That was March 2014. I’m able to do everything I did before but I’m way more conservative than I used to be and I do have chronic pain issues. Overall I consider myself lucky and just keep living
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That was March 2014. I’m able to do everything I did before but I’m way more conservative than I used to be and I do have chronic pain issues. Overall I consider myself lucky and just keep living
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x2. That is a harrowing story.
Seen some loooong slides for life including a fatality down 3rd gully at Big Sky, horrible to see. Glad you made it.
I have been in this State for 30 years and I am willing to admit that I am part of the problem.
"Happiest years of my life were earning < $8.00 and hour, collecting unemployment every spring and fall, no car, no debt and no responsibilities. 1984-1990 Park City UT"
I no longer ski hard snow in steep terrain, obviously. Until something like that happens it’s hard to appreciate how easy it is to happen but how you’re basically helpless
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That's another one. But I see it at Kaiser too, which doesn't require authorization, loses money with unnecessary tests. Someone gets a ministroke. Gets an ultrasound that shows 90% narrowing of the carotid. Which is all I need. But radiologists suggests confirming with CT angiogram, which the med doc orders, and the next xr doc suggests confirming with an MR angio, which the patient gets. It's how we're trained. No intern was ever chewed out for ordering too many tests, only for not ordering, because that's how the resident supervising them was treated as an intern. There is no training in cost effective medicine. I have a cardiologist who manages my lipids because I don't tolerate the usual drugs and I'm at high risk. I'm on a regimen that works, but she wants new lipid tests every 6 months, for no reason I can see.
Sounds exactly like my slide for life in Chute 75 at Olympic. Except I didn't break any trees. Just a pole trying to arrest. And the body of T3 (fused), ribs in 14 places, acetabulum (minor), several transverse processes (of no consequence). Like you I was skiing wind blown. The day before, with the same wind blowing snow into the gully it was soft, smooth, and as joyous a surface as I've ever skied on. I lapped it as long as it lasted. The next day, same wind blowing snow in, the powder had slid off on hard water ice. I managed one turn, but slid out trying to traverse back to West Face, which had 3 feet of soft snow, and tumbled back first into a tree. And patrol brought my skis and poles (including the broken one) down with me.
Well I crashed on a cat track and broke my pelvis.
Technically it was the rocks below the cat track that broke that shit but wutev.
That's the way i feel about it--and if I ever make it back into 75 I'll wait and watch someone else drop it first. My fall wasn't the first time I did that chute and found unpleasant conditions at the top. My bones break way too easy.
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