Oh goody, my pap results are back. Said no-one, ever. I’m not the least bit concerned about my vaginal and cervical health (oh wow, did I really just write that). I don’t have a family history of cancer down south and it’s not on my secret list of life-threatening diseases.
Lungs top my hypochondriac list. I smoked like Kate Moss in my 20s and every flu season at the fist sign of a sniffle I visualise my little shrivelled-up sultana lungs. I’m not alone in catastrophising health problems.
My friend Lyn sizzled her fair British skin for five Australian summers and now every freckle and spot looks like a suspicious melanoma. My partner eats fast food, too fast: you guessed it, heart attack. (Oh wait. It’s just heartburn masquerading as a heart attack, that old chestnut!) I won’t go into my nan’s pearl-clutching constipation/bowel cancer stories.
Medical proof – shmoof! We all know what will get us in the end.
So there I was at the doctor’s surgery watching my GP clack away at his computer in that clumsy way doctors do and I’m thinking (not for the first time) ‘why aren’t GP’s better at using computers? Seriously!’
Finally, he claps his hands together, squints at the screen and says,
“Ah yes, you have a low grade squamous intraepithelial lesion, Mrs Thomas.”
“Oh, I see” is all I can manage. I’m acting all casual, like my low grade squammy something lesion was just what I was expecting to hear.
The GP looks pleased with my response and I’m pleased he’s pleased (I can’t help it! A hangover of mum’s doctor inferiority complex). So, I don’t say: “Is a lesion a cut? I saw a Tom Hanks movie where he had lesions from AIDS. OMG I must have misunderstood! Did I cut my cervix with a tampon? I don’t understand? What is this low grade squammy you speak of? Get it out!”