Last night as I lie in bed in pain I started thinking about what I would do if I got to the point I couldn't rack the slide on my pistols. Whether it was something temporary or permanent, what changes would I have to make? As it stands now both of my hands work well enough but I have arthritis in dozens of joints in my body, and that's never going away. One time I had a 1911 muzzle brake that replaced the barrel bushing. It was long enough that I could push it against a solid object and get the slide fully to the rear, which I've never had to do. I know there are rear sights available for some pistols that can catch against a pocket or something to rack the slide. If anyone who's had a physical problem can tell me what works for whatever kind of problem they had, that would be great. It's nice to know what options are available even if I end up not needing them.
My doctors are being mean to me this week. First I started seeing a neurologist who gave me 2 shots of lidocaine in the back of the head and prescribed some muscle relaxers. The shots stung for awhile but weren't too bad. Lidocaine is acidic and if it's not mixed with something like sodium bicarbonate to buffer it, it can hurt. Today I started seeing an orthopedist who gave me a shot into my shoulder joint. I didn't even ask him what it was but must be some kind of corticosteroid, maybe mixed with a numbing agent like lidocaine. The last time I had an injection like that the pain was back in 3 days, but I couldn't get another shot for 3 months. Today he told me to turn my head away and he sprayed a little Gebauer's Ethyl Chloride on top of the joint, which made it slightly cold. When he stuck the needle partway in it wasn't bad, but when the needle hit bone that really hurt. He said that's how you know it's in the joint. Then he stuck in farther and I had that same bad pain again. When he was done he put a bandage on and prescribed PT. I'm trying to avoid surgery like I had on my other shoulder, which he said is one of the most painful kinds of surgery there is. I remember back then when I was halfway home from the surgery center I was crying, so I can tell you it hurts like hell to get pieces of bone cut out. In the morning I have to get blood drawn because my primary doctor needs to check a couple of things, but that's no big deal. I just sit there and watch the tubes fill with blood until they're done, then I go home and eat breakfast.