Having a broken arm is like having a giant claw. I'm not exactly loving it.
Although I can't go out to social events without slumping down into the corner after half an hour, I have been slowly reacquainting myself with my friends over cups of tea. My diary for the past week looks something like this:
Tea: earl grey, lady grey, chai, english breakfast, white wine, mangoes.
Friends: an artist, a singer/songwriter, a filmmaker, someone I went to primary school with, someone I went to High School with, and an official Christmas elf.
Random purchases that probably never would have happened if my wrist wasn't broken: car wash ($12), new mobile phone (minimum $30 per month, phone "free"), $20 worth of raffle tickets for diabetes institute (first ever response to telemarketing), visits to hairdressers ($20 for a wash and blow dry), enormous amounts of codeine.
Things I've watched: Fast Food Nation, lots of Aaron Sorkin, Australian Story (and anything else where people come up against greater odds than mine and win), Scrubs, and half of an accidentally hilarious sports movie called Youngblood, the central charracter in which is actually called Dean Youngblood. Somewhere, there are producers still kicking themselves that they got Patrick Swayze, Rob Lowe, and Keanu Reeves into a film, and it is immortalised thus.
Most annoying incidental things about broken wrist: can't tie shoe laces, or use credit card due to inability to sign name.
Biggest incidental joy brought about by broken wrist: actual hands-in-the-air-not-my-fault inability to dress in anything other than trackie dacks or to cook.
Little thing it makes me think: "Plaster and water wrapped around an essential limb? That's the solution here? Come ON."
Big thing it makes me think: be nicer to old people. Being slow and relying on other people makes me want to scratch my skin off.
Amount of time it took me to write this, in comparison to how long it normally takes: 4:1
Weeks left in cast: five.
Degree of sympathy for own self: extreme to overbearing.