No thanks, I'll pass on
passing out, that is. Have you heard about these folks that pass out
on purpose? Auto-asphyxiation it's called, or
erotic-asphyxiation if done during sex. From what I've read, the
pass-out junkies put something over their faces or clamp off their
windpipes until the sudden loss of oxygen creates an
endorphin-release high and sense of giddiness. In the erotic version,
the black-out process reportedly increases sexual pleasure and amps
up the orgasm. Now I've passed out three times in my life – not
during sex, though, I try to stay awake for that! – and all I ever
got was perspiration, puke, and pee. And embarrassed. Maybe I wasn't
doing it right. You be the judge.
Pass Out #1
A
hot September, definitely Indian summer, found me living back home in
Missouri with my parents after leaving my first husband. In need of a
job and place to live in a hurry – I love Mama and Daddy, I do, but
not to live with! – I decided a spiffy new hairdo would boost my
confidence and be a first step into my new solo life. I tracked down
an old friend from high school who had become a super stylist, and
she gave me the glam treatment: cut, mousse job, blow dry, curling
ironing, and a final shellacking with hairspray that could withstand
a wind tunnel. I looked fabulous!
Before meeting Mama at
her work at Montgomery Ward and then having lunch together at Orange
Julius, I took my new “do” out to run errands, check out
apartments, and give blood. That last item might seem like an odd
thing to do, but since I had moved away I hadn't donated blood once
and felt guilty. Word of caution: Be careful what you feel guilty
about because it may rear up and bite you in the ass.
Even though I was
running around like a chicken with its head cut off, I got everything
done and made it to the store even before Mama's lunch break. She
parked me in an empty back office to wait for her. No problem, I can
amuse myself and rest a bit. I plopped on a 1950s metal desk, dangled
my legs, and hummed a Skynyrd tune so as not to hear my stomach
growling. I had declined the offer of a post-donation snack to save
my calories for lunch. The Red Cross had some fine snacks, too –
Little Debbie Nutty Bars and Oatmeal Creme Pies, Goldfish crackers,
orange drink that tastes just like Tang – what a dummy I was to
skip all that.
I grabbed a Ward's
sales circular and began thumbing through to get my mind off food.
Not a good distraction, though, too much reminder of the
clearance-rack clothes Mama always bought that made me feel even more
uncool than I already was in high school. I decided to head on down
to Orange Julius and wait for her there.
I jumped off the desk
to go tell Mama my plan and WHOA NELLIE! The room started to spin and
take me with it. My gut bottomed out, leaving me feeling hollow as a
gourd inside. Intense heat radiated from my empty belly through my
entire body. Sweat beads popped out like a dam burst, especially on
my freshly-coiffed scalp. The store sounds turned muffled as if I had
dove underwater. The last thing I heard was a dull thud as my
forehead slammed into an Army-surplus steel filing cabinet, which was
just my height. Wasn't that nice for it to “catch” me like that
and save me from falling face down onto the concrete floor?
Faces I didn't know
were staring down at me when my eyes opened. A lady was fanning me
with a summer catalog, another wiped my face with a damp paper towel.
I wasn't sure where I was, but I was sure every piece of my clothing
was stuck to whatever I was lying on like I had just showered fully
dressed. The faces' mouths were moving, but my ears still weren't
working right. I tried to unstick myself and get up when black
splotches floated before my eyes and even more sweat poured out of
me, a river of it ran down my scalp and pooled under my neck. I
stayed put.
After more fanning and
dabbing and a couple sips of ice water brought to my lips by a
grandmotherly gal, my ears cleared and the splotches stopped
floating.
“Are
you alright?” I heard from the water lady. “My goodness, we heard
a racket of banging and crashing in the receiving office and found
you keeled over flat on the floor. You must've hit your head hard,
look at that welt coming up on your forehead. What in the world were
you doing in there? And who in the world are you?”
Making no sense of all
those words, I croaked out Mama's name and somebody went to fetch her
from major appliances. Without needing a mirror, seeing Mama's face
told me “whatever happened was bad and I looked even worse.”
Her
face wasn't kidding. When I was finally able to extricate myself from
the sweaty vinyl sofa in the ladies lounge, bathroom mirrors were
everywhere. My fancy hairdo was plastered to my head in the back and
on one side, shellacked now with hairspray and
sweat, while the other side was still poofy and styled. I looked like
both the “before” and “after” pictures in a makeover
magazine. The filing cabinet impression on my forehead was plumping
like a hot dog under the skin, quickly morphing from blood red to
bruised plum. My eye makeup, which I took extra time with that
morning to accent the new hairstyle, had run halfway down my face in
a waterfall of sweat. And my clothes? They hung on me as if I'd put
them on straight from the washing machine.
