Joys of Withdrawal in the Real Desert

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas Screenshot
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas Screenshot
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

 

Keeping to the theme of writing about my new, temporary, abode in the great Southwest desert, or the “Real Desert” as I like to refer to it, I’m now dipping into the less fun aspects of my refuge from the criminal element of Las Vegas and the Internet. The above title is a bit of a misnomer, anyone who has gone through withdrawal knows that there are no joys involved.

Just a lot of suffering.

This is not a complaint, just a fact. While the discomfort is not fun, it is nothing compared to the original ailment that required the painkiller to be prescribed initially. Regardless of pain levels, as any addict will tell you, getting off any drug, or pharmaceutical medication, is damned hard. Even more so when the tapering off procedure is inadvertently bypassed  because you have run out of the substance  that has taken up residence in your system for far too long.

Years ago, when I was taking a plethora of pain medication for a back condition that was finally sorted out with surgery via the NHS, I became addicted to several medications. I was naive back then; despite reading about various celebs who were all “fessing up” to being hooked on prescribed medication, I thought that becoming addicted had to do with illegal substances like, crack, heroin and so on.

I soon found out that when the stuff the good doctor has shoved in your system, via pills and potions, runs out, addiction is not so close minded or choosy. Whether the drug of choice is cocaine or valium, or Tramadol (a man-made morphine substitute) or Percocet, when you run out or try to wean yourself off the bloody stuff, life becomes upsetting and pretty unpleasant.

My retreat into the joys of withdrawal in the real desert started with giving the wrong address to the VA, after inadvertently either suffering from numerical dyslexia or just “old man idiocy” I swapped out the last two numbers in the temporary PO Box number I now have. As a result, my pain meds, and more importantly, one of my heart medications was kept for four days at the local USPS and then returned to the sender. Through a series of misinformation and a non-caring Hitler-ish type woman who runs the local post office and a ticking clock, I have been without one of my heart meds for over two weeks and my pain meds have been drastically cut down from my usual 300 mg per day to nil.

Ironically, I went in the day before the meds arrived and asked about the medicine coming in and since I  could not open the post box, could they please check for the parcels. Firstly, she refused to look in the actual post office box and then she went back in the sorting area, stood in plain view of me and the rest of the customers looking blankly at the room behind the service desk and announced, “There’s nothing back here.”

I went back a couple of days later, when my medicine was there (according to the tracking numbers) and got the same song and dance, even after explaining about my getting the PO Box number wrong, so “please, can you actually look for the parcel.”  No dice,  the woman lied to me and did not care that my heart medication had run out. I’ll deal with that later, especially since the “big” USPS office told me that the packages should have been kept a week at a  minimum and not four days.

My heart meds came in today. My pain meds are yet to arrive, but hopefully will be here tomorrow. I’ve got to take my hat off to the beleaguered VA. I rang them yesterday, the first day after President’s Day and reminded them of my plight, the lovely lady I spoke to said she would pass the details of my dilemma onto the pharmacy, who by then had my “drugs” with them.

On a side note, as stated above,  my heart meds arrived this afternoon. They’d actually been posted on February 13, the day I first rang, quite panic stricken at my dilemma, before I rang yesterday to see if they were paying attention. Way to go guys!

While the heart pills are not helping me to cope with the Tramadol withdrawal, at least now I know that I can, if needs be, exist without the heart meds for a pretty extended period of time.

I have also learned that living in the real desert, with no car, a bike out of commission, and miles away from the nearest VA facility, or bloody town for that matter, is not the best of all situations. I am away from the greedy vampire that was and is GLV and now different problems are cropping up.

On the bright side, and there is one, the weather is warm and my feet and ankles, which were so swollen from the ride back on the bike with the flat tire, have deflated from their Bugs Bunny hugeness and I can again wear something on them besides flip-flops. They still feel swollen and uncomfortable so my six mile trudge to town will have to wait for one more day.

