22 May 2026

22.05.2026 Doing porridge.

 *

Friday 22nd Overcast.

06.00 still alive. Sitting in the comfortable armchair by the window. Two others are awake and monitoring their phones. Each relaxed in their standard issue uniforms. Of baggy white pants and shapeless, pale blue shirts. The fourth inmate is still battling demons. For his crimes against his cellmates. Don't ask!

 I was awake in the night for about an hour. Tiptoed to the toilet and fetched a glass of water. Dropped off to sleep again about 5am.

 I am expecting to be released today. After being free of pain or other symptoms. There was no mention of time off for good behaviour. So somebody is obviously taking notes.

 6.10 My first exploratory, brisk walk along the corridor is completed. It helps that we, the worst offenders, are at the far end. Which avoids unnecessary doubling back. Before the real journey can begin. 

 I'd suggest the corridor is about 60 meters long. So my cumulative mileage is adding up. I do try to stick to three round trips per hour. I'd hate to be accused of over-training at this late stage.

 Adherence to Guinness Record standards is flexible in the absence of official observers. There is little that can be done to lighten the Standard Burden of one wireless heart monitor. Though I heard one chap tried taking out the rechargeable, lead-acid battery. 

The charge nurses did not let that pass unnoticed. They were on him like ton of bricks. He was never seen on the corridor after that. No doubt propped up in a forgotten broom cupboard somewhere.

 I have even noticed patients in civvies. With the telltale loop of wires hanging  from their bulging waistlines. They can't fool an old recidivist, like me, with their subterfuge!

 Rumours that the monitors double as tasers is still unproven. Nobody has risked behavior likely to need such measures. At least, not on my present watch.

 So begins the long wait for breakfast. I keep monitoring the skies for drones. Though only gulls and pigeons have skirmished to date.

 The sheer scale of the chasms between the parallel building blocks is staggering. Puny humans crawl like ants far below. Thank god for lifts! 

 Though altitude sickness is still a daily battle. For those of us who have not acclimatized prior to admission. I am grateful for the long climbs on my daily walks. In preparation for everything the hospital can throw at us. 

 Not for nothing are Danes world class cyclists. No need for them to travel to the high mountains. They need only take the climb into the village. To fetch their morning rolls from the baker.

 7.45 The charge nurse has just been around to take my blood pressure. It's all just a ploy really. To get me to give him my password. To prove I wasn't substituted in the night. As if!

 The heavy medication continues. Ten tablets this morning. No doubt a futile attempt to erase my memory of the past few days. Before I  can meet up with a fellow conspiracy theorist. To produce an artistic video of my torture. All with the aid of AI. 

 8.30 Breakfast. Porridge of course. With a crusty roll with a tasty cheese. If I can sneak past the guards on return of the dirty paper crockery and sharp-free utensils I'll ask the kitchen staff what kind of cheese. Mellem lageret. Danish for medium mature. My usual extra mature Cheddar is being substituted with cheap Chinese imports. So I want to remain flexible on my release. 

 8.45 All hands on deck! Severe nose bleed! My brain is taking the easy route out of here. All those blood thinners have taken their toll!

 It got so bad the International TV News cameras were assembling. To capture the gory crime scene. Splatter movies doesn't even begin to cover it. Whole teams of nurses were working up a sweat. Taking it in turns at holding my nose tightly. To stop the ward beds being washed away. Cold compresses and even hydraulic clamps were tried unsuccessfully. They even brought in the charge nurse from the food dispensing window. She doubles as a bouncer at the roughest night club in town. The pain just increased. All to no avail. I was force fed ice cubes for hours and told to keep them in my mouth. 

 In the end they sent me down to Hell in a Basement. More precisely to: Ear, Nose and Throat. For further torture. A gowned and masked operative approached. From the first I didn't like the wild look in his bloodshot eyes. 

"I'll just give you a local," he muttered. As I protested through a red mist that "locals" were always far worse than the procedure itself. He nodded in half agreements as the nurse eagerly prepared a garden syringe longer than her arm. With an evil looking  20cm/8" needle protruding menacingly. 

 Which he promptly shoved up the offending nostril. Causing enough agony for tears to flow freely as I clutched his arm in undisguised terror. Then there was distant talk of burning through the searing pain. I could smell the effects all too soon. As I let out an involuntary scream and more arm clutching ensued. 

 Having had his fix at my expense. He finished me off by stuffing my poor and battered nose with some weird, white, waxy block and pointing at the exit. I was in far too much pain by then. To even care about the pretty nurse cowering by the door. Her face ashen with fear at my wild and flailing contortions. 

 So, for those with an appetite for pure torture. A form which leaves dentists trailing in a poor, tenth place. Here's your chance. E, N & T is right up your street. Or rather right  down in your local hospital cellar. Years of fun to be had and it's all perfectly legal! 

 My still writhing remains were gathered up and centered back on the hospital bed. For the journey back up to the light and the heart department. Where I was duly informed that the hospital had had its fun but I was now deemed surplus to requirements. It was a firm, "Pack your bags and prepare for departure and will you be wanting lunch?" 

 Having swallowed several liters of blood in the last three hours I was not remotely hungry at that point. So there were savings to be made there. 

 "But I came here for a stent and ended up with a free nose job!" I complained. They were still adamant. I must leave.  

 The long wait for transport began. To relive the nightmare of my morning's suffering over and over again. What happened to me can never be undone. Nor easily laundered out.  

 The one highlight of the entire day was a free ride home. In a posh, Cherry painted Tesla. Though I was not alone. There were three passengers, including myself, to save on costs. I craned my neck to admire the display screens as we worked our way steadily towards home. Via a quiet cul-de-sac for senior citizens. Where the first passenger was duly turfed out. 

