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Monday, June 9th, 2008 04:28 pm
I'm beginning to lose patience with a certain category of people. Oh, I'm not proactively rude, but I no longer accept some pronouncements unquestioned.

"I can't swallow pills," someone said to me once. Well, I carefully didn't say, you better not live to be much older. (NB: This person had no dramatic anatomical weirdness. She could swallow food and drink.) Seriously, who lives to middle age without learning to cope with swallowing pills? Heck, who gets to COLLEGE age and hasn't learned to cope with that one? I felt like she was bragging that she was still five years old inside, and a spoiled five at that.

I remember a recent comment in a friend's journal about not dealing well with needles. I can relate. I used to faint -- no kidding here, FAINT -- at the sight of needles in use. I now inject myself daily. I don't LIKE it, don't get me wrong, but I DO it. There are certain special-snowflake attributes that I simply no longer have the luxury of keeping.

"Restrictive diets don't work for me," said a coworker of mine at lunch today, referring to what I don't eat on the Lyme/antibiotic/yeast-control diet. And this time, I spoke up.

"They don't?" I said. Like you're so special, I didn't say, that if you got this disease you would somehow be above managing it. "What if you knew that eating ice cream would make you pretty sick?" I asked instead. "What if you knew it would land you in the hospital, what then? Where's the line?"

He readily rephrased, saying he has no strong motivation to lose weight; I agreed that I could totally understand that, and we rambled off on side topics.

I think I'm beginning to see that in some cases, "special snowflake" translates to "I've been very lucky in certain ways and I take it for granted." I don't have nearly as much patience with that as I once had.

Bad me, for having little patience? Maybe, but y'know, I'm not at all sure of that.
Tuesday, June 10th, 2008 02:59 pm (UTC)
Needles were my thing too...then I started giving plasma in college and it became an irregular source of income. I gave blood a few times after that too. After becoming prego, fugetabut anyone caring about needle phobia.
My eight years younger sister was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at age 11. I'd watch her routine and feel such pity for her. I am ashamed of my past inmature feelings b/c of her. I feel like she was unlucky in the big sis department, at times.

I know someone who has those annoying attributes you describe...attributes that seem egregious on a 40-something woman, and some days it's easier to bite my tongue be polite company and all. But, SOME DAYS?! Ugh.