Wednesday, June 28
Torture Chamber
After what seemed like hours of anxious and painful waiting I was seen by the eye specialist. He began by giving me an anaesthetic in both eyes and this brought some of my sight back, but as he told me this would be short lived only giving him time to examine the eyes. I don’t know whether that was a good thing or a bad thing because all I saw for the next hour or so was needles going into my eyeballs. Funny but your natural reaction is to flinch when a needle is coming toward your eye, and so I was almost glad when my sight faded away again. His diagnosis was some kind of virus possibly picked up from one of the water parks, and he described it as like hundreds of blisters on the cornea of the eyes almost like a cold sore on the eye. He said it was very rare for both eyes to be affected and that he would prescribe some antiviral drugs. He then said I must come back the next day for further treatment, not that it mattered because my flight home had long departed. Then my new taxi driving friend Frankie was called and he came straight away to collect me for my second sightless taxi ride back to the hotel.
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travel
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3 comments:
Kriminey! Never heard of that... and believe me, it'd be on the 5 o'clock news here in the USA if that was going around on the beach.
Just like life to toss a monkey wrench like that into the works...
We can only safely assume that you recovered... or else are awful good at touch typing.
I hope the water park has been put on notice. You should consider a lawsuit.
Yeah, well, think about those of us in the United States with NO health insurance. When we get sick, we may as well go to prison and walk around picking up the soap.
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