Hip Revision, Balance Regained

To be steady on my feet…steady in my thoughts, I need balance.

First off, when balance is disturbed, my writing Muse muffles.  

Shooting from a 26-year-old hip replacement, my decrepit spoke to me. At first, in quiet tones. Then, louder and more persistently. As a result, I became aware it was time to regain balance with hip revision surgery.

In the ensuing paragraphs, an old hip expresses herself, while providing some lesser-known, yet nonetheless ‘hip’ facts.

“I’m overdue…for a re-do,” it murmured. Then its larynx came unleashed.

The surgeon had suggested that my askew total hip replacement might give out. And yet, I was functional, so we waited.

The break-up came in the yarling: a combo of yawn and snarl.  Crackle-pops reverberated.

“Don’t be afraid of it,” said a physio friend.  “Be pro-active.”

X-rays proved it was yarlier and more off-kilter than most 26-year-olds (no offence, twenty-somethings). 

Loose hip facts:

  • Os coxae is not oxymoronic for the ‘Year of the Ox’.
  • Hands on your hips, you’re gripping the iliac crest: the summit of a mountain ridge: one of three fused hip bones.
  • In the valley are the pubis, and behind it, the ischium or ‘sit bones’.
  • Rivers of veins, nerves and arteries flow through a pelvic canyon (obturator foramen).
  • The pelvic ischium contains the ball-socket joint.
  • In this weight-bearing core of breathing, posture and spinal stability, 20 muscles cross paths.
  • Of over 250 primate species, only one primate is reading this while taking a load off two bi-pedaling legs.

If ‘hip were on the wall’ (as a proverbial ‘fly’):

Surgeon:  (to his team) “Now that we’re in, this liner has to go.”

Yarler:  “Are you removing my ‘voice box’, doc?”

Surgeon:  “Let’s get behind the eroded socket.”

Yarler:  “E-ro-ded, as in ‘ro-de-o’?”

Surgeon:  “Cowboy, plastic bits in bloodstream turn bone to marshmallow (osteolysis).” 

Yarler:  “Bucking broncos.”

Surgeon:  “Repack it with synthetic bone.”

Yarler:  “Syn-the-tic?  I’m too young…”

Surgeon:  “Stem and socket look good.  Leave the (tug, tug) titanium.”

Yarler:  “Whoa, heavy metal.”

Surgeon:  “Unscrew the old femoral head.”

Yarler:  “Wha’????”

Surgeon:  “Nice fit.  Okay.  Stapler…”

Yarler:  (lip-and-hip synching) “New head, new muffler, syn-the-tics…”

Surgeon:  “A more secure…and silent joint.”

                                                            *

In conclusion, my yarler hushed as I lay with gel packs cooling enflamed tissue.  From here on in, more and more equilibrium.  Less and less yarling.

Muse-infused! Hip revision: balance regained.

*The author wishes to clarify that every hip revision differs.  She is now one month post-op, doing rehab exercises, and moving more and more silently.