Influenza
“A
physician is not angry at the intemperance of a mad patient,
nor
does he take it ill to be railed at by a man in fever.
Just
so should a wise man treat all mankind, as a physician does his patient,
and
look upon them only as sick and extravagant.”
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
[NB. Back in the days when another, thankfully less virulent virus was running its course around the world, I contracted swine flu. Below is an account of my ordeal. It suffices to say that swine flu was sufficiently awful, so I am grateful to have avoided covid-19 thus far. In light of the current crisis, I thought it might be useful to re-post this tale.]
I. Incubation
It was the summer
of 2009. I had always been churlishly disinclined towards anything so
exhibitionistic as ‘panic’: the growing public alarm at the prospective swine
flu pandemic met with my typical cold and tight-lipped disapproval. I had been
at Singapore
airport at the time of the bird-flu hysteria, and had tutted at all the poor
fools scampering around in their ineffectual face masks. The scaremongering
surrounding bird flu had been conclusively proven to be bogus, and I was thus
ill-disposed to humour the breathless threats of swine flu. So people were
dying – bah, people die of ‘common’ flu, and a million other things besides. If
people stopped dying – then would be a time to worry.
I was
particularly incensed by the blind condescension of the public health
proclamations: call me fastidious, but I was already in the habit of washing my
hands more than once a day, and of throwing away used tissues (did some people
collect them, perchance, and dry them on radiators for later re-use?). Perhaps
the government feels it incumbent to assume that general standards of hygiene
are not much improved since the age of typhoid and cholera; or indeed that
people in general are stupid (predictably there is no argument from me on that
score).
As the spread of
the contagion grew more tangible, I took the time to note the supposed symptoms
(in my guise of Health & Safety Officer, I am obliged to feign a little
interest). Like TB, depression, and apparently syphilis, flu may be deemed one
of the Great Imitators, insofar as its numerous symptoms are easily mistaken
for something completely different (how often do we hear the term ‘flu-like
symptoms’ used to describe any undefined malady?). Indeed on any given day I
could feasibly present with half a dozen supposed symptoms of swine flu:
headache, tiredness, nausea, loss of appetite, aches, and general malaise. Such
of course are equally symptomatic of melancholia, and as such are as
commonplace as waking and breathing and scowling.
When I noted that
my headache was persisting for a fortnight, I began to suspect that this was a
more than ordinary malady. Back in my heyday of weekly migraines, I did study
the surrounding subject, and drew meagre consolation from reading of numerous cases
of chronic headache lasting several years. Thankfully the introduction
of temazepam into my diet has drastically curtailed my disposition for the sick
headache (now two or three a year, rather than 50), but the mild variety of the
headache remains a frequent visitor.
But I digress. My
two-week headache had quite outstayed its welcome; given the supposedly short
incubation period of influenza, it was safe to say that the mal de tête
was not in itself an indicator of the flu. Furthermore, I had been in contact
with no known contagious vermin, indeed I had been more brutishly unsociable
than usual.
II. Manifestation
When I awoke it
was no longer a playful fancy that I was harbouring the dread disease. My brow
was flushed, I had the energy of a broken-backed sloth, and I ticked more than
enough boxes for the NHS Direct swine flu diagnostics to condemn me as a
suspected patient. And yet (I told myself, clearly already convulsed in the
sticky embrace of delirium) I must go to work, for no one else was around to
open up the office. One might argue that it was a tad reckless of me to shamble
onto public transport when at the height of contagiousness, but I could always
reason that I was merely returning the favour: given that I had been in contact
with no confirmed carriers, and had not received any ricin-flavoured missives
in the post, it was my conclusion that some scabby mongrel on a bus, or perhaps
a phlegm-fingered checkout assistant at Tesco, had contaminated my noble
sanctum.
I did not linger
long at work – long enough to communicate electronically with the rabble to the
effect that I was plague-stricken (which of course I could have done from
home), and to hand over my suitably sterilised keys to the only poor soul who
was in that day.
I retired to bed
with Britney and Girls Aloud. I was not tired enough to sleep: who indeed could
sleep when such enticing sirens were caressing the ear with their gorgeous
melodies? I then changed tack and reclined to the bittersweet indulgence of
Burt Bacharach. There can be no setback in life that the music of BB cannot ameliorate.
Unfortunately it proved too efficacious, insofar as my mood was lightened as by
the lambent flame of dawn, and I felt more than capable of getting out of bed
and bouncing around (not literally, I hasten to add).
By early evening
the sense of sickness doubled back on me. My body ached abominably. My ribs, my
shoulder blades, my midriff, my thighs, my upper arms, all vied to crush me
with a senseless pain. At least a bruise or a broken bone has good reason to
hurt, but why should pain enshroud a body for no obvious cause?
III. Isolation
And so began in
earnest my quarantine from the human race. I will not waste valuable paragraph
space in declaring that, under other circumstances, I would scornfully welcome
any such avoidance of social contact. Such was the unsettling effect of my
(suspected) diagnosis that I soon discarded any sense of one-upmanship; there
was a frisson of fear – people had died of this – and the accompanying
acknowledgment that for all my Weltschmerz, I was not in fact ready to
be extinguished.
