The Official #6 TENNESSEE (10-2) vs. #7 Climpson (11-2) Orange Bowl Thread - Zone Edition - 12/30 @ 8:00 EST - ESPN

#6
#6
Clemson has adulterated orange among their colors. “Adulterated” is the proper descriptor.
 
#8
#8
He's BACK!
I've never been a "phone poster." I really don't use my phone like I use a computer. This is really the first day I've felt like sitting down at the computer for a few minutes.
If this mold infection clears my lungs, I think I'm going to feel a whole lot better.
But I'm still muddy-headed a little bit and not having looked at a computer screen for days and days is really challenging.
 
#11
#11
Yeah, at this point I guess it doesn't matter.
 
#15
#15
I've never been a "phone poster." I really don't use my phone like I use a computer. This is really the first day I've felt like sitting down at the computer for a few minutes.
If this mold infection clears my lungs, I think I'm going to feel a whole lot better.
But I'm still muddy-headed a little bit and not having looked at a computer screen for days and days is really challenging.
Did you have myocardial infarction ?
 
#17
#17
yes
and a lot of other things listed: heart failure, sepsis with multi-organ shutdown, mold infection in my lungs
it has been a ride, brother
Good grief, when I had sepsis it was shutting down all my organs and I was in the hospital for three months with the doctors telling my family I was gone die. Glad you’re getting better.
 
#19
#19
Good grief, when I had sepsis it was shutting down all my organs and I was in the hospital for three months with the doctors telling my family I was gone die. Glad you’re getting better.
my wife's sepsis was like that....she was trached for a total of like 2 months
on mine, they were able to dial-in an antibiotic, I think
 
#22
#22
my wife's sepsis was like that....she was trached for a total of like 2 months
on mine, they were able to dial-in an antibiotic, I think
I was still trached in the physical rehab facility after I left the hospital. The therapist freaked when she saw me in there with a trach still in my neck. They took it out after a couple weeks.
 
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#23
#23
I was still trached in the physical rehab facility after I left the hospital. The therapist freaked when she saw me in there with a trach still in my neck. They took it out after a couple weeks.
Toward the end of my wife's illness, they sent her to a section of the Bristol Hospital called "Select Specialty", which is an ICU-unit specifically focused on getting people off the trach.
 
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#24
#24
Toward the end of my wife's illness, they sent her to a section of the Bristol Hospital called "Select Specialty", which is an ICU-unit specifically focused on getting people off the trach.
There used to be two SSH’s in Knoxville, one in St Mary’s and one at Ft Sanders, maybe they’re still there in whatever hospitals are left. I was Medical Records Manager at both for a couple of years. (I left a while after 9/11; one of those “Is this where you want to be working if the world’s about to end?” decisions)

We did a ton of vent-weaning, along with long-term IV antibiotics, multiple system rehab, etc
 
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#25
#25
Toward the end of my wife's illness, they sent her to a section of the Bristol Hospital called "Select Specialty", which is an ICU-unit specifically focused on getting people off the trach.
When the doctor finally took the trach out he laid a 2” square piece of gauze over the hole. As he was leaving the room I said is that all you’re going to do about the hole in my neck. He said it will heal up by itself. 🫤
 
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