ᴅʀ. ᴀɴɢᴇʟᴀ ❝ᴍᴇʀᴄʏ❞ ᴢɪᴇɢʟᴇʀ (
cadeuces) wrote in
prismatica2020-03-10 01:00 am
fourth ☕✨ text (AMA! un: mercy)
Hello, Lunatia! I hope this finds you all well. I'm Dr. Angela Ziegler, if we've yet to have the pleasure. The doctor who owns the Second Nature (Free) Clinic on the beach in level 2.
I have seen a lot of new faces of late and quite the number of questioning entries, as well as some other Q&As, so I thought that I would offer one a little more... medically professional? And from someone who has been here for a year, now.
I'm sure it is quite disorienting here at times and I would like to offer some peace of mind and an open venue to ask anything you'd like, whether it's about this place or its changes, pre-existing medical concerns, how to administer a massage for a partner, what goes into cybernetics, creating a swedish torch as the weather warms up for hiking, or even simply just coffee shop recommendations. Everyone is welcome to try me.
If even posting anonymously is a bit too much, you are free to contact me privately as well.
( ooc: "trauma surgeon, combat medic, former CMO of a peacekeeping organization, prosthetics/cybernetics specialist, and coffee aficionado, AMA!" time! why is blizzard like this she's so much... please feel free to private lock replies to assume messaging her on the side, remember your content warnings in subject titles for Risky Business topics, ask others' permission before threadjacking, and go wild! )
I have seen a lot of new faces of late and quite the number of questioning entries, as well as some other Q&As, so I thought that I would offer one a little more... medically professional? And from someone who has been here for a year, now.
I'm sure it is quite disorienting here at times and I would like to offer some peace of mind and an open venue to ask anything you'd like, whether it's about this place or its changes, pre-existing medical concerns, how to administer a massage for a partner, what goes into cybernetics, creating a swedish torch as the weather warms up for hiking, or even simply just coffee shop recommendations. Everyone is welcome to try me.
If even posting anonymously is a bit too much, you are free to contact me privately as well.
( ooc: "trauma surgeon, combat medic, former CMO of a peacekeeping organization, prosthetics/cybernetics specialist, and coffee aficionado, AMA!" time! why is blizzard like this she's so much... please feel free to private lock replies to assume messaging her on the side, remember your content warnings in subject titles for Risky Business topics, ask others' permission before threadjacking, and go wild! )

Text ; un:magicowl
no subject
That would be dependent on a couple of different things. Firstly, if the pain is a result of the weight of the wings stressing the muscles or if it's more a matter of tendons, if there's damage to the muscles or tendons surrounding the shoulderblades, and if it's a matter of tears in the muscle fibers or simply inflammation. The latter will feel quite warm to the touch compared to the rest of the body.
There are anti-inflammatory medications that can be taken for pain relief from muscle pain, but if it is anything else, it will require a deal of rest and careful massage and tending as one heals. Is this a temporary concern to align with lunar effects, or something natural to the person of concern?
no subject
No, nothing with the cycles. It's an ability I have naturally. I'm a shapeshifter with an affinity for birds. The Eurasian Eagle Owl in particular, if that classification means anything to you.
I can call on my wings even in my human form but I would rather not do that since it messes with my skeletal and muscle structure and causes me some bad back pains. Humans don't naturally have wings after all.
I had to use said ability last January, I helped with rescue operations during the attack on the amphitheater, and during the same incident I was heavily injured and had to be hospitalised for a good amount of days. Since then I've had minor aches which escalated after the floods. I was certain I was healing fine but now I'm a little worried.
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Advice over such matters is a little tricky with only text, but it sounds as though you might have torn something. If you would like to come in whenever is convenient for you, I'm at the clinic every day until 1500, and I can make exceptions to stick around a little longer for a set appointment time. I can take a look at it and see what I can do for you. It is a bit worrisome that it is persisting months later, I will admit. But it shouldn't be anything permanent.
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I can drop by shortly if it's not too much trouble. I'm just idle at a cafe at the moment.
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It's no trouble at all; I have pastries and coffee here if for any reason they left you wanting. 😉
text -> action (im assuming there's a receptionist)
[After paying and saying his good byes to the staff, Bishop shows up roughly half an hour later. At first he flew in and perched on the balcony outside, but since it's his first visit he should be more proper and changed back into his human form and came in through the front door.]
Excuse me, I'm looking for Dr. Angela Ziegler...
[He tells the receptionist took his name and such, before sitting him down and asked him to wait patiently.]
(there is not but that's aight she has a coworker!!)
Danny takes his name down, goes to the bottom of the staircase access at the back end of the hall, and calls her name. He'll hear her soft footsteps padding down them before the click of her boot heels meet the tile and she rounds the corner with a smile, laundry basket tucked under one arm she's quick to set aside. She'll trade places with the man who will see the basket where it needs to be and busy himself elsewhere, and she'll trot down the hall with a smile. )
Hello! You weren't waiting long, I hope. Mr. Owl, is it?
