Hi, guys.

It's a nice hospital, isn't it?

Because they've got a nice little garden and they've seen people bring their dogs and pets down to see their owners and stuff.

I don't think you can sit over there more, have you?

Which is quite nice.

I've had that done.

I'm alright.

A bit dizzy after it.

I won't be good this morning, to be honest.

But then I worked till four o'clock this morning, you see.

And then I couldn't fall asleep then.

I couldn't fall asleep.

I might walk down the ramp on the fresh air.

There's the... I did a little course there.

I think it was a three-day course.

I did a placement year in this hospital.

And I did a three-day course, I think, in there, in the Booth Institute.

It's lovely in there.

I think I might go at the top door.

I'll take me onto the ramp.

This is Estred.

So, there seems to be a problem between...

I thought it was a power one today.

I think I'm going to go this way.

I put it down because this patient's there.

Just have a bit of fresh air in there.

I did pyjamas today.

I thought, why not?

Why not just have a pyjama day there?

Thank you for the status in today, covering me.

So, I seem to have a disc problem now.

Between L1 and S5.

So, that's like, pelvis down.

My dad's picking me up.

I'll take a walk down the ramp, I think.

And then, at least, I'm out in the fresh air for a bit.

Because I felt a bit sicky.

They were very good.

So, I was expecting to have the bowel one.

You know, when they put the air in the bowel and then the contrast.

I've had that before.

So, I was like, oh, not again.

You know, it's bloody arse of mine.

TNT won't shift it, man.

But I didn't have that.

I had pelvis and abdomen.

So, that's what they're checking now.

Because, obviously, there's still blood showing up in the poop.

Why am I telling you this?

Because my stalker online will tell you anyway.

So, you know, how they haven't accessed my medical records.

I'll never know.

But there we are.

If you do access them, there's a couple of things I need to check.

So, let me know.

So, she wouldn't say about the tumor.

I was like, oh, just tell me.

As it shrunk.

And she was like, oh, I don't know.

There's thousands of images.

But also, they want to check the discs between L1S5.

I can't see now to put it up on the screen.

I might be able to.

I don't know.

Oh, I've walked out now.

So, am I still connected?

There we are.

There's the discs.

So, it's at L1S5 down the bottom.

Now, bottom of your spine is where the bone marrow makes red blood cells.

Right?

And that is a release point.

Okay, because your red blood cells are made within your bone marrow.

And the bottom of the spine there is a release point.

Now, obviously, I have a tumor in the back wall of my womb, which doesn't help the situation or the placement.

And also, I have, because the GPs wouldn't do anything, they said there was nothing wrong with me for the first couple of years, and they let it grow out of control, I then developed aplastic anemia, which affects the production of red blood cells and other blood cells.

And, obviously, I'm under hematology within the bone marrow, and that's one of the main sites.

So, when the tumor was very big, I had a lot of pain.

I would be screaming out in pain.

I couldn't move, and I had to lay flat on the floor and things.

It was awful.

Daniel and I said, like, push my back.

Is that what my dad would think it might be?

Push my spine right in.

It was awful.

You had to put so much pressure on it, you thought it was going to snap.

And now that pain is gone, that excruciating pain, but I do have a pain right there where the coccyx is in the lower bones, like a permanently dull, sort of dull, sort of strong pain, and I can't lie as flat as I used to.

So we shall see.

We shall see.

