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the lady spanishes

EX-FLEET STREET JOURNALIST DONNA GEE SHARES SOME REMARKABLE TALES OF COSTA BLANCA LIVING

Warning: Diets can give you that rock-bottom feeling
Saturday, February 15, 2014 @ 2:08 AM

I HIT rock bottom last weekend, literally.

But at least I’m still here – and that's more than I expected at my loo-ist point (yes, loo-ist, read on for explanation).

I actually began to bottom out  late on Friday, when my brain signalled an immediate drop-off and I headed for the WC.

Moments later the stable door was open but the horse wouldn't budge. I was constipated with a vengeance.

I spent virtually the entire night creased up on the loo, convinced I had a permanent blockage and fearing I was going to bloat up and explode like a pricked balloon.

I considered calling 112 but the thought of paramedics catching me with my pants down was too embarrassing for words. So I just sat there, cursing the Cambridge 800 diet I had started the previous week, and wondering who would find the 1,000 bits of bloated body I left behind (pun intended, as ever).

Now that it’s all over, I can now laugh at the Weekend of Weak Ends. Or Tight Ends, to be more accurate.

Either way, panic sent in when my bowel and bladder suddenly went on strike. I was so busy trying to force a return to work that it was breakfast time before I had the sense to call my Cambridge 800 consultant Debi Winston.

“Don't worry. You've clearly not been drinking enough water,'' she scolded.

“Just drink and drink and within an hour or two the problem will be solved.''

Unlike her patient, Debi, a qualified senior nurse, knew what she was talking about. And well before midday I was indeed back to my grumpy old self.

My flirtation with the Cambridge 800 diet was always going to be a major challenge. I knew from the off that I would struggle to drink the required 2.5 litres of liquid every day. Or even for one day.

“Just do the best you can,''  Debi had urged when I expressed my doubts. The vital message did not get over to me – that if I DIDN'T pour those 2.5 litres into the well, there would be consequences. And they would not be pleasant.

In the event, what I thought was a decent amount of water over the first few days of  my diet probably totalled little more than one litre.

So I really have to blame myself for the sweat I got into on Friday night. Had anyone seen the bizarre pan-orama,  they might well have mistaken it for a Poo Bare impersonation!

Having told that, I am told that nominations for the 2014 Strain of Britain award are still open.

Not since my argument with a large kidney stone back in the 1990s had I suffered so much discomfort as I did on Friday night.

Common sense should have told me the lack of water meant my system had been unable to break down the high-energy Cambridge products – and consequently everything had seized up.

I know the diet works but it clearly cannot be toyed with. My instinct at the weekend was that the regime was not for me

But now that I have (hopefully) found my way, I owe it to Debi and Co to keep it going.



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5 Comments


SandrainAlgorfa said:
Saturday, February 15, 2014 @ 8:52 AM

Thanks for giving me a great laugh to start the day, Donna! Rock bottom is not something I'm familiar with - in fact the opposite is true. Due to Lupus, which affects my bowel and lungs, I'm what you might call a Loose Woman!


eggcup said:
Saturday, February 15, 2014 @ 7:06 PM

Well done both for broaching a taboo subject. It's important to break down the taboos. Everyone gets one or both of these problems from time to time and the fact that it's not considered a subject for polite company only makes it worse for the sufferer. Right. Off to the loo now.


Donna773 said:
Saturday, February 15, 2014 @ 11:15 PM

I would love to use those quotes on my Grumpy Old Gran page in the Torrevieja-based Courier newspaper? Poor SandrainAlgorfa clearly has a dire rear - but I'm sure she knows us. And Eggcup, whereabouts do you live? Feel free to email me at donna@thecourier.es


SandrainAlgorfa said:
Sunday, February 16, 2014 @ 9:22 AM

Donna, feel free to use my quote. As I sit here praying for a lump, it will give me some comfort to know my plumbing problems are entertaining the Costa Blanca - just as long as there are no identifying photos!


eggcup said:
Sunday, February 16, 2014 @ 1:31 PM

Hi Donna. Yes, you can use any comments I make. And I live in Wales, having returned after living in Spain for 5 years. Just to take it further regarding breaking taboos: I would compare talking about bowel problems to talking about mental illness/mental health problems. Everyone (without exception) suffers from anxiety, depression, feelings of anger etc. (even if they don't acknowledge it to themselves or others); it's part of the human condition. But if you mention a vulnerability like this, certain people will raise their eyebrows as though they're the 'normal' ones and you're off another planet. Each time people speak out about these vulnerabilities they perform an important service, making people feel less alone with their problems and less 'weird.' My children have sometimes thought they were weird and even been called it. '"Weird" is good,' I say, '"boring" isn't. And even if you're called "boring" it's more likely it's the accuser who's boring or who's worried about being boring.' And going back to embarrassing bodily functions, it can be very important to talk about these things as problems can be a symptom of cancer, for example. These cultural taboos can be dangerous. All the best.


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