Confined to the house
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
It all began with a blister on
my lower eyelid. I happened to rub it accidentally and it was painful.
Soon
after blisters appeared on my hands and neck. I suspected that I must be
coming down with something. My mother examined me and immediately pronounced
"chicken-pox". I had come down with chicken-pox.
She
took me to the doctor's to make sure. The doctor said that what I needed was
rest. He gave me a two- week medical certificate and some pills to keep down
the fever.
Two
weeks! I had to stay in the house for two weeks.
Very
quickly more blisters appeared all over my body. I even had some in the
throat, which made swallowing difficult. To make matters worse, I began to
get bouts of fever. At times
when the fever was raging, I seemed to drift into a kind of limbo. Things became hazy and I was not sure
whether I was dreaming or awake.
I
had a look in the mirror and saw that my face was grotesque. Red blisters
covered the whole face. I wondered if I would be scarred permanently.
So
I stayed in the house and did nothing. It was not too unpleasant except for
the fever and the extra care I had to take not to break the blisters
accidentally. Nobody came to visit me. I was forbidden to visit others. It
was customary to remain out of sight when one had chicken- pox. I had no
choice but to comply.
The
days passed. Slowly the blisters dried into dark scabs which flaked off after
a while, leaving behind little red scars. The flakes fell on the floor, on
the bed and among my clothes.
For
two weeks I remained confined to the house. At the end of the period, my
appearance had improved enough for me to go back to school. The little scars
remained there for a few more months but I was glad my enforced stay in the
house was over.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
วันอังคารที่ 1 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2556
Confined to the house
สมัครสมาชิก:
ส่งความคิดเห็น (Atom)
ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:
แสดงความคิดเห็น