The next morning
did bring Tamiflu, and the realisation that ‘flu-like symptoms’ is not simply a
euphemism for feeling like shit. The one saving grace of aching all over is that
one does not focus on any specific pain, although I rapidly concluded that if
this creaking bodily discomfort is a precursor of old age, I should very gladly
spill my heart’s blood sooner rather than later.
And what of
Tamiflu? I have been asked if it helped, and can offer only vague observations.
It does not promise to cure influenza, merely to detain the virus from
spreading further in the body (hence the importance of taking it straight away
and not losing a day – oh wait…). I cannot say that my symptoms worsened once I
began the course, although I could shrug and say that only coma and death would
have been worse than the way I then felt. I cannot reasonably say that my
symptoms improved once I began the course. I did experience initial nausea, but
given that nausea is equally a symptom of the disease as of the cure, and that
furthermore I have a touch of nausea on most days, I did not permit it to alarm
me.
But what of the
fatigue? Just as a migraine is not simply a bad headache, so now did I realise
that flu is not just a bad cold. Indeed other than a slight cough I had no real
symptoms of the classic head cold. Flu inveigles itself far deeper into one’s
core. I freely admit to laziness – I celebrate it. I love to crown a lazy
weekend afternoon with a little nap. Laziness is a choice, an indulgence;
brain-sapping, muscle-sapping tiredness is not. Much as one who has never
experienced depression cannot fathom the true hopelessness of the void, one who
has never been floored by fatigue cannot imagine its paralysing weakness. On
one occasion I dragged myself to the kitchen to make some tea and toast; the
simple necessity of standing up for more than a few seconds, and the negligible
manual effort of preparing a little sustenance, was so shattering that I then
had to go back to bed. As I write this, it seems pathetic and laughable; at the
time I was going out of my mind. Now, it seems monstrous that I permitted such
a lapse into invalidity, but I actually did reach a stage of such whimpering
self-denial that I felt incapable even of putting on a CD or DVD, so onerous
was the concentration demanded, so unflinching was my sickly certainty that I
could not be entertained.
Such was my
prevailing sense of stagnation that I could not even muse on such idle themes as
why Americans insist on calling paracetamol ‘acetomenophin’ (neither exactly
flows off the tongue – could they not call it something catchy?). By the
Tuesday – the day I finished the course of Tamiflu and so by rights should have
felt some improvement – I had strayed into the most dangerous stage of any
affliction: self-pity. On day one, the faint prospect that I could be dead in
days played on my mind, but only as a teasing possibility (the way that the
realisation of unlikely but statistically feasible death during a routine
operation might flicker in one’s thoughts). By day five the sheer physical
enfeeblement distressed me: if walking a few steps made me feel sick, what else
was there to do but wallow in the cess-pool of lethargy?
IV. Remission
In my greater
than usual discomposure, I began to think of my isolation as a leper-like
quarantine, yet here I am, capable of bouts of ferocious unsociability. Of
course when a life of hermit-like reclusion is voluntary it can be a means to
attain a freedom from the world and its invidious obligations. When
house-arrest is thrust upon you to contain you from the world, it is a little
less salutary (though to be fair, I had so little strength I wonder if I could
actually have descended two flights of stairs).
By the close of
the week my spirits had mustered themselves into some form of resistance, if
only to preserve me from spending another afternoon groaning on the sofa in
front of Channel 4’s afternoon film (yes, the 1959 Journey To The Center [sic]
Of The Earth does not get any better). The aches and pains lessened, to the
extent that I could stand up for long enough to make a sandwich. I could
concentrate for long enough to read.
I could even see
the light at the end of the proverbial tunnel, and actually see the real
light of day, for one is no longer considered contagious on completion of a
course of Tamiflu – with the key proviso, as my GP sagely advised, that one
should still keep away from neo-natal units and the like (because the first
thing anyone recovering from a potentially dangerous illness wants to do is
spend time around newborn babies).
V. Reflection
What are the
benefits of illness? That it forces us to rest, to abstain from physical
activity, and thereby to take stock from what consolation the mental faculties
can offer? To what extent is sweaty, nauseous self-absorption a benefit, when
so much of existence is contrived to obviate the barren confines of the self?
The melancholy penchant for navel-gazing loses its appeal when every last wisp
of navel fluff has been teased. So no, in this instance I did not find the
abundant ‘time to think’ therapeutic.
What else? Cynic
that I am, it is obligatory to celebrate the fortuitous weight loss that
illness so often brings. During the quarantine period itself I cannot have lost
any weight – true, my appetite was diminished, but how many calories does it
take to flop on the sofa all day? It was only with the return to everyday
activities that the after-effects of flu could be noted. I was tired; my
energies were low, and I still had lingering aches. Post-viral myalgia (muscle
pain) was not an uncommon occurrence (so my GP advised me) – surprisingly,
despite my leanings towards hypochondria, I did not dwell on whether this
myalgia would blossom into fibromyalgia or some gloomy post-viral auto-immune
disease (after all, it’s never lupus).
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