If you don't mind me asking, what ARE the right codewords to use on doctors and such?
Iâve thought, many times, about writing a book or something that was basically How To Negotiate Your Disability Without Curling Into A Ball And Weeping More Than Once Or Twice A Week *Or* Murdering The Entire Universe (More Than Once Or Twice A Week).
Here are some highlights:
1) On acquiring adequate pain medication.
Never actually say âI really need strong drugs here doctor, because the drugs you and every other doctor gave me for this injury/illness didnât work, and also Iâve been in pain for years and Iâd like that to stop.â
While there are some doctors who speak human languages and will understand what youâre saying, most, when you say that, will hear:
âI am a ravening junkie werekaiju, and I will come to your house and EAT YOUR BABIES IF YOU DONâT GIVE ME HEROIN.â
You think Iâm kidding? Watch a healthcare professionalâs eyes when someone else says something like the following. Watch them shut down and back away and tighten up and generally stop treating the person like a human. So what do you say?
âWell, I hate these drugs that make me *stupid*, you know? One of these so-called doctors â they gave me some pill that made me feel like I was on a whole separate planet for *years*, but I was still in pain! I have things to *do*, doctor. I have a job/family/projects. I wouldnât be here if I could get my work done the way I am now, but if I canât do them with the drugs you give me, then whatâs the point?â
Make sure to translate this into the appropriate dialect for your area, but note the important points:
a) Reassures the doctor that youâre not one of those ~*eeevil*~ junkies.b) Reassures the doctor that youâre not one of those ~*eeevil*~ non-productive members of society.
c) Reassures the doctor that youâre not one of those ~*eeevil*~ weak-willed disabled people.
Remember not to use too *much* *correct* medical jargon â they get suspicious about that.
Yes, all of this is necessary a *lot* of the time.
With the above code, 95% of the time the doctors begin *cooing* at me and treating me like *royalty* â and *100%* of the time I have gotten the effective medication.
Pro-tip: If you can add a true (or true-sounding) story about how much you *hate* one *particular* opiate (âPercocet is useless! All it does is make me stupid!â), then youâre probably in the bag.
2) Acquiring mobility devices.
Never actually say âI need a walker/wheelchair/scooter, because I have trouble getting around, and also I have a great deal of fatigue and pain when I try to do so.â
While some healthcare professionals speak human languages and have souls⌠well. A lot of them? Will hear this:
âI am a fat, lazy, Fatty McFatFat, and I will continue to expand, much like the universe, until I am a drain on the resources of this great nation and a proof that you, doctor, are a failure. I will never use the mobility devices, ever, and they will gather dust in my home â a mockery of everything you, Morally Healthy Person, holds dear.â
Yes, I know this makes even less sense than the former, but Iâve interrogated these people â the ones who have still have partially-functional souls and minds â and this really is how it works in their adorable little pinheads.
They really do think weâre asking for these devices for⌠no reason at all.
Or, as my otherwise sane GP put it, she has an honest fear that people like us will take one look at our new mobility devices and throw all caution â and sense â to the winds. That weâll stop stretching and exercising. That those of us who *can* walk for short distances will â somehow! â decide to *never walk again*. That weâll decide to â gleefully! cheerfully! blithely! â let every last one of the muscles weâve been clinging to with our *fingernails* *atrophy* to *nothing*, becauseâŚ
Because they think weâre idiots, thatâs why. So, try this instead:
âI have a lot of pain and fatigue when I try to walk for any kind of distance, at all, and thatâs getting in the way of my ability to have anything resembling an active life. Itâs even hard to get to my doctorâs appointments sometimes! I want to do at least some of my own shopping and other errands, and go out with my friends, and at least try to hold down a job, but unless the weather is really good and Iâm having a good day in other ways, itâs just not going to happen. I donât want to stop using my cane/walker/whatever completely â and I *wonât* unless I *have* to, just like I wonât stop doing my PT and OT exercises â but I need something that will let me actually have a life.â Note the similarities to the pain management code â and yes, do make sure you put this in your own words.
But also make sure you keep everything that makes you sound like the Virtuous Handicapable Person you totally are.
Because thatâs necessary.Yes, it is.Yes. It. Is. Just as it will be necessary, in many states â make sure you check â to add in this little number:
âItâs just⌠well, you know that I donât really have any bladder or GI issues, doctor, but I still⌠sometimes⌠on bad mobility days⌠you know.â
Hereâs where you look down.
âSometimes I donât make it⌠you know. In time.â
Understand that youâll have to repeat this to, like, four different people. At least.Understand that some of them will make you get specific.
If it helps, pretend youâre Steph Brown, doing her level best to gross the everloving bejeezus out of her P.E. teacher with graphic stories about her period so she can get out of class and fight crime.
*I* certainly found that helpful.