
This is a post about hemorrhoids. Does that gross you out? Because guess what, someday you might have a human being burst through your pussy and you will probably crap all over it in the process, so grow up. Our bodies are gross. This column is about that. But it is also a touching tale of a doctor named Wang, and how he liberated the bowels of the woman he loves. And no it was not written by me, it was written by someone we'll call Poshterior Spice, and you can thank Intern Cheryl for the high art.
In retrospect, I wonder if looking at the toilet paper after I wipe is something that I have always done and didn't really think about, or if I just I looked that day, because I sensed something was wrong. Suffice it to say, I did look at the toilet paper, and there was blood on it. It was not a lot of blood, and it was bright red, which even I know meant the bleeding was not internal. Still, any kind of blood coming from your ass is alarming. "Holy shit," I thought. "I have anal cancer." Then I immediately thought of Farrah Fawcett, which was annoying. Has my brain been so corrupted by tabloids that I can't even think about cancer without invoking a celebrity? And wait—how did I even know Farrah Fawcett had anal cancer?Who had printed that? Must have been Star. How awful for her. Because let's face it, while all cancer is horrific anal cancer has the added bonus of being really really really embarrassing. The only disease I can think of that is actually more embarrassing than anal cancer is Elephantitis of the balls, which is, at least, fun to say. I bet Farrah first discovered she had anal cancer just like this I thought moodily, sitting on the toilet. The stars, so like us! I pictured her all skinny and scared, clutching a piece of soiled toilet paper and wondering if she could trust her doctor or make him sign a nondisclosure agreement.
I decided I would not tell anyone about what I had seen in the bathroom. I intuitively grasped that "I have unexplained rectal bleeding," is not a phrase that anyone wants to hear. The Internet was of little help: My rectal bleeding could be caused by hemroids, it said, but hemroids are more of a male problem. What I probably have is anal cancer.
I would just wait it out, I said to myself, and adopted the strategy, oft-employed by those of us with insufficient healthcare plans, of deep denial. Either the condition, whatever it was, would go away, or rivers of blood would come pouring out my anus and I'd be forced to take action. I conducted the rest of the day's activities with the solemn dignity of Mandy Moore in Walk to Remember, taking care to be extra pleasant to my coworkers so that they would say nice things about me when I died (of unknown causes).
Several days passed, and I forgot all about the blood and the cancer. I resumed being antisocial and sarcastic at the office. Then, perhaps inevitably, I had to shit again.
That night I woke up from a dream about a picnic hosted by Ryan O'Neal sweating and panicked. I dialed the hospital and was assigned an appointment with a Dr. Wang. I joked on the phone that this will be the first wang I've ever had in my butt. Silence. "Er, great then," I stammered. "Thanks." Why. Why do I try to joke with the colo-rectal people? What is wrong with me?
After listening patiently to my hysterical tirade against medical message board Chicken Littles and Star, Dr. Wang instructed me lie on my side, facing away from him. "I'm going to tell you everything I'm doing, so they'll be no surprises," he said. I heard the squirting of KY.
"I'm inserting a small camera into your rectum now," he said soothingly, as though this happens all the time. "I can that there's no internal bleeding. I can see hard stool up there."
"Is it possible to take prints home?" I asked. Why do I do this? But Dr. Wang chuckled. Yay!
"Now I'm going to insert this, so I can see the edge of your rectum," he says. He dangles a metal object shaped like a large crooked index finger in front of me. It looks like a prop from Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.
"Oh," I say meekly. Moments later, I sense that even if I get really poor, selling my anal virginity on eBay is no longer an option.
"You have hemorrhoids," said Dr. Wang, as I sheepishly adjust my clothes.
"I thought only 60-year-old men got hemorrhoids," I said.
He shakes his head. "Many more women get them than men, actually," he said. "But no one ever wants to talk about it." He says this with a trace of bitterness. Dr. Wang can find no one who wants to talk about their ass with him! How sad he must be.
