Revisiting the hospital: One Year Later

Exactly one year ago today, I wrote about the time I visited a Chinese hospital. 

It was a nice foil for the struggles of arriving at site, and served as an amusing anecdote to haul out when I was around other Peace Corps Volunteers. 

So this one time, I got taken to a Chinese hospital… and can you believe it? They thought I was pregnant! All it was was constipation!

Cue the laughter. Even Peace Corps Medical Staff loved the story, because it was a prime example of me keeping my cool and an example of why you need to call your doctor first.

One thing I’ve kept quiet is that the pain that sent me to the hospital that first time kept coming, but never as bad as the first time. Since we’d gone through the process before and determined it constipation, I just put on a brave face and suffered through it alone. Why call the doctors again when we already knew the diagnosis? Then, one time last April it was bad enough to make me vomit for hours, but by the time I dialed the doctor, my symptoms were already resolving. On a follow-up phone call two hours later, I felt as good as new.

Occasional attacks came through the summer, all continuing to be self-diagnosed, same as the original.

Then, a week ago, I woke up and rolled over to turn off my alarm. I felt a dull pop in my side, and that same pain came flooding back, stronger than ever. I tried using a heat compress, as had worked in the past, but once I started throwing up, I knew I had no choice but to call my doctor. 

The initial diagnosis was a kidney stone, and my doctor arranged with someone from the school to take me to the hospital so I could get some pain killers and confirm the diagnosis. By this time, I felt like I could barely stand up,  let alone walk down my five flights of stairs.

A picture I wish I could show you all here is me getting carried down five flights of narrow stairs wrapped in a bright pink blanket. 

At the hospital, I went through the usual ultrasound routine. I carefully stressed the impossibility of me being pregnant. Then my cell phone rings. It’s the Peace Corps doctor, saying that maybe it’s still a kidney stone, but it seems like there’s also a mass on my ovary, so they’re going to transfer me to the Number 1 Hospital in Xi’an. They also tell me that since today’s the last day of the National Holiday, there are no flights available for a Peace Corps doctor to come meet me, but they’re sending one to Chongqing to take a flight out the next morning to be with me. 

I was still hanging tough throughout this, only having one moment as we reached the Xi’an city limits and the driver turned on the ambulance siren that I really felt like I wanted to cry. Luckily, I was too dehydrated for that kind of nonsense.

At the hospital we play the ultrasound game again, and afterwards Peace Corps calls me up and says, “Yep, it’s a cyst and it’s twisting, so we’re going to have to do surgery to take it out.” 

That doctor has subsequently told me she was afraid to tell me this news, since I was out in Xi’an alone and with no one to support me. She was shocked when I responded, “I get to have the surgery tonight, right? Please can we make it tonight? I don’t want to wait for anyone to come meet me, I don’t care what you have to do.” 

Turns out extreme pain can conquer any fear. 

The four hours waiting to be prepped for surgery were unbearable. I kept calling Peace Corps and making sure yes, absolutely, it would be happening tonight. Otherwise, I was just bored and in pain. Also mystified by the nurses who kept coming in and asking me if I could understand Chinese, and at the moment of my eventual assent would assault me with medical Chinese. Which, unsurprisingly, I do not understand.

Anyway, finally 9:30 arrives and I get taken off to surgery where I have two interesting facts to report. First, though I was excited about the operation, I still forced everyone to wait for me to throw up a final few times. This was a language learning milestone, where I realized I came prepared to say such useful phrases as, “I’m not done throwing up yet”. Second, Chinese surgeons wear plastic sandals in the operation room. Which makes total sense from a sanitation standpoint, but for someone raised on a healthy diet of “no open-toed shoes in the workplace” this was especially amusing.

Long story short: I had the surgery, somehow managed to recuperate from it without painkillers (because they never offered me any, and I didn’t know I could ask,  ha!). Medical was equally hesitant when they called me up to inform me of the result of the surgery, “So, did they tell you what happened?”

“They took out the cyst and had to take my left ovary too, right? Does this affect my ability to adopt an animal later in life?” 

A shocked Medical Officer, “Uh, no…” 

“Great!”

After two days in the hospital, I stayed in a hotel in Xi’an for a few days with my doctor, where I slowly learned how to function like a human again. 

Here I wish I could show you a picture of me being too weak to properly wring out my laundry, so instead I took each piece and carefully wrapped it in a towel and then sat on it. Innovative! 

