A little step back in time as I recount
a true story of events experienced by me
in the hospital after hip replacement surgery.
The hallucinations were as real as my 2008 accident
and I remember even the minutest of details.
Originally published in 2021.

“Use the call button on the side panel of your bed if you need a nurse. My shift is almost over. Can I get you anything before I leave?”
It took me a few seconds to remember where I was as I stared at the friendly face of the nurse standing over me.
“Pain meds would be lovely” I answered, grimacing.
“You’re hooked up to a morphine drip; you should begin to feel much more comfortable very soon. Until then, try to get some rest” the nurse suggested.
I had been in an accident a day or two earlier, falling off a three-foot-high deck and landing on my left side with tremendous impact. As I lay stunned on the hard ground, my face resting on my outstretched left arm, I felt absolutely nothing. I thought I had survived the fall unscathed. Then I realized I could not move my feet or wiggle my toes. When the emergency medical teams arrived, they tried to gently and ever so slowly shift my body in order to slide a stretcher under me. That’s when it hit. Moving even a millimeter caused the most excruciating pain I had ever experienced in my life. It shot all the way down my motionless leg to my unmoving Apple Green painted toenails.
My hip was not broken; it was demolished.
I’m a firm believer that copious amounts of pain medication should be dispensed frequently to patients in need. I smiled wanly at the nurse and asked for my iPhone; while I waited for the morphine to take me to another dimension, I would lose myself in my playlist.
If you’re sick or injured, a hospital is the last place you want to be. Trying to rest is next to impossible. Patients pleading, buzzers buzzing, machines murmuring, carts careening, elevators elevating, doctors discussing, nurses needling. Even the mourning doves who kept watch on my windowsill were cooing ceaselessly.
I slipped in my earbuds and cued up The Beatles “Helter Skelter“. No matter how horrendous I may be feeling at any given moment, listening to that masterpiece makes life perfect for 4 minutes and 29 seconds.
Someone wheels in my dinner cart. Lifting the lid I see a salad, a medium-rare hamburger, a beverage and a pint of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream. Not feeling hungry just yet, I go through my collection of albums trying to decide which one to play. Ah, “Revolver”. You can never go wrong with that beauty. I close my eyes and revel in the brilliance of “Tomorrow Never Knows”.
I’m suddenly aware of a rush of air and find I am now outside floating uptown over the streets of Manhattan, my hospital gown flapping like laundry on a clothesline. I hear the old Klaxon car horn sound of “AHOOGA!” behind me and swivel round to see a flying ice cream truck being driven by none other than John Lennon. Somehow, as bizarre as it all is, it seems perfectly normal.
“You getting in? We don’t want to be late” John says.
“Late for what?” I ask.
“For whatever comes next” John replies with a grin and I slide onto the seat beside him. “It’s very rude to be late, isn’t it?” and we zoom off.
“AHOOGA!!“
“What’s on your bucket list, me darlin’?” John asks me and I answer without hesitation “To go to Liverpool!”
“Ah, lovely Liverpool. I won’t be going back there again, I’m afraid. Next stop: The Dakota!” John calls out and we swoosh away.
“No, John. You mustn’t!” I beg him and I start to cry.
“Oh, but I must! Now dry those green eyes. It is my destiny and we can’t change that.“
He was silent for a moment, deep in thought, then he spoke very quietly to me:
“Nancy girl, listen to what I’m going to say. Aim for the stars. Love with your whole heart. Work hard. Be the best person you can be but never ever forget to have fun. Time is fleeting and tomorrow never knows so always eat dessert first. Got it? Good! Now, let’s be on our way.”
As I nod in agreement I can hear the faint words “Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream.”
And in a flash John and his flying ice cream truck are gone.
I open my eyes and gingerly prop myself up on my hospital bed pillow. Dinner is still there, right where I left it, and I find I’m suddenly starving. Ignoring everything else on my tray, I go directly to the Ben & Jerry’s, pop open the container of ice cream and dig in.
And in that moment I realize nothing in my life ever tasted so delicious.
NAR © 2023
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At The Movies.
I think you’re gonna like it!
https://rhythmsection.blog/

When in doubt The Beatles and Ben and Jerry do the trick!💕
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Yes, ma’am! Every single time! Did you catch the name of the ice cream flavor in the graphic? Pretty cool! It’s actually a real flavor by B&J! 😎
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gotta love that title!!! whirled peace works for me!!! 🥰
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Hobbo!! He’s in this thread! I do so miss him… I’m sure he’s eating his ice cream first every day now.
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I saw that, Misky, and just figured I’d leave it where it was. I miss him, too.
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Absolutely correct: the last place you want to be when you’resick is the hospital.
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No offense to our good medical people here on WordPress but having to stay in the hospital is brutal and just as rough for the good folks who work there!
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The mind is a wonderful thing, and you’re brilliant!
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Wow! I was going to ask “Can I get that in writing?” but you already came through for me! What an amazing compliment, Kelly! Thank you! I will try not to let it go to my head. 🤯
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Sorry about your hip, but what a great morphine trip.
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Thanks, Staci! Rehab was not easy but I was fortunate and healed very nicely. Fifteen years later and my hip doesn’t bother me at all.
To describe it as a “trip” is not an exaggeration; it was as real for me as this very moment in time that I’m writing to you and is still perfectly clear in my memory bank. What a freakin’ journey of the mind!
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Our brains are amazing things. But who’s to say it wasn’t “real” in some way? If it made an impact on you, it was real. Or real enough, anyway.
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Well, what an amazing hallucination! I would call it a gift, my friend. John in a flying B&J truck, no pain, who could ask for anything more.
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Absolutely right, D! I was so sure it happened, too! I recorded what I experienced in the phone I was using at the time. Since 2008 I have had many phones and no longer have that morphine-induced recording. Too bad! At least I remembered to write it down!
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Great tale, I hope B & J still come first
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Always! I could live on that stuff! Thanks, Deb!
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This is awesome! A dream or a hallucination?
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Definitely a hallucination. I also thought I saw an army of bugs marching up and down the foot of my hospital bed. That morphine can really play a number on your head.
Thanks Sadje!
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Yes, morphine has that effect.
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So many flakes of gold here, cara, that not only I enjoyed reading but resonated deeply.
From the “If you’re sick or injured, a hospital is the last place you want to be” to my favorite “What’s on your bucket list, me darlin” lots of potential unpacking…if the reader takes a moment and actually “tastes” what you are offering beyond your accident story…
…and let me tell ya, ” its a taste of honey…tasting much sweeter than wine”!
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Thanks so much, Nick! I know you know what I’m talking about! I definitely appreciate that fact.
I also saw what you did there; very clever, Nick. Very clever!
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The Beatles are my favourite group and that brilliant quote from George Harrisons ‘within you, without you’ masterpiece, rounded off a fine piece of writing Nancy.
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Thank you so much, Hobbo. The Beatles are also my favorite group. Many of my story names are Beatles’ song titles. They inspire me all the time, often in ways that sneak up and surprise me. I’m glad you liked the story.
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👍 You are welcome.
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