Apparently, women have a lot more problems with constipation than men, and when you strain to pass a bowel movement, it causes blood vessels in your butt to swell. If you remain constipated, and thusly your shits are hard, it irritates the swelling and the swollen blood vessels tear, which causes the bleeding. It's very common in women in their twenties and thirties, especially those who, like me, take birth control pills.
"No one ever tells you this!" I said. "They should show you a film strip in school! The Second Period."
"I know," Dr. Wang said glumly.
While Dr. Wang talked about how softening the stool with fiber and over-the-counter stool softeners will relieve the hemroids, I tried to maintain eye contact, because it must be hard to be a colorectal surgeon who no one ever wants to make eye contact with. He seemed to appreciate this and opened up a little.
"When I first met my wife, she only had a bowel movement around once a week," he said. "She used to get bloated, to cry out from the pain. And she's little, like you! She's thin. I used to say to her, I can feel the stool when I press on your belly."
This, I think, has to be the most romantic thing any man has said to a woman.
"I started her on fiber supplements," he said proudly, "the drink, not the pills. The pills barely do anything. In a few weeks, she was much better." He pressed a package of Konsyl into my hands and smiled paternally.
Dr. Wang and his wife have been married for eight years, and in all that time she has been hemorrhoid-free. Now, he says, she shits at least every other day.










Comments
BC gives you hemorrhoids? Awesome . . .
waxing the backdoor has been proven to prevent hemorrhoids. seriously.
Well. There goes lunch!
Also, that evil-looking flame graphic thing is hands down the best part of this post!
I can see the PSA's already.
fuck. now i have to quit the pill and get my butt waxed?
copy. edit.
please?
bc, huh?
and so the great abortion v. hemorrhoid debates begin...
if dr wang was on the bachelor, he'd be bigger than bob guiney.
I joked on the phone that this will be the first wang I've ever had in my butt. Silence.
I laughed so hard at this. Ah, thank you.
This was great and I can personally relate. Combination of not enough fiber and fear of pooping in public restrooms brought down the wrath of the hemmy a couple years back. When I waddled through Walgreens to get my PrepH, I picked up a Happy 40th birthday card so the clerk would think it was a joke gift. Now I tell that story to everyone because hemorrhoids are hilarious.
I happen to share my first name with a relatively popular sci-fiction character and have heard every lame joke and inappropriate comment imaginable. Because of this I keep all name-related jokes/puns to myself; surely that wasn't the 1st time Dr. Wang was subjected to that one.
But I totally laughed.
Actually, I'm grateful for the article. I have a few GI disorders that require such self-examinations during bathroom sojourns (and a lot of meds). In my case, the disorders I have are of the type in which bright red can equal internal bleeding, so I do have to stay aware in case a trip to the doctor is called for. Fortunately it's just rrhoid rage.
It's the "ick" factor of the subject that makes it difficult for patients to discuss these things with their doctors. And that also makes it difficult for doctors to say "it's common, treatable and no big deal" or, more importantly, "Hmmm, let's do a scope and make sure everything's ok." It's why it took me so long to finally be completely forthright with my doctor, and suffered needlessly for years because I wasn't providing the information he needed to prescribe appropriate treatment.
IBS, Crohn's and colitis do occur in women in greater numbers than men. So kudos to Moe for taking that brave first step!
@SweatsuitHaven: Obi-Wan?
The more you know.
My mother, bless her, once pleasantly explained to me that a hemorrhoid is "when the bottom part of your low intestine falls out of your butt". Falls out! Like, hey, sometimes your innards go flying out the back end-- whatever, it's just gravity!
Also-- is Jezebel doing poop stories now? Can I submit my anecdote about a college boyfriend who had a vestigial anus?