Turns
out you shouldn't run around all morning on a hot day and empty
stomach, give blood, and then get up too fast. Not unless you want to
pass out cold, ruin your “do,” and resemble a drowned rat. Not
unless you like being carried to the ladies lounge by two burly
warehouse dudes you don't even know, driven home by your daddy
because you can't see straight, then fill your belly and crash for
five hours before you feel like yourself again. Take my word for it.
Pass Out #2
Trying to pack too
many to-dos into too little time makes me crazy, but it's just my
way. This day was no exception.
I was scheduled to do
a one-to-five shift at my receptionist gig at a day spa, then I would
see two massage therapy clients of my own there afterward. That would
shoot the afternoon and evening, but I could still cram more into my
morning. After the household chores I deemed “necessary” – most
likely laundry or grocery buying, I don't remember – I got in an
hour of aerobics with a workout DVD and worked up a hellacious sweat.
And appetite.
Besides all that it
was time to give blood again, and today was the day. The Community
Blood Center's promo to kick off the summer donation drive was on its
last day, and I wanted a free t-shirt. Bad. The caption read,
“'Iguana' give blood. I did, I did give blood!,” surrounding
dancing iguanas in fiesta-colored sombreros and serapes. Just my kind
of funky casual wear. So, after a quick shower, I hauled ass to the
CBC to donate. My heart must've been pumping like an oil derrick at
warp speed, because I was done in record time. Having learned my
lesson from the Monkey Ward's incident, I even sipped Tang and
nibbled a few Goldfish crackers before leaving.
Perfect. I still had
time to grab a mini-bun tuna sandwich and Cheddar Sun Chips at Subway
on the way to work. Perfect day as well, cloudless blue sky and low
humidity, to have my lunch picnic-style on the stoop outside the
spa's back door and soak up some sun.
The tuna and chips
were delish, at least what I tasted while scarfing them down and
watching my watch. Still had time for a quick cigarette before work.
Nothing like a smoke to settle my stomach after a meal, which was a
bit jumpy from all the running around.
If you're not a
smoker, you wouldn't have experienced that having a cigarette after a
couple of drinks (of the alcoholic variety) seems to intensify the
buzz. It's true, light up and all of a sudden you feel more drunkety
drunk. So I'm not sure if it was the effect of having a smoke,
smoking too fast, eating too fast, or all of the above plus pumping
out my blood sprint-style, but when I stood up to go into work it was
WHOA NELLIE time again. Here came the popping sweat, racing heart,
hollow gut, and underwater ears. This time I knew exactly what was
happening. It didn't help. I plopped down on my butt hard on the
stoop, and that's all I remember.
Some time later, I do
remember thinking I was dead. I heard soft, heavenly music when my
ears woke up. Everything was dark except for a faint glow around me.
I was lying on something cushy, cocooned by a blanket. This is my
funeral, I am in a coffin popped into my head, even though I had
expressly asked to be cremated. Then someone touched me on the
shoulder. I sat up with a jolt and the room spins. I wasn't dead but
wished I was. Especially after Sheila, the spa owner who had come to
check on me, filled in the disgusting details I had been thankfully
blacked out through.
According to her, when
I plopped down I must have keeled over sideways, my face coming to
rest ever so UN-gently on the cement. Despite the crimson bull's-eye
on my cheek, this was really quite fortunate as I then upchucked my
picnic all over the stoop. Had I passed out on my back, I might have
drowned, or if I had slumped forward, I certainly would have soiled
my outfit. So it could have been worse.
When I wasn't at my
desk at one o'clock, Sheila came looking for me in my usual smoking
spot and found me when the back door hit my inert body. She and
another massage therapist helped me to a therapy room – she claimed
I was walking but that was news to me – put me on the massage
table, lit some candles, covered me up because I was drenched in
sweat, and let me sleep it off.
I'm proud to say I did
manage to finish the last two hours of my shift after my doze, even
with hair that looked like a cow had lick-styled it and smelling of
eau de sweat. Luckily, there is dim lighting for ambiance in the
reception area so maybe none of the clients noticed my “hair-don't,”
and I kept a candle burning on my desk to squelch my stench. I'm
embarrassed to say I didn't have enough mojo to massage my clients
and I bailed on them. And I'm ashamed to say I did not thank the
person who policed up my puke. I didn't even ask who did it; I just
couldn't. But the next time I had a stoop smoke the evidence was
gone, leaving only a whiff of tainted tuna in the sweltering summer
air to remind me of the picnic-upchuck pass-out.
