Treasure Hunting
This morning, I was going through some old boxes stored in my garage (no basements in Orlando–the water table is so high that you can strike water eighteen inches into the ground). I’m trying to get rid of some stuff that has been lying around for far too long and to do that, I have to go through it all. I’m trying to be ruthless, but it’s hard.
I’m a “pack rat” by nature. I save books, old notebooks from school, articles, pages cut from magazines, illustrations that took my fancy, paintings, posters, art prints, sculpture, electronics, tools, guns, coins, items of clothing, weights, exercise equipment, office and tax records, you name it. Then, there’s the stuff my wife likes, like multiple sets of china, clothes, pocketbooks, and enough shoes to give Imelda Marcos a run for her money. And on top of all of that is furniture and more furniture. You name it, I’ve saved it. Never know when it might come in handy….
In digging through this stuff, it’s like being an archeologist, or treasure hunting. Every new box I open is filled with stuff. Everything I touch evokes a memory. Which is why it’s hard to part with this stuff–it’s like throwing away a part of my life, in a way. But it’s got to be done.
The trouble with stuff is that after a while, you don’t own your possessions–they own YOU. We’re now married for over 34 years and I still have stuff from Grammar School, Junior High, High School, College and Medical School for God’s sake! Little by little, like barnacles on the hull of a ship, the stuff accumulates. This, of course, makes every move a nightmare. So the stuff has to go.
But, as it’s contrary to my nature, I can’t simply pitch everything. No, I have to go through it, to be sure I’m not throwing away some long buried treasure from my past. It’s sick, I admit it. In my own defense, I don’t smoke, I don’t drink and I don’t fool around on the bride–hey, you’ve gotta do SOMETHING, right? Could be worse.
So, while I’m digging through the boxes, I came across my old bones collection, from the office: near perfect skull, probably a young woman, a femur, tibia, a vertebral body, a bag of foot bones. Thing is, these are REAL human bones. Can’t get these any more. The countries that used to produce them, chiefly India, under Indira Ghandi, outlawed the practice many years ago.
Today, plastic models are the best a young medical student can do. Not the same thing, though–they can’t capture the subtle details, especially in the delicate internal bones of the skull. So I’m thinking, good thing I didn’t just throw these out. Can you imagine these bones coming to light in the garbage dump? I can see the cops knocking on my door now…. ![]()
Then, I came across my old knee model. This IS plastic and shows the menisci and all the ligaments. I used to use this to explain why someone was having pain, to demonstrate which part of the joint was damaged. Then, under these items, I came across my teaching handouts. I used to give these to the patients as “take aways” so they’d remember some of what I told them during their office visits. Even though I could tell what was wrong with someone and formulate a treatment plan in under a minute, I would often spend the next hour or so explaining everything to the patient and family. But as studies done at the University of Florida showed years ago, people just don’t remember what they were told. They retain less than 27%, especially stuff like complications of surgery, after only 24
hours.
So, my handouts were my way of reminding them. Each one was a single page, with all the pertinent information we had just discussed. One for each of the most common clinical problems I treated. And then, there was my physical therapy prescription. The therapist loved my Rx, because I gave them the diagnosis, the surgery (if any), with exactly what was done, and specified exercises and modalities to be done. This was the prototype of the exercises I teach in my PAIN-FREE PROGRAM, which you can get at
http://drbillsclinic.com/exercise_eliminate.html
The therapists liked this because most docs sent them a prescription that said “P.T.” They left pretty much everything up to the therapist, who of course had NO clinical information about the patient. Incredible. How could they help, if they didn’t know what they were treating? Made no sense to me. So they generally gave the patients knee extensions, or leg presses with resistance, to strengthen the quads, followed by ice and later, hot packs and electrical stimulation. Hard to go too wrong with those.
The miracle was that many people got better, anyway. That’s a tribute to the power of exercise to relieve pain, even if done in a very general way. Better, by far, if exercise is done strategically, to alter the dynamics of the knee, according to the pathology causing the problem. That’s what the PAIN-FREE PROGRAM does. See it at http://drbillsclinic.com/exercise_eliminate.html
Well, back to the junk heap. I’m sure I can get rid of a lot of this stuff. Just have to keep digging…. Til next time, my friend, be well.
Yours for a pain-free tomorrow,
Dr. Bill
P.S. For DR. BILL’S LITTLE GREEN BOOK ON ELIMINATING KNEE PAIN, a concise, but complete handbook on the root causes and the various options for treating knee pain, go to http://drbillsclinic.com/eliminate_knee_pain.html
P.P.S. For DR. BILL’S PAIN-FREE PROGRAM: EXERCISES TO PREVENT OR ELIMINATE KNEE PAIN, please go to
http://drbillsclinic.com/exercise_eliminate.html
P.P.P.S. For the giant, comprehensive ADVANCED MASTERS’ COURSE: HOW TO ELIMINATE KNEE PAIN–ONCE & FOR ALL!, everything you need to know on causes and solutions for knee pain and the complete exercise program, too, go to
http://drbillsclinic.com/advanced_masters.html
FREE BONUS CD with any order: THE HEALING POWER OF POSITIVE PAIN PERCEPTION
Copyright, 2008 by William Thomas Stillwell, MD
All rights reserved
Tags: alter the dynamics of the knee, exercises, knee, knee extensions, knee pain, leg presses, ligaments, menisci, P.T., Pain-free program, physical therapy, relieve pain, strengthen the quads