological exam. CPAP stands for Continuous Positive Airway Pressure, and it is basically a nose plug on steroids. Did you see Star Wars Episode 5 / The Empire Strikes Back where Luke is brought back to the Hoth snow base and is in a big tube of water wearing a breathing mask? Well that’s basically what a CPAP mask looks like.

There are two kinds. First, one that goes just over your nose, and made me feel like I was suffocating. You can’t open your mouth at all while wearing it or it suddenly vapour locks to your cheeks and nose. Very disturbing feeling — air pressure to lightly force the air into your lungs so you don’t have to work as hard, but also air pressure that fights against it when you breathe out so that your lungs don’t stop working (I guess, not really sure). The second kind is like the Star Wars mask, it’s a long hose with a breathing mask that fits over your nose and mouth — just like them giving you oxygen in an ambulance, but instead of a thin 8 mm tube for air, this is a garden hose coming at you. Heavy. Needs a full harness to go around top of your head, wrap around to the back, drop down and then back under your chin, up to your mouth, straps on with velcro and seals shut. Kind of like a catcher’s mask.

Sure, that won’t be distracting or hard to get used to wearing while sleeping, will it? Of course not.

Some 45 minutes later, I was still counting sheep and wondering what time it was. I did eventually drift off to sleep, only waking one more time before the 6:30 wake up call. Oh yeah, I forgot that part too. They wake you up around 6:00 and kick you to the curb so they have the space back. Great, very restful. Oddly enough, I actually DID sleep okay in that last 3 hours or so. It wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be wearing the mask, I think it was more the other things that were distracting (it’s hard to move around and get comfortable in a strange bed and no favorite pillow when you’re connected to 17 wired thingies).

The end result is that the very evangelical technician thinks me (and everybody on the planet, incidentally) should rush to the nearest medical centre and get a machine. But this is no small decision. It’s meant to be worn EVERY night. It also makes mostly white noise while you sleep, not very loud, but I don’t know what Jacob would think the first time he saw me in it. It’s not a simple “grab and go”, or drift off. This is very much sleeping with intent.

On the positive side, cost isn’t really a factor. While the machine is about $900 for the base model, 75% is covered by the government, and my work coverage would cover 80% of the rest, leaving me about 5% normally but we have double-coverage with Andrea, so hers would pick up the remaining 5%. I might have to buy some accessories, like a case and some cleaning cloths, but that’s about it.

I just did the test last night, so I still have some thinking to do. It is intrusive, it is disruptive, it is a bit claustrophobic. It also might make very little difference to my sleep. Lots of people rave as the technician did, but Andrea’s sleep wasn’t much better even with hers on, as others have said too, so it isn’t a slam dunk for everyone.

Plus there’s a psychological element. About 70% of overweight people have apnea, and that is the most likely cause for me. The extra weight basically leads to an enlarged tongue, narrower pathways, and/or extra skin at the back of the throat, and those three possible “blockages” screw up your breathing. To fully accept that I have sleep apnea requiring a serious mechanical intervention rather than an occasional challenge sleeping is to more broadly acknowledge that it is simply because I’m fat. That’s a hard pill to swallow for a whole host of other reasons, and triggers no end of self-defense psych reactions.

In the past, that would be enough to seal the outcome, no deal. But this is PolyWogg 4.0 who said death to squirrels just 16 days ago. I have a follow-up appointment in two weeks to review the results, and if I already have my machine, for the doctor to authorize the government funding, etc. And they will likely invite me back in the future to do another test where I just use my machine plus all their little electrodes again.

Decisions, decisions. While the cost is basically $0 to try, I don’t like wasting anyone’s resources, including the government’s if I’m not fully committed to doing it long-term. I can however try it and see if it makes an amazing difference, generally with 30 days free trial. I could do that this month, next month, next October, whenever. Stay tuned…

And sorry to my brother Mike who got excited no doubt with my being in the mental hospital, even if it was only for a night. He was probably hoping I could entice some other siblings to join me.

Posted in Experiences | Tagged 2015, apnea, goals, health, sleep | Leave a reply

Gratitude for planetary conjunctions

The PolyBlog
January 15 2015

Gratitude entry #11…Today I am grateful for planetary conjunctions. At the moment, in the sky, Venus and Mercury appear about two inches apart if you hold your hand straight towards them and measure. I’ve never seen Mercury before, or rather never realized it if I did. And for the last couple of weeks, I’ve looked at dusk and saw nothing. Mind you, I’m only doing naked eye visuals, nothing with a telescope or anything. But tonight, as I drove home, Venus was very obvious straight ahead of me, and faintly to the right, I could see Mercury. Nice of Venus to provide a simple easy arrow to find it.

I’m hoping on Sunday maybe, or possibly even Friday night, I might get a chance to try for it with the telescope. I’d love to see Comet Lovejoy too, and Orion is pointing the way, but just haven’t nailed it yet.

That’s it for today…Onward in the journey…

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Tagged 2015, astronomy, goals, gratitude, spiritualism | Leave a reply

Eight ways I’m going to manipulate my friends this year

The PolyBlog
January 14 2015

Thanks for clicking, that was method #1! An interesting thing happened last week. I posted a FB and Twitter link to my “red” goals for the year and how I was embarrassed by them. Nothing unusual about the link to me, just part of my process, I wasn`t trying to be innovative or manipulative. Yet twice as many people clicked to read that entry as compared to my other posts (oh, you scandalous readers!). And since people create blogs in the hope that people will read them, yep, I’m going to try to write more compelling titles that will manipulate you into feeling an almost irresistible desire to click. 🙂 Aren`t you glad I told you in advance?