( She'll offer her hand to shake; cool to the touch and a slender thing, but she has a good grip, gentle as she tries to be. )
(> <);;
[The touch of her hands are what one might expect of a doctor as he takes her hand. His in comparison are rough and hardy with a solid grip, one of the little reflections of his time in service.]
Sorry I took so long. I had to stop by a few places to pick up somethings.
[He gestured to the backpack to the filled backpack on his shoulder.]
But thank you for meeting me on such short notice. I appreciate it.
IT'S OK 😭💦 we made it work!! it's v.smol, 3 employees
And if your back's been bothering you, should you be carrying a bag?
( It's a gentle tease as he takes her hand in his own and she keeps ahold of him, covering the back with her other. Rough. He works with them, smoothed by time and likely some sort of weapon, if she's come to know anything about anyone. When she finally releases him, she gestures around with a playful little smirk. )
We're not often anything nearing 'busy'. It's really no trouble, but you're very welcome. Can I steal you back to an exam room, or would you like something to drink, first? We can speak out here if you'd like.
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[The bag carries all the remains of his possessions after the flood and the fiasco that was weird crying robot in his apartment. At the very least, it really isn't heavy, not for a guy who can lift a small car.]
I'm good, thanks. [He takes a look around, nice place and pretty empty, which he thinks is a good sign. Empty clinics and hospitals mean healthy people.] The exam room sounds great.
[He also doesn't want too many people knowing he's hurt or that he can conjure wings even in his human form. It's good to have surprises after all.]
no subject
( She tips her head for him to follow, and the same traits of the lobby continue back— warm lighting, comfortable leather furniture easy to wipe down, all done in ivories and golds and wood accents. There are throw blankets anywhere one could sit in soft knits, and it's clearly a space made to be comfortable to anyone walking through the door.
The exam table in the center of the exam room she leads him to is leather, as well, but also a massage table it the top end is anything to go by. Everything does double duty in such a small clinic. )
Wherever you're comfortable. Can you tell me where you were experiencing pain?
no subject
The trend continued to the exam room where he sits on the exam table just in case she asked him to lie down or something to examine him.]
Right at my shoulder blades. It doesn't hurt when I do normal every day things, but when I try to practice or train certain movements cause discomfort. More complicated movements do cause some pain.
no subject
Will you mind taking your shirt off? So I can have a look and you can show me what range of motion starts to hurt. There are a few smaller muscles atop the scapula, and a stretch of larger ones between the edge and your spine, so I'll need to narrow it down a little.
( She gestures with her hands as she explains, one flattening near her own shoulder of the opposite side, fingers fanning outward to demonstrate their direction. )
no subject
[ He removes his coat, folding it neatly before reaching for the hem of his shirt. He lifts a little bit and stops, eyes wide open then brows furrowing making him look like he's troubled by something. It doesn't last long though and he just shrugs and removes the article of clothing.
His physique is what you might expect of a soldier, lean, solid and well defined muscles. There are various scars all over but most have faded from age however on his lower back are ten scars that look like entrance wounds of a gun, five scars on either side. They're faded but still very noticeable and each roughly an inch in diameter, arranged in a strange pattern with four of them equidistant from one another with one off to the side a top his lower ribs. If you stare long enough, it starts to look like a pair of hands grabbing from the front and digging their fingers into him.
He says nothing about the scars, his earlier pause must have been indication of that, and he starts to do as she instructed. He raised one arm until his elbow was about parallel with his ear and he stops. ]
About here, it gets a little uncomfortable. Then-
[ He raises his arm further until its above his head and twitches just a bit. ]
Here where it hurts. It's not very painful, but enough to cause me some pause.
no subject
Her eyes don't linger on anything in particular, mostly keeping his gaze until she's moving to sanitize her hands, then coming up behind him. The pitted round scars at his back are particularly strange, measured and mirrored... Ah, but he's moving, so she speaks gently as she offers some forewarning of her touch. )
I'm going to place my hands against your back; just a warning since my hands are often a bit cold.
( Fond and teasing, then flattening cool palms to his shoulderblades to feel the muscle as he moves, attentive. She can feel how his body tenses as the pain sensors relay his limits, then further still— ah. There it is, a split moment before he speaks again. She felt the strain nearly quivering. The body's natural response to fighting pain, trying to tell him to slow down. )
Thank you for that, Bishop. It seems the strain was mostly the muscle stretching from the spine to the scapula, right in here. ( Her fingertips are gentle where they "sketch" in the general area on his skin, both index fingers squiggling down from top to bottom of the edges of his shoulderblades, in toward his vertebrae. ) Probably from the strain you'd explained. It limits your motions a bit more than the other muscles would be.