This is pretty much one of the funniest things I have read in a long time. You don't have to be old to be male with hemorrhoids, it also happens to be a common problem amongst drunks. Between the havoc that a steady diet of Marlboros and Negra Modelo can wreck on your GI tract and the long long hours spent sitting on a hard wooden stool a solid stool may be a distant memory, but the inflamed hemorrhoids are not. I wouldn't be surprised if the kind of cool tattooed kids that ride fixed gear bikes, drink too much cheap beer, and have weekend heroin habits are also victims of this pain in the ass.
As a note...Try to remember what you've eaten before the appearance of the red too. I had eaten beet salad and was very embarrassed that I made a trip to the Dr. to find out that, well, it was the beets. The more you know indeed.
This is seriously helpful info though :)
Dr. Wang is awesome.
@SweatsuitHaven: Buffy?
You really are supposed to poop at least once a day. Not only hemorrhoids can develop but worse problems with your colon. Sorry to be gross but you might want to google the problem.
Huh. It must be some sort of "face the 'roids" week. There was a two page article on hemmoroids in this week's Self magazine...
what about when 'roids get "popped back in" by your doctor ... not that I know anything about that.
Throw in raging alcoholism and the fun with the 'roids REALLY begins....
That mention of not pooping for several days was kind of a red flag. Eat your fiber, everyone!
Moe Tkacik, you're a good writer.
I'm very familiar with the 'rrhoids, thanks to having had IBS since childhood. Major fiber intake helps, but I still get the cracking form on occasion. Haven't had a prolapsed one since that horrible time about 10 years ago when I finally wound up at the doctor (driving a stick shift while sitting on only one cheek the whole way) and got put into the stirrups. I'll take a lifetime of pelvics over that any day.
Got good prescription foam with a hilarious syringe-thingie, though.
Yeah, I found out the hard way that even with a C-section, they happen. Also fun: pilonidal and Bartholin's cysts. I had the surgery for the pilonidal when I was fifteen, and then bumped into the surgeon again when I was in nursing school. He was a complete jerk, and although I knew he didn't remember me, I could never interact with him without thinking about how he operated on my butt.
Bartholin's are horrible. Worse than childbirth. I thought I had cancer. I'm lucky my now-husband doesn't skeeve easily.
I guess pointing out that Shit haoppens would be redundent?//Ok, Ok, OK...... Karma Cameleone
Ooo, can you do one next on prolapsed uterus? I think that's something we can all agree to look forward to.
I do agree with everyone else that this is the funniest thing I've read in I don't know how long.
Moe T, seriously funny, and amusingly serious. But, dear, I hope you would be earning enough to eat something more healthy? Fresh fruit and veg everyday will help keep Dr. Wang away, charming as he may be. Elimination once a day is good for the system; not doing so indicates a lack of many things, food being one of them.
@mmh: Damnit. I just googled that. I did not know that could happen.
I have sooo many questions, and yet, I really don't want any of them answered. Okay, maybe just one: That's just for women who have kids, right? Right? Lie to me if you have to ...
Best post ever. Thanks.
@BonnieLass: I'm afraid I cannot make you feel better about this. When I was a nurse, I had a couple of patients with pessaries. They were in their nineties, and had been nuns all their lives. Never had sex. Definitely no children. It's more of a connective tissue problem at the root. Anyone can get it. It's just more likely to happen if you've had children.
@brechtgirl: Hee!
@talaton: No. Though didn't someone change their name to Obi-Wan for some radio contest when Episode 1 came out?
@mccauller: I'm too old to have been named Buffy. Thank ever-lovin God.
We nearly skipped over Self’s “Sitting On a Secret,” July, once we determined it was about hemorrhoids. A few days ago, we read this, which was more than enough information on the topic. Also, we’re squeamish.
cute and useful story thanks
bowel movements once a week?
you people are insane. also- i blame the whiskey induced diarrhea.
Comment on this post
Reply by EmailLogin with your username and password below. Or comment on this post via email.
Forgot your username or password? New User?