I rode a chicken bus to my surgery!
Seriously. I'm staying in Guatemala for a while and decided to take advantage of the affordable rates here. Felt very comfortable with the doctor who was highly trained in the US and the great accomodations at the private hostpital in Guatemala City.
Ok, so here's the chicken bus part. We live in Antigua, about a 1hr bus ride to the city. We don't have a car so my awesome hubby & I hopped on a chicken bus at 5am, it was still dark and there was standing room only. But the conductor wouldn't let anyone stand so we squeezed in between people in the aisle as more and more people loaded on at each stop. The ride from Antigua to the city is over a windy mountain road and the drivers are CRAZY! You literally have to hold on to the rails going around the curves. People do the sign of the cross. I'm not kidding. Once we started up the hill the internal lights were turned off and all you could see were outlines of heads in the dark and the road fast approaching and curvy. I thought to myself "oh my goodness, this is the bus of death". But we made it just fine :redface:
The surgery coordinators met us in the city and drove us in a car to the hospital. Surgery was on Jan 29. Came home the next day. Everything went just as planned, except I found out I'm allergic to penicillin. They had to give me a hepinephrin (spelling?) shot during surgery because of the reaction. All else was good. A bit more uncomfortable the 2nd day as to be expected. Scared to cough. Crushed pills taste horrible but making it through.
Oh and by the way, we had a car service drive us back home from the hospital. I wasn't about to risk the chicken bus post-surgery. But what an adventure!