Pass Out #3
My blood-giving days
are over. No, I wasn't banned for being an idiot and passing out
twice, although I probably should have been since my post-donation
dramas, while amusing (now), don't bode well for enticing new donors.
Now I would still love to be able to offer my blood, but I am
considered a “permanent deferral” due to a diagnosis I was given
when a doctor was trying to rule out my having tuberculosis. Damn
doctors don't know how to mind their own business. I don't have TB,
never did have. I don't consider myself to have the diagnosed ailment
either. But still I was honest in my disclosure, therefore the ban
stands. So now I donate plasma. And get paid for it. I guess honesty
does pay off in the long run.
I've got this
plasma-donation routine down too. My appointments are scheduled for
my days off or after work, that way I'm not overtaxing my body. I
take a quickie nap afterward, leaving me feeling refreshed and not
drained the rest of the day. Plus, I amp up my hydration and protein
on plasma days, two key components of a successful donation. Over a
decade had passed since my last pass-out, and I'd never had an issue
with donating plasma until . . . I monkeyed with the routine.
Why I did things
differently, I don't recall. Probably a case of post-plasma pass-out
amnesia impeding my memory. Instead of sleeping in that day, I got up
early and rushed around working out and writing. Instead of having my
protein smoothie just before leaving to donate, I drank it right
after I woke up and ate nothing else. Despite feeling a might hungry
and tired, my donation went fine. I was feeling so fine, that I had a
quickie smoke on the way home even though they recommend waiting an
hour afterward. No problem, I thought, I have this down pat.
I thought wrong.
Getting up out of my car when I got home, the woozies set in. DMan
came into the kitchen to greet me, and his sturdy hug settled me
down. I just need to eat something, I told myself, and I'll be all
better. Wrong again. I slapped chunky peanut butter on a slice of
bread and nibbled it over the sink. My knees buckled after three
bites, and I grabbed the sink. The sound of DMan's noon news from the
TV started fading in my ears. After a fast flash of heat, sweat
started to pour despite my being chilled from the donation-ending
flush of saline and frigid temperature outside. I was right
about this – I was going down.
But I didn't hit the
ground, that was a good thing. Otherwise DMan would have heard the
thud, come running, and witnessed the unfolding spectacle. No, my
body jackknifed into the sink, my feet barely touching the floor
while my forehead came to rest on the plastic mat on the garbage
disposal side. Somehow my mind was working enough to say, “Chew,
chew. Don't swallow or you'll choke.” I kept chewing in sloooow
motion, the wad of doughy peanut butter swelling more in my mouth
with every chew. Then I felt another flash of warmth, this time down
my thighs. My bladder had blacked out as well, and I was powerless to
stop the trickle of pee saturating my jeans. When things go wrong for
me, they go WAY wrong. But at least my bowels didn't buckle like my
knees and bladder.
I have no idea how
long I was “inSinkerated.” My ears waking up are always my sign
that I'm coming to, and eventually I could hear DMan laughing at “The
Andy Griffith Show” that comes on after the news. Thank God, he
doesn't know I keeled over into the sink. I slowly un-jackknifed
myself, the half-eaten sandwich still in my fist, my back stiff from
being bent over. The chaw of peanut butter had grown to the size of a
lime – but I hadn't swallowed! I tried to spit, then flick it out
with my tongue. Nothing happened. It was stuck. Finally I had to rake
two fingers along the inside of my cheek to extricate the gluey glob.
My jeans had trapped the tinkle so I wasn't standing in a puddle, but
by now the wetness was cold. Shivery cold.
As quietly as I could
with soaked pant legs rubbing together, I slipped through the sitting
room and into the bathroom. DMan didn't notice, still engrossed in
Mayberry antics in the living room. Dear Lord, I was a fright: hair
plastered with sweat back from my face, showcasing a red
checker-boarded forehead the spitting image of the sink mat; mascara
smeared into raccoon eyes; sweat rings surrounding my armpits; and a
dark rainbow of urine on my jeans from crotch to calf. After cleaning
myself up and hosing down my pants in the shower, I took a long nap,
more like a mini-coma, and vowed never to monkey with my plasma
routine again. Never.
So now you understand
why I say, “No thanks, I'll pass on passing out.” I don't know
about those “asphyxionados,” but I never had a bit of fun doing it.
No endorphin high. No giddiness. And I sure as hell never got an
orgasm out of the deal.
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