Just a lift too high
He lifted my right
leg by the foot towards the back, and I was out. I cannot tell how long I was
out for, but I eventually came to, and considering he neither panicked nor
called for help, it could not have been that long.
That was fifty years
ago, around this time of the year. We had gone cycling together into the
wilderness among the tin mines of Jos, near Rayfield. This was both adventurous
and dangerous. We once came upon a gathering of menacing men who not only
shooed us away, but they were also quite threatening, though it is unlikely
that reporting them to the police would have made much difference.
On that day, we had
ridden out on an uncharted route around the paddocks, too deep to approach,
with standing water that spelled danger and death by drowning, with the
possibility that one may not be found at all. However, that was a story of
childhood.
Woozy, down and out
What brought back
that memory was suddenly standing up, and I had a serious woozy feeling, very
much like when I took my eighth COVID-19 booster on Monday. I had willed myself
back from the pharmacy to the office and sat down; everything seemed to sort itself
out in minutes.
This time, I grabbed
onto something, thinking I was holding on until I heard a crashing sound. It
was me hitting the floor, and I lapsed into a kind of dreamland, believing I
was still holding on and about to get up.
I was out, quite
totally out, and I cannot remember how long for; I just realised I was picking
myself off the floor and made for the sofa to sit down and gather myself
together. What just happened? I had a fainting spell.
A bit delicate, I
realise
Until this afternoon,
I had handled these sudden drops in blood pressure caused by standing or
sitting up quite well. I think it was exacerbated by my medication, which, as
an alpha-blocker,
could accentuate light-headedness and, in some cases, lead to passing out.
It was not a side
effect I had associated with the medication, having only learnt of this usually
rare side effect from a YouTube video this morning. [The NHS: About
Tamsulosin]
While I have tried
not to feel too delicate in my recovery stretch, the reality suggests that I
need to be more careful and considerate of the unforeseen events that could put
me at great risk and peril. The knowledge is helpful, and I am doing quite well
after that episode.
Postscript: The medication
for the treatment of benign prostate hyperplasia (an enlarged prostate), also treats
high blood pressure.