On a related note, I have just finished an interesting article by Jon Morrow about “headline hacks” that get readers to click. Some of them seemed too cheesy to me (“How safe is your wallet on vacation?”) or other people’s approaches seem downright silly (“(person x did y) and you’ll never guess what happened next!”). SO there won’t be simple click-bait. But I think it isn’t out of the realm of comfort to have some of the other types of headlines — lists of things (5 resources for x, etc.) that I have curated, how to do x, six mistakes applicants make in their resumes or a top 10 list. Not really “manipulative” but it got you to click this far, didn’t it?

Method #2 — I’m hoping to inspire you somewhat. I don’t normally think of my blog as deliberately trying to influence people, but this is a different kind of year. At the same time that I’m publicly committing, I’m hoping the journey is entertaining at least, inspiring if possible. More that I’m hoping it’s a journey that COULD inspire someone, that I’ll be successful enough that it MIGHT inspire someone. Maybe it will just be through candor.

Method #3 — I’m hoping to wow you a little on the astronomy side. I’m hoping I get some great pics of the Moon or planets and that you’ll decide to attend a star party sometime.

Method #4 — I’m hoping my spiritual journey might prompt you to share some of your beliefs. I have no monopoly on spiritual insights, and my sister-in-law already sent me a good idea to add to the list. Others may have some too that they’re willing to share.

Method #5 — I’m hoping my wing nights will encourage some guys to come out for wings and a beer, or even just eat meat with friends.

Method #6 — I’m going to steal an idea from Jon Morrow and focus on hacks for charitable giving. I already have what I think is a good one — a relatively easy and somewhat “free” way to help out, just by doing what you’re mostly already doing. I need to test it, but I like it. So I’m wondering if I can find 10 other hacks like it for the year.

Method #7 — I keep vaguebooking about a large social campaign that I’m going to try this year. And when it happens, I’m hoping to influence your personal behaviour. It’s an easy campaign to support, you can do it in your own home, and it doesn’t cost you anything. It’s also a safe, no-brainer. But you know what? It’s as serious as death. So I’m not revealing details until I know I’ve got it right. It deserves my A-game, not random haphazard blog entries or messages. It will be organized, sustained, clear, and I hope persuasive. I don’t share messages about international development or human rights which are good ideas, nor the ridiculous “share if you are easily manipulated through guilt” memes on the opposite end of the spectrum. Truth be told, outside of regular humour, there’s no underlying theme to most of the stuff I share. But this idea is worth a campaign. So campaign I will.

Method #8 — I may, for the first time ever, ask you for money for my participation in a charity fund-raiser. I don’t normally do that, although I’m always happy to help others do “event” fundraising. I admire your efforts. But I’m not a participatory-type donor. But don’t worry — I won’t ask until December when of course lots of people have extra money lying around. I didn’t say I was EXPECTING money, I just said I would ask.

So that’s my eight ways. I hope it wasn’t a let down that there was no brain-washing robot or voodoo magic involved. Stand by to be lured, inspired, wowed, enticed to share, fed, taught, influenced, and (potentially) solicited.

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2015, goals, hacks, quest | Leave a reply

Gratitude for a new recipe

The PolyBlog
January 13 2015

Gratitude entry #10…Today I am grateful for a new recipe for lasagna. No, I haven’t turned into Garfield. The lasagna was a vegetarian recipe that my wife found that uses the Epicure steamer. I had a long day at work, didn’t get home until late, had to heat it up after everyone else was long done and had left the kitchen, and it was really good. Even re-heated.

That’s it for today — just grateful for a good meal, something different than our norm. Onward in the journey…

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Tagged 2015, Andrea, Epicure, goals, gratitude, recipe, spiritualism | Leave a reply

Gratitude for Impromptu Organizing

The PolyBlog
January 12 2015

Gratitude entry #9…Today I am grateful for an impromptu organizing session. As you can see from my blog, I’ve been on a “goal” kick. My wife, by contrast, is more on a “get organized” kick as her main goal, with her targets ranging from desks to playrooms.

As mentioned too in my goals, this year’s big goal for us together is a kitchen renovation. We have a decent amount of cupboard space in our kitchen, good size, but the island shape sucks. It’s got a small bend in it to make it more open going into the playroom and to give a bit more room by the table, but it really screws up the kitchen area when you’re loading the dishwasher.

But this isn’t about that. This is about 22 shelves we have in our cupboards. Today, out of the blue, we reorganized the stuff on 18 of those shelves. It wasn’t planned, it just sort of mushroomed and we went crazy in the kitchen. We turfed a few things, rearranged just about everything. Well, not quite. The cereal stayed put (it’s the only shelf high enough and deep enough). Time will tell if we got it right, but I like the basics so far. A bunch of related things were kind of spread out before, and they’re all together (tea, coffee, a teapot, hot chocolate, etc.). Our pasta sauce is with the grains they go with. We ditched the “extra” rice bag we had up on another shelf, poured it in a smaller container, put it with the other rice and the rest of the grains and pasta.

We also decided that we have a past affinity for alcohol that isn’t really current, so we have a lot of small bottles of stuff we don’t drink. I think the cottage will inherit some of it. We’re not crazy, we kept some. But really, when am I going to use a daiquiri mix or a blue curacao? I don’t even know if I spelled those right! About the only lament I had was a really nice bottle of vodka that I once planned to consume.

That’s it for today — gratefulness for an impromptu organizing session that looks like it was highly effective. Onward in the journey…

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Tagged 2015, Andrea, goals, gratitude, kitchen, organization, spiritualism, spontaneous | Leave a reply

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