There are other stresses that I am ill equipped to deal with, but that will change. Once the joys of withdrawal in the real desert are overcome, this old man will once more be able to deal with things that, right now, are urging a temper tantrum that would make North West at her daddy’s concert look like a fan.

Hopefully, the muscle twitching, nausea,  headache, weakness, cold symptoms and inability to think along with the struggle to not turn into a homicidal, foul-mouthed, maniac will cease by tomorrow, or the day after (Please? Big Guy?). Oh and before you ask the question of why I haven’t just gone to the local quack and gotten a prescription, answer me this, how would I pay for the visit and the drugs? Even if the VA sign off on using a non VA treatment arena, it is still co-pay. While these folks, Veterans Administration,  only charge me afterward, the doctor’s office will not be so obliging, not to mention that the stuff  not provided by the VA is damned expensive.

In the meantime, I’ll say a big “Thank you,” to the Nevada VA;  you guys rock and give the USPS another nod of thanks, they called me today, not the Hitler lady who runs Quartzsite, but the bigger more professional postal people,  to confirm that the VA had my drugs. To the large lady who runs the local USPS, I give you fair warning, address me in that tone of voice again and you’ll be amazed to see that there is an old codger who can vault your service counter and kick some manners into you. I’ll even wait calmly for the police to arrest me, from what I’ve heard from other customers, no judge in the local area will convict me.

18 February, 2015

Author: Michael Knox-Smith

Former Actor, Former Writer, Former Journalist, USAF Veteran, Former Member Nevada Film Critics Society (As Michael Smith)

8 thoughts on “Joys of Withdrawal in the Real Desert”

  1. Unfortunately, from what I can see of it, the VA insists on mail order, must be some sort of “under the table” payoff. So far, touch wood, apart from my getting used to the system, the dosages have been fine. I doubt if I can get the witch fired, it will be hard to prove when I was in there. But, like my teachers used to tell me when I was a problematic smart arse in elementary school, “I’ve got my eye on her…”

  2. I actually did get someone at our post office fired. For lying. It wasn’t even malicious. He was lazy and incompetent, and was trying to cover it up. I called the main office. I had paperwork. They followed the trail and he lost his job. Tough luck, because it’s hard to get jobs around here.Our local post office still sucks, but less without that asshole. I suppose that’s not exactly a hearty recommendation.

    Over the Christmas holidays, we watched “Miracle on 34th Street” and there’s that moment where they sing the praises of the postal system. Best laugh we had all week.

    The VA has been having its share of problems. Inadequate funding. As usual. Obama has improved the medical care situation for millions of people who never had medical insurance before. I personally know more than a dozen people who finally can go to a doctor when they are sick. Still no insurance teeth or hearing or vision … and medication is always an issue.

    The mail order thing was horrible. The meds never got here on time and it wasn’t the USPS’s fault. Half the time, the prescription was the wrong strength and once, it almost killed me. Fortunately, they made it illegal to force people to use mail order. They keep trying to sell it to us as “convenient” and “reliable” and “saves money.” If saves very little money … almost none … it is neither reliable nor convenient.

  3. I’ve had nothing but issues with the whole meds by mail thing, not to mention the whole American medical system. When I lived here before, I used the USAF for my medical needs and didn’t need the civilian system at all. Once I got out of the service and used the NHS I never gave the medical arena in the US any thought. Now I’m here and apart from all the Obama-care kerfuffle and getting used to the VA way of doing things, the postal medication delivery system and I don’t necessarily get along.

    Granted, it is usually my fault, but in Vegas, when you went down to have a chat with the USPS staff, they might not have been overly friendly, but they were helpful, this b**** was neither. As my blood pressure started reaching dangerous levels, I had to struggle not to slap the woman. Now I’ve learned that she and her little lapdog assistant lied about the parcels, I’ll be attempting to get the incompetent slag fired. Hard feelings much…Oh yes…

  4. I know you have no choice given your location and living situation, but I’ve had only bad experiences with getting meds by mail.

    Wouldn’t it be nice if we didn’t need drugs?

    Our post office substitutes stupidity and incompetence for malice. It works equally well and the results are identical.

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