After two days there, and when my personal items from site finally arrived (biggies like shoes, a change of clothes, and a passport – thanks, site mate!), we took a flight to Chengdu, where I am now holed up in a hotel resting for the next week. I’m feeling back up to 90%, and though an impending sneeze does still leave me slightly terrified, I am wandering the streets on my own and feeling good enough to complain bitterly about the heat wave. It should end tomorrow. 

The one thing that I can show, is that there is never, ever an inappropriate moment for a photo op. May I present to you me, on Day 3 of the hospital and getting ready to leave:

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It’s the lady they hired to get me food/stay with me overnights, me (obviously), and my lovely doctor. 

A lot of people have expressed concern about me feeling alone or scared, or any number of negative emotions. I never felt any of those things (except pain). I’m really happy that this happened here. In America, my recovery would be saddled with me worrying about how to pay my bills, or worrying about how much time I could take off from work and whether my job would be affected. Here, I’m free to not worry about a thing and just get better. It hasn’t been fun, exactly, but it hasn’t been terrible at all. I’ve appreciated the well wishes and hopefully this story can prove to be amusing enough to serve as a ‘thank you!’ to everyone. 

PS: Okay, you probably to want to know the terrible parts. I can’t eat food that’s greasy or spicy for a full week, which means I had to turn away real bacon in Xi’an, and now that I’m stuck in Chengdu (arguably the capital of greasy and spicy) I’m stuck with plain bread and porridge. It’s a rough life I lead, and feel free to open send sympathy my way. 

 

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Are you familiar with the Journey to the West?

Are you familiar with the Journey to the West?

More often than not, this seems to be the answer to the questions I have.

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Eco Camp, Finale

Eco Camp, Finale

I think it’s also hard to show the breadth and depth of the connections our students were able to make at this camp. Students attending our camp came from Gansu, Guizhou, and Sichuan provinces. The farmers and hosts are practicing Buddhists living on an organic farm in rural Sichuan. For everyone, there was something they hadn’t encountered before.

For everyone, there was something they wouldn’t have gotten to see. Someone they wouldn’t have gotten to meet. A lesson they would never have learned. But it was because of the help of friends and strangers alike, halfway around the world, that this could happen.

I am thankful to those who donated, those who I sent over here because I didn’t want to drown you with words in a single e-mail. I am thankful for those who read and support, through whatever means possible, our goals here. I am thankful for my hard-working students whose drive and passion is helping China grow. For helping me grow.

Like I said before, everyone knows something you don’t, and they remind of that every day. Cheers!

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Eco Camp, Part 2

Eco Camp, Part 2

Another goal of our English Eco Leadership Camp was to promote volunteerism amongst students. With that in mind, we took a day trip to a second farm. There each student was assigned a camper and asked to be their teacher for the day, and asked to teach them at least 10 English words.

Our students came back having learned more than they taught. Lucy is standing here in front of a rice paddy, one of the first she’s ever seen. The boy also introduced her to many local plants.

Everyone you meet knows something you don’t know, an important lesson to learn at any age.

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Eco Camp, Part 1

Eco Camp, Part 1

At Eco Camp, volunteers were all asked to lead activities. I asked our students to write and perform a short skit that addressed current environmental issues.

These students took the story behind Qixi Festival (or, Chinese Valentine’s Day). In this story, ZhiNu is from heaven, and comes to earth one day and meets NiuLang. They fall in love and have two children. Of course, one day ZhiNu is banished back to heaven, where the two are now forever separated by a river. Once a year, on the 7th day of the 7th lunar month, magpies will form a bridge so that the two meet.

Our students acted out this familiar story, but where poor food quality left the children ill and unable to go meet ZhiNu. And again they met trouble where the air pollution killed off all the magpies and only two were able to come.

It was a really wonderful performance, one of many, and it reminded me of how continually impressive and creative the students here are, and in a foreign language at that.

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The Last Year in a Snapshot

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As you can see above, the most popular word my students learned from me this year was:

Jerk. Sometimes we say ZhiYuanJerk (志愿jerk), as a play on ZhiYuanZhe (志愿者), the word for volunteer. 

 

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(Almost) A Year

My family is kind of terrible at taking group photos, and I can only think of a handful of photos that include my father, my sister, and me that have been taking in the last decade. Because of this, naturally, we have no photo to memorialize me getting on a plane to leave for China a year ago.

Which I’m okay with, mostly.

Anyway, I’ve been a lousy blogger over my last year in China, and I’m hoping that in the next week and a half, I can post once or twice a day as a sort of anniversary-special, looking back at my past year here. I am to start on July 2nd which, thanks to 24 hours of flying and the international date line, officially marks one year of China living. So get ready for a year’s worth of updates, because hopefully this will motivate me to dole them out. 

