Idiopathic Idiot!

– Curt Swarm, Empty Nest, April 8, 2024

The neurologist gave me the diagnosis I didn’t want to hear: “Severe Idiopathic Neuropathy.”  I pretended to know what he meant.  Ginnie, the lab-tech, told me later that “Idiopathic” simply means the condition arises spontaneously, cause unknown.  Great.  Neuropathy is a pain or tingling in the feet or hands and can be accompanied with balance issues.  I didn’t have pain or tingling, but my legs did feel like stumps at times, and I was definitely having balance issues.  There is no cure for Neuropathy, the condition worsens over time, and it may be hereditary.  I was advised to start using a cane (yeah, right), and that I should notify my kids of the condition. 

I had been through every test, poke, prod and thump imaginable: EKG, ultrasound (heart and carotids), echocardiogram, CT scan, MRI (brain), blood work, pin poke (actual and electronic), and reflex-hammer bump.  When my pulse was determined to be too low, a pacemaker was implanted in my chest.  I thought that would cure the vertigo, but noooo.  The pacemaker did stop my near-fainting episodes when I stood up too fast, but not the vertigo.  Neuropathy seemed to be the evil culprit. 

I ‘spose I should be thankful that I don’t have Parkinson’s Disease, dementia, or something worse.  After all, I am going on 76.  Being a former marathoner and triathlete, I’m not accustomed nor did I expect to ever be using a cane.  Geesh.  I did go so far as to dig Ginnie’s two canes out of the attic.  (She’d had a hip replacement.)  The canes are hanging by their hooks in the kitchen, in case I decide to use them.  I practiced walking with one of those canes.  It does feel good.  But for now, the canes are hanging silently, waiting knowingly for the inevitable. 

Then I came home to a computer hack.  Ginnie and I were watching one of the late evening NCAA Basketball Tournament games.  I received a Facebook Messenger message from a distant friend, asking for my phone number.  I figured he wanted to call me.  So, with one eye on the game, I gave him my phone number.  Then he (or she) asked for something strange, like a code number from Facebook.  Like an idiot, still trying to watch the game, I gave him this code.  Kerblewy!  Facebook crashed and so did my world.  A notice went out to all 2,500 of my Facebook “Friends” that my father had passed away, (my father died 30 years ago) and that I was selling a whole bunch of his possessions, cheap.  I tried to take the notice down but was locked out of my account.  I started getting calls like, “Hey Curt, I’m coming to pick up your dad’s car I just bought through PayPal.”  My daughter even had someone come to her door looking for the trailer he bought.  Good grief.  I notified the sheriff’s department and Facebook.  There didn’t seem to be much they could do.  I changed passwords and got my account back up and running.  I apologized profusely to all of my “Friends.”  Then the advertisements for my late dad’s possessions reappeared.  I could see on Facebook Messenger where the hacker, disguised as me, had been communicating with my Facebook Friends.  I reported the problem to Facebook.  They suspended my account.

Feeling dirty and violated, I appealed the suspension.  I had to take a selfie video of myself proving who I was.  I looked at the image of myself in the phone and wondered if I really wanted to get back on Facebook.  My image argued back, “You post your ‘Empty Nest’ column on Facebook, and that’s where a lot of people read it.” 

As of right now, thanks to the help of a computer “guru,” my Facebook page is up and running again with new passwords, and is locked down tight (I hope).  If you get a “Friend” request from me, you might wonder if it’s really me, or some hacker.  Between my neuropathy and gullibility, just call me the idiopathic idiot.

Have a good story? Call or text Curt Swarm in Mt. Pleasant at 319-217-0526, email him at curtswarm@yahoo.com, or visit his website at www.empty-nest-words-photos-and-frames.com

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