Clutz much?
Apr. 29th, 2008 11:07 amI was telling
chuckro about my failure to basically move through space without colliding into things and I thought I'd share. I didn't think it was jetlag that caused me to repeatedly spill and drop things at work, whack various body parts multiple times against objects I should have been able to avoid, etc. I'm thinking it may be lingering imbalance of the inner ear. I still sort of feel like I'm on a boat. I generally have a lot of trouble with seasickness, but once I'm adjusted to the motion of a boat, I'm good. It's getting back on land that's a problem. My head is rocking back and forth (or just the fluid in my ears is or something). Weird.
Anyway, I don't think I'm going to be doing anything more complicated than walking (and even there, I'm having trouble) for a couple more days. If this persists as a problem, I might take my anti-seasickness medication on land, see if that helps.
Oh well, at least I can pretend that my utter failure at life yesterday is the fault of some odd physical imbalance and not just my complete lack of coordination. Last night, after I finished my paper, I debated playing Rock Band to work on my horribly bad drum "skills" and decided it was better I didn't. I'd probably have lost an eye, given the way yesterday was going.
Anyway, I don't think I'm going to be doing anything more complicated than walking (and even there, I'm having trouble) for a couple more days. If this persists as a problem, I might take my anti-seasickness medication on land, see if that helps.
Oh well, at least I can pretend that my utter failure at life yesterday is the fault of some odd physical imbalance and not just my complete lack of coordination. Last night, after I finished my paper, I debated playing Rock Band to work on my horribly bad drum "skills" and decided it was better I didn't. I'd probably have lost an eye, given the way yesterday was going.