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To the farm!

Tomorrow morning I head back to the pig farm for a two day vacation. It’s Dragon Boat Festival here in China, and it’s one of the view Chinese festivals I can claim familiarity with. Fortunately, this year I am not serving brunch and instead hanging out with these guys again: Image

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Questions and Answers

Students are often really curious about my Chinese learning. They usually either over-estimate my abilities or grossly underestimate them (I have gotten exceptionally skilled at not flipping out whenever someone slowly intones “Ni Hao” in my direction). Way less frequent are exchanges like the following:

Student: Kathryn, why are you learning Chinese? It’s too hard.
Me: It’s not that hard, and anyway, I tried learning French when I first came to China, but no one understood me. So I had to study Chinese. Why do you study English?
Student: Globalization. 

She nailed it.

BONUS! To paint a better picture of this particular student, here’s the cover of the book she wrote for book-making day:

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So this happened.

About a month ago, I got an e-mail from a woman I had met before I came to China. She works for Peace Corps, specifically with the Master’s International students, and was working on putting a piece together featuring the experiences of some MI students around the world. Would I mind helping?

I’m always one to do a favor, so I said yes. Plus, it always seems like Peace Corps headquarters passes over stories about China in favor of Central/South America or Africa. So, sure. I’ll help.

I wrote up my responses to her questions, sent along a few pictures, and maybe two weeks later she sent me a belated thank you. That last thing, the belated thank you, really made me feel like I was in the clear.

Until this morning. When I woke up, saw a newsletter from Peace Corps in my inbox.

ImageWell, crap. That’s not just a mention. That’s a feature article. I can’t even bear to read it, but I know I have beloved friends and family back home who may be interested. Also, a general lesson to just never respond when Peace Corps comes knocking. 

Here’s the full text, for those who care. Tell me if I sound stupid, because I haven’t been able to read about myself since that one time when I was 17 and the paper quoted me saying, “Please don’t harass the cars”. Anyway, here you go:

 

Master’s International Student Kathryn Johnston Falls in Love with Gansu, China

“I never planned on pursuing a master’s in TESOL or joining the Peace Corps. Both are things that happened to fall in my lap at the right time. Looking back from my 10th month of service, now I can’t see pursuing any other possible option.

“I got lucky finding this path. My old computer crashed with a few weeks to spare of graduate school application season. I had nothing backed up. At the same time, an email appeared in my inbox from a new program called Peace Corps Master’s International at Portland State University. I clicked over to the Peace Corps website, and an hour later I had planted the seed. Deciding to apply for a TESOL degree wasn’t too far from my original plan, and actually fit my life goals better. I have always wanted the teaching position in the end, and teaching English-language learners rather than liberal arts majors better suited my fledgling teaching philosophy.

“Everyone has a different experience and, even though I made my best efforts, I was still convinced that if I got placed in China, things would be terrible. I overcame that fear, got placed in China, but then maintained that getting placed in Gansu would be the worst thing ever. It’s good to admit to being wrong, which I wholeheartedly do in this case: Being in Gansu is the greatest experience ever. Of course, I think I would love any place with the same depth simply because that is what I wanted to do in the Peace Corps: I wanted to fall in love with a place and fall in love with my work. I’ve fallen in love a thousand times over already, and it happens in new ways with every passing day. My students inspire me to become a better teacher, and I hope that I, in turn, can inspire them to be better teachers when they leave our school and front a classroom on their own. I have done things I never thought would be fun, like visiting primary schools, only to get hooked and seek out new chances to return to the schools I have already visited and find new ones to visit.

“I think the most important thing I have experienced so far has been to go to a student’s home for the big winter holiday—Spring Festival/Chinese New Year. I spent almost two weeks living with her and her family, and this is really where I met Peace Corps Goals 2 and 3. I was the first foreigner they had ever met, and (I hope) I represented the American people to the best of my ability. In turn, I was able to tell my friends and family stories about China that often go unheard: stories about a family willing to take in a foreign guest for two weeks, have a huge communication gap, yet still treat that guest with extreme kindness. This is especially poignant to me as my hosts reminded me it wasn’t so long ago that there was not enough to go around to spare such kindness.

“While I stay busy enough that I can hardly even think a month ahead, let alone to the end of my service, no matter what I do in the future, I want to be with underserved populations and teaching skills they can use to create the destiny they want for themselves.”

 

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