 I was next. As we followed the long, rough and narrow lane. Leading eventually to Chez Hovel's very own parking space. I was home and safe again. At least for the moment. I'll ring the hospital's PTSD department on the morrow. If I am feeling strong enough. 

  My visitor did the cooking. Organic pork chops, peas, carrots, boiled potatoes and gravy. Helped down with a pleasant wine.  

 

*

21 May 2026

21.05.2026 Man Down!

                             *

 Thursday 21st. Overcast. I am finding my way around my phone keyboard as I pretend to be an influencer.

 I suffered from chest pains yesterday evening. The nurse gave me pain killers and blood thinners. She brought in the ECG? and blood pressure machines. With lightning speed she repeatedly unclipped the usual monitor leads and fitted the new. It helps to be colour coded.

 My pulse, on the screen, was the roughest looking wire net fencing imaginable! The spacing was all over the place! From an earlier, more cheerful, BP reading, it was now elevated. 

 I was shaking as if from the cold. Though the air temperature was perfectly comfortable. Thankfully the strange shivering soon passed.  

 As I struck up a conversation in Danish with a fellow inmate. The hospital helicopter had arrived. To provide the evening's only real entertainment. 

The pain stopped as the minutes crawled inexorably towards bed time. Which was a little after 10pm for me.

 It was then I discovered that memory foam pillows may not lie in my future. Though raising the bed head certainly helped. 

 A crosspiece of 2x4 will be tried on my recycled bed at home. Not with the intension of investing in a new pillow. More as a sideline in research into increased home comforts. At minimum cost of course.

 My view through the vast window nearby. Is of  the soaring cliff of another hospital building. Which runs parallel to my own spacious accommodation. The seemingly countless windows gradually lit up throughout the interminable evening.

 I slept quite well. Getting up only three times. Fortunately the toilets were just across the corridor. As I crept about in my hospital issue socks with their  grippy soles. Though I have yet to test the limits of adhesion on the corners. Nor their braking power in an emergency.

 6.30 and a new nurse did the first rounds. My blood pressure was still elevated. At least compared with yesterday's personal best.

 Last night's chest pains may have dashed any chance of a swift exit. Not by the accepted route anyway.

 Back to the necessities of life and the discovery that breakfast does not follow a strict, home timetable. An exploratory jog down the corridor left me bereft of my first fix. Of my organic Arabic coffee. Served black and pre-cooled. 

 Nor was the morning bowl of organic porridge oats forthcoming.  With the mandatory organic milk. Measured to the nearest milliliter to avoid sogginess. Or worse, to dry out. Before the very last, large flake, was carefully scraped from the pristine enamel.

 7.10 and news of the arrival of coffee and assorted juices went around. 

 We are now a man down. As the patient to my left has been released on parole. False alarm! He just had his bedding changed in his absence.

 Yet another update to his status. He was wheeled through the orderly queue at the breakfast dispensing window. With full pomp and ceremony. Something to do with a poor connection to his new pacemaker. They were going to try again. Third time lucky? 

 A new male nurse arrived. We chatted about yesterday's shenanigans. It seems I have been punctured. The catheter was too large to reach the minor plumbing features of my heart. 

 The doctor/surgeon will be around later. To decide if I get time off for good behaviour. Or must continue my enforced incarceration.

 8.25 and I joined the queue for breakfast. Porridge oats with whole milk. With a side order of a crusty brown roll and generous slices of a tasty cheese.

 The weight of the tray caused a leak. Which went unnoticed. Until my thigh and  hospital issue shirt began to look like a rather grisly crime scene!.

 The dressing had lost contact with my wrist.  On the brisk jog back to my bed. Where I sat in the comfortable armchair. Normally reserved for visitors. 

 Two nurses promptly attended to my efforts to discolour the decor. I was marched, hand held high, back to my shared cell. Where a wrist compressing bracelet was inflated. To avoid further embarrassment.

 A nice lady arrived to try and extend my enforced stay. I left it to their expertise to decide when to chuck me out. Early release, while still suffering from symptoms, is a bit of a no-no it seems.

 Lunch was a delicious tomato soup with chicken bits.

 The helicopter arrived and departed later.

 13.15 No further symptoms or pain.

Our fourth man was eventually taken away. To be replaced by yet another heart patient. I am  beginning to feel guilty at my lack of symptoms. 

 The nurse confirmed that I was not taking up a valuable bed. A recovered patient was the reward for services rendered.


                                 *

20 May 2026

20.05.2026 Admission of guilt.

 ~?~

  Wednesday 20th 53F/12C [7.00] Overcast with a day of rain forecast.

 Up at 6.30 after a difficult night. I was awake for some of the time. Rehearsing my Danish to the bus drivers. I have traveled on buses an average of once in two years and then only recently. 

I very rarely use cash. So almost never have the right fare available. There is a fair bit of negativity towards using cash. It's all phone apps, for almost everything and has been for years. 

 I need to be on the bus into the village just before 8am. Then change to the bus to Odense to the bottom of the village. There is doubtful overlap between the bus stops.  

In fact I was far too early at the hospital. At least I enjoyed a decent walk between the bus stop and hospital entrance. Then just had to sit and wait.     

 They used a balloon to inflate the narrowed artery. The stent didn't take. So I was wheeled to a small ward. With a mandatory 4 hours of monitoring.

 Then I had a recurrence of chest pain. The nurse suggested they might keep me in overnight. They will not let me go home if I am in any pain. Which is potentially boring but there we are.

 They have decided to move me to a ward overnight. To keep an eye on me.

 I am high up with a window view. Pictures tomorrow. Dinner was roast beef with potatoes, veg and brown sauce. The Danish version of gravy. Desert was vanilla ice cream in a fruity sauce. 

 BTW:  I am blogging from my phone.

 

  ~?~