It seems like it could be a deeper tear since it feels quite warm to the touch, here; your body is still trying to heal, though if there was any inflammation it is mostly abated now. Have you tried taking any anti-inflammatories? Pain relief medication?
no subject
The memory associated with it wasn't pleasant, although each scar he earned doesn't exactly have good memories as well, but those were particularly strained for him. He could still feel the pain if he thought of it, the taste of blood on his tongue if he spoke of it, and most especially the grim cold in his chest as he and his allies fought to stay alive.
He mentally follows her hand as he examines and doesn't comment how her hand feels like a small relief on his back, but it shows with how his shoulder relax a bit. ]
No I haven't. I haven't really tried any of the pharmaceutical drugs here since I came here. I was worried that they might have an adverse effect on me but, if you think I should then I will.
no subject
If she moves into a massage she's like to ease further down toward those strange scars— if he feels they're worth speaking of, she'd gladly listen, but she'll be content not to pry. )
That's quite all right; I only asked to see if it had done any good for you. Do you often experience ill effects from any medications taken? These will only help with the swelling and minor pain relief, so they shouldn't do much else to you. They're incredibly mild so long as you follow proper dosages.
( She won't force them on him; since it already feels a little inflamed, she's gathering up an ice pack to crunch and activate, then wrapping it in a thin towel to press to the affected area. This will be a start and it will do far more than the anti-inflammatories will. She can give him those to try and be sure he doesn't have a bad reaction to them before she'd likely send him off with a week's worth. )
no subject
[ He raises his hand and gestures with his thumb loosely towards the ten scars. ]
I didn't particularly enjoy feeling like I was orbiting Jupiter and talking to Santa's reindeer.
[ He might as well be a little forthcoming with his medical history. She is a doctor, and she can't treat him. He'll just be careful with what he reveals. If she asked that is. ]
Will you be putting me on some meds?
no subject
It must have been quite severe at the time; I'm sorry to hear of it. ( They look as if they'd been deep; they're such strange injuries, though, she doesn't quite know what to make of them. ) Did they have any state secrets to give up? Santa's reindeer. But no, these won't dull the mind. They're very simple medications. The only side effects they have are only if you take far too many of them and processing the chemical structures grows to be a strain on your kidneys. But taking 6-8 per day, as needed, for a week or two won't cause you any harm at all. You don't have to take them, but I'll give you some if you get any particular flare-ups and can't make it in. They're not required.
How is this feeling?
( The massage, which she's eased into a deep-tissue amount of pressure as she goes, slow in her progress. Right now, it's slender fingers curled over his shoulders and easing along the trapezius with rhythmic kneading as her thumbs work along the stretch of muscle between spine and scapulae. )
no subject
[ Kidding aside he memorizes the amount of times he needs to take the medication to get better. ]
That's quite a lot. I take it their just small doses then?
[ Medicine in his world has improved by a lot to the point taking something once every three or two days was the norm, though he still vaguely remembers the old days before magic. ]
That helps.
[ He says with a particular tone, like he's trying to suppress a sigh, yawn, or a moan. The massage is working quite well, he can feel the affected muscles already loosening and some relief in his back. ]
no subject
( She grins for the tease, not that he can see it— perhaps he'll pick up on it in her tone. As for the medicine, she doesn't miss a beat as she elaborates, fingertips sinking into the affected area. )
You usually take two at a time, but yes; they're only about 300 milligrams each. So, a couple of times a day. Their effects wear off after six hours or so. Just enough relief to keep you from changing how you go about your typical day, so you don't over-correct and injure something else while you're healing. You do still have to take it easy.
And good; I'm glad to hear it. You sound about ready to fall asleep. ( Usually a good sign, as far as relaxation and relief went. No one sleeps well when they're in pain. ) Did you want to lie down?
no subject
[ He's also still a little apprehensive. He's not fond of people touching his body which is why he never usually gets massages, even though hers feels quite nice, but the feeling still exists as a nagging thought. ]
Hmmm...would this take a while to do? I don't want to take up too much of your time.
[ As polite as that sounds, he forgets she's a doctor and that taking time with patients is a part of the job. Someone's clearly gotten too accustomed to quick patch-up treatments rather than thorough ones. ]
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You don't need to worry about my time, honest. It's nice to have patients for a change. I like to help people. I didn't have anyone else coming in today that I'm aware of, and if I really wanted to, I could do this for hours.
But if you just want to rest without the trek back home rousing you from this drowsiness, you're welcome to sleep for a few hours too. If this is getting uncomfortable or starting to ache then I can stop.
( It's his call. She can get him a blanket to cover him up and he can lay down on the exam table he's already on, dim the lights, and let him sleep uninterrupted until she needs to leave. )
no subject
No, no, this is good.
[ Very good in fact. He understands why people get massages now. He's quiet for a couple of minutes mulling it over and eventually gives in to the natural state his body is falling into as he yawns. ]
Okay, maybe I will take your offer. A couple hours of rest would do me well.
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