We Feared I Was Like Graham Chapman, Luckily I Was Like Sean Connery

Labor Day 1977 –  It was the last day of summer vacation.  The Jerry Lewis telethon was winding down. The beginning of a new school year was only hours away.  All my friends were going to my friend’s house to swim.  My parents told me I couldn’t go swimming because I was going to dinner with them and my grandmother.  I begged them to let me go swimming instead.  My main selling point?  The pool was being shut down the next day and this was my last chance to swim for about 8 months.  I won!  They went to dinner and I went swimming.  Life was good!

So my friends Keith, Richard, Jay and Jay’s father and I were having a blast in the pool.  While playing around, I knocked Jay’s father’s hat off his head and into the pool. His response?  The adult in charge of the kids, starting to dunk me under the water for long periods of time.  When he finally let me go, I could barely breathe.  I swam over to the side of the pool and tried to catch my breath.   Was the adult in charge done? Sadly, yes was not the answer. Instead, he grabbed a big inner tube and smashed the inner tube on the back of my head forcing my mouth into the side of the pool.  End result?  I lost many of my top permanent teeth.   Since that event, I have had many operations and struggles with my teeth.

Fast forward almost 43 years.  This March, when Covid-19 was shutting down the United States, my top teeth (though at this point they are my fake top teeth) started to really bother me.  Since dentist offices were closed, I got to learn to deal with the pain.   Finally, three months later I got to see a dentist.  During that visit, a couple of the preliminary theories for the cause of my issues were pretty dismal.   During a very long weekend, while we waited for some test results, we did a massive 6 part Monty Python UMR page project.  While researching our Graham Chapman page we discovered that during a routine dentist visit, they discovered he had cancer on his tonsils.  That would ultimately take his life.   I am not ashamed to admit this, but that fact scared the hell out of me.

Luckily, I did not have the issues Graham Chapman was handed.   Instead, I have the issues that Sir Sean Connery had to deal with.  Apparently people that have a large amount of dental work like actors like Connery and accident people like me are very susceptible to infections and other issues.  In the case of Connery, he had a horrible but manageable experience.   I am going down that exact same path right now.  I will be undergoing between 8 and 9 procedures in the next few weeks.  I did the first procedure on Wednesday and the second one on Friday.   I get one day off to recover.  Part three is tomorrow. Part four is on Wednesday.  Friday is the halfway mark if things are going well.

So why am I sharing this information?  Mainly to provide a reason why my return comments will not be as common as they used to be.   Today is the first day I have felt like myself since Wednesday morning when this adventure got started.  I wrote lots of new pages for my absence.  One thing I could not do was predict the passings of people like Alan Parker and Wilford Brimley. I am so proud of my daughters for putting together those pages in my absence.   On the good side of things…today we are having a big celebration – SoC2 turned 28 on Friday, GoC1 (Grandchild of Cogerson #1) turns 13 today, tomorrow is WoC and my anniversary and on Tuesday DoC2 turns 14.  4 big events in 5 days….it is good to be a Cogerson….even if I get to get my nourishment through a straw.  Stay safe and healthy.

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16 thoughts on “We Feared I Was Like Graham Chapman, Luckily I Was Like Sean Connery

  1. Wow Bruce what a title and what a story! I didn’t even know you can get cancer of the tonsils. Glad you’re okay amigo.

    What a terrible year so far. We’re still waiting for summer here in the wetlands of Manchester where there is a spike in virus cases.

    Next year can’t possibly be worse, can it?

    1. Hey Steve….thanks for the kind words Steve. It has been a very rough couple of weeks. Get a week off this week….but Monday it all starts again. 2021 has a great chance to be better than 2020…especially since it will not take much…lol. Good stuff.

  2. Wo! The title is funny but the story is not, though I guess it’s a relief that the problem with your teeth are not as bad as you feared. And since you are like Sean Connery, you can ride out the whole thing with courage and dignity 🙂 Happy celebrations and good luck with the procedures!

    1. Hey Phil. Glad our title caught your attention. Me, BrIts and bad teeth what a combination….lol. Relief is an understatement, when we got home from that initial visit, we did some research on the internet. A good portion of that issue lead back to some pretty horrible issues. Seems if you look up any medical condition that eventually leads to two things: cancer or COVID-19. Our celebrations have gone well, we were in the last day, though the hurricane was nice enough to wipe out our power last night. We are closing on 12 hours without power but that is the only issue the hurricane left us. Greatly appreciate your words of support.

  3. Cogerson, you and yours are in my thoughts and prayers. do you need any help? let me know.
    i lost 1 1/2 permanent teeth at age 8 to an errant 8 ball on a pool table, not a swimming pool. great tale of overcoming difficulty. you are …………… A WINNER. Yea Cogerson, Yea UMR, Yea overcomers like you.

    1. Thank you Bob Cox. So it looks like you me and Dan are in the broken tooth club. Not a clue of either one of us wants to be in. Interesting that a pool table got you in a pool got me. Thanks for the offer of help, luckily I have some good people working on me.Thanks for your kind words of support, luckily I’m getting to the halfway mark, which means soon I’ll be coming down the mountain versus going up the mountain. Thanks again.

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