It must have
been something I ate.
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It seemed
like it all happened at once. The heat broke. The rains came. And I spent the
night hunched over the commode.
It is a
wonderful thing when the heat breaks, more-so this year as we sweltered under
an unrelenting heat bubble.
When the
rains come, immediately the temperatures drop, twenty degrees this year. Plants
of all species lift their heads and drink largely. Birds lift their beaks in
the happiest of songs. Bugs of all descriptions line up outside my door, hoping
for easy entry, all seeking a dry bed for the night.
The chicken
stir-fry, graciously given to me by Tom next door, only had a couple leftover
shrimps finely chopped into the entire huge panful of delicious goodness, not
even enough for me to see the evidence. My stomach knew. Afterward.
This is a
recent development in my life, this sensitivity to shrimp. Began about a year
ago, after a sumptuous shrimp dinner at the elegant Restaurante Don Luis up the
mountain. Proofed it with a dish of ceviche from another neighbor, the best
I’ve ever eaten and I love ceviche. That was enough for me. I determined to
never eat shrimp again. Nobody should ever be that sick.
This
go-around it was invisible shrimp, innocently given and innocently received.
Tom and Janet didn’t know I’d developed this reaction to shrimp and I didn’t
know the chicken stir-fry, which I eagerly scarfed up, contained just that
miniscule bit of the sea creature.
I did the
thing I tell friends and family to avoid. I consulted the oracle of
mis-information. It told me that one can develop allergies in old-age. It said,
“Yes, Virginia, thou shalt eat no more of shellfish, including crustaceans and mollusks
of any kind, or the by-products thereof.”
Shrimps,
okay, I don’t mind. But no more crab cakes at JJ’s Fish House in Poulsbo. No
more oysters on the half shell at the beach. No lobster. No calamari, no
octopus, no clams. No scallops. The list is long.
It’s been
several days, long enough for my plants to take on new life, for dead stalks to
resurrect, for the sweetest gecko to take up residence in my house along the
wall behind my computer desk.
I’m sure I’ll
crawl out of my cave soon. This round of retching wiped out my entire physical system.
I’ll get better. I will.
Please
forgive me for popping in with a “Hi” and a “Bye”. It’s all I’ve got today.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door in July
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