Chris Erskine: Heâs doctor feel good
Iâd rather go to a Clippers game than the doctor. Iâd rather have my nose chewed off by zebras.
But still I go, if only for the very reasonable $20 co-payment. Really, you canât even get your oil changed for that.
So I roll into the doctorâs office 10 minutes early, a nasty habit. I arrive early almost everywhere. I was late for a dental appointment once, with the leggy Beverly Hills dentist, and I beat myself up about it for weeks. Some people are crazy for cleanliness. Me, Iâm crazy for time.
See, I plan to live to be 100, a fine number if youâre a cognac or a bowl game. Itâs a little old for a martini-swilling American meatball like me. But I plan to live to be 100, if only to spite my children. The best revenge would be that, one day, they will actually have to diaper me.
Before you say, âEwwwww,â keep in mind all the stuff Iâve done for them, starting with prenatal care, bee stings, braces, college. Iâve taught them how to pack a cooler or relace a mitt. Iâve taught them the difference between Ecuador and Venezuela. They know Portugal is like the âleft brain of Spain.â On long car trips, I used to quiz them on the state capitals.
If you yourself know buckets of useless information, be sure to thank a dad, keepers of the trivial flame.
âWally Pipp took a day off and the rest is history,â I reminded them the other day.
âWhoâs Wally Pipp?â one of them asked.
Evidently, my work is not yet done.
With that in mind, Iâm getting a routine physical, a nice way to spend a sunny spring afternoon. My medical groupâs office â doctors travel in packs, like meerkats â is tucked into the side of the mountains, the kind of shadowy canyon where bandits used to hide. Thereâs an In-N-Out Burger down the block that I suspect is owned by cardiologists. What a racket, medicine.
âYou can go right in,â the receptionist says. âRoom 6.â
This is my first doctor visit since the new healthcare rules went into effect, and I can see the difference already. For one, they rush me into the exam room, probably so I canât debrief the other patients. One of my favorite things is waiting room conversations. âWhat are you in for?â Or, âWow, is that a bunion?â
I am a good patient, though, for I undress quickly and willingly, they never have to ask twice. There is no hesitation in the way I reveal myself. In an earlier life, I suspect I mightâve been a member of the British House of Lords.
âGood to see you,â says Dr. Steve, holding out his hand. âBeen a while.â
Turns out, I am in peak physical form. My arms are like ship rope. You could bounce a tennis ball off my stomach â not high, but it would bounce a little, partly because, at 53, Iâm still built like a cedar chest, in the sense that I am hollow inside and repel moths.
âTicklish?â the doctor says while pushing on my pancreas.
âNo.â
âThatâs OK, no extra charge,â he says.
Yeah, so Iâm a little ticklish, big deal. Iâve always been an easy laugh. I laugh at funerals. I laugh at Kevin James movies. If laugher were a form of promiscuity, Iâd be Italy.
âAnything bothering you?â Dr. Steve asks.
Well, doc, Iâm not comfortable with the debt load the country is carrying right now. And there are too many medical dramas on TV, not to mention police procedurals â sick to death of those.
What else? Well, I wish I were more simpatico with my dog. Sometimes, itâs as if heâs in a completely different universe. If anyone broke in, Iâm pretty sure itâs me he would attack. And I donât like the way he treats women.
âWell, my thumb is bothering me,â I finally sputter.
âCan you bend it?â
âThis much.â
âItâs probably just sprained,â he says.
Then we talk about my prostate a while.
Let me just say this: I love my prostate. Half gland, half flower, it is more important to me than my brain or my heart â probably because I use it more.
Isnât it amazing how little love the prostate gets, considering itâs importance in that very area. Nobody ever wrote a poem to his prostate. For all their sonnets, did Keats or Shakespeare think to mention theirs once?
So let me be the first:
Roses are red, Viagra is blue,
I love my prostate, itâs big as a shoe.
Actually, it might be bigger than a shoe, my doc says, not uncommon in men my age.
But itâs healthy and mine, all mine â 53 going on forever. Under the new health regulations, I think I get to keep it.