Sechin Tower
@SechinTower
Yesterday was the first day of my summer vacation so, of
course, I came down with a 100 degree fever.
This seems happens to a lot of people: we push ourselves
through all manner of storm and stress without slowing down and then, BOOM, we
fall apart after it’s all over. I know people who had to cancel a trip to
Hawaii because of an ill-timed illness just like this.
Why does it work like that? Why do so many people get sick on their long-awaited vacation?
I’m not prone to illness (I haven’t needed to take a sick
day all year), but it’s no mystery how I wore myself out this time. For a teacher
in my position, the weeks before graduation are the most stressful of the year
as I scramble to certify (or deny) potential graduates before they can walk across
that stage. Every year there are triumphs and tears, angry parents and elated
parents, and, paperwork, paperwork, paperwork.
I go through a similar cycle when writing. As I’m
approaching the end of a book, I feel a rush to get those final chapters on
paper. Actually, it’s a lot like graduation in that it’s such a huge turning-point,
when everything has to be completed and started. It weighs so heavily on my
mind that I figure as long as I can’t sleep anyway I might as well get up and
do something about it.
So that brings me to right now, and, if you’d like to know,
I’m still feeling miserable. Luckily, I didn’t have stomach trouble or sore
throat or many of the other cold symptoms. My problem is that there seems to be
no way to sit that’s comfortable, and I fluctuate between being too hot and too
cold. The biggest trouble is the lethargy: I keep thinking that I should get up
off the couch, but then I don’t. So I just sit there thinking it’s a fortunate
coincidence that I don’t really have anywhere I need to go.
Or is that coincidence? We all know how germs are
transferred, but I haven’t heard a cough in months or seen anyone so much as a
sniffle. It’s summer, after all, and we’re as far from cold and flu season as we
can get. So where did I pick up the germs that gave me this fever?
My guess is that I’ve had it for a while, and my immune
system has been holding it at bay just well enough to deal with it later. It
takes a lot of energy to battle an illness—as evidenced by the fact that I’m so
freakin’ exhausted after doing absolutely nothing—so the immune system bides
its time until the resources are available, like the way your computer only scans
for viruses when you’re not using any other apps.
Somehow, I must have sent out a signal that it was finally
okay to relax, and my system said “Great! Let’s take care of that overdue
cleanup.”
When you think about it, that’s pretty amazing. All those
tiny little T-cells and leucocytes and whatever other things we have to fight
infection seem like they shouldn’t be that smart. After all, they don’t have
brains, and we can’t make a conscious decision about using them, so you’d think
their reactions would be automatic and immediate, with no alteration in their
programmed behavior. And yet, they’re part of such a miraculous system that
they can work in harmony with the rest of us, detecting our mood and perceived stress,
biding their time while we’re busy and then swinging into high gear when we’re
not.
It makes me see how amazing the human body really is… even
though mine feels awful at the moment.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go drink some fluids
and go back to sleep. If I’m lucky, by tomorrow I’ll actually be good for
something.
Sechin
Tower is a teacher, a table-top game designer, and the author of Mad Science Institute. You can read more
about him and his books on SechinTower.com
2 comments:
Two words: chicken soup
Sorry you're sick, Sechin. Indulge in a little "me" time therapy and take care, buddy.
Thanks, Jordan.
I hope this post was coherent because I was a little out-of-it when I wrote it. It's probably riddled with typos.
I wrote this last night and I'm glad to say feeling much better today.
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