In the Know
I am reading a book titled "Mother's Milk" by Edward St. Aubyn. It is an interesting book and certainly more cerebral than the light summer reading I have been devouring for the past year. As I have been reading it, I have been marking pages with quotes that make me think. All of these quotes deserve a blog post so that I can really work though them, but who has the time. I went through the first half of the book I have read so far and I picked the quote that fits my life at this moment.
"I remember complaining to my doctor about the side effects of the Ribavirin he prescribed me. "Oh, yes, that's known," he said with a kind of tremendous infectious calm. Mind you, when I told him about a side effect that wasn't known, he dismissed it by saying, 'I've never heard of that before.'" (p.103)
Perhaps the quote is not as interesting when taken out of context, but nonetheless it speaks to me. It speaks to me about the known versus the unknown and how sometimes our brains help us to "unknow" the things we know to be true.
I had an attack of pelvic pain the other night. When Matt asked me how long it had been happening, I couldn't tell him because I didn't know exactly. I remember thinking the last time that it happened "I should probably call my doctor because this feels like the pain from my ovarian cyst." Did I call my doctor? No. I moved on and convinced myself that it was a one time thing and it would take care of itself. That was over 3 months ago and the pain keeps returning. I knew something was wrong, but my brain dismissed it and turned it into the unknown.
I called the doctor today and made an appointment to make the unknown known.

