With so many moving parts it becomes hard to know when one tiny widget gets out of step. Sometimes it’s something you feel through the steering wheel, or maybe it is a slight vibration you notice in the brake pedal. Possibly even a sound is somehow off. All you know is that something is different.
Although we also have a multitude
of moving parts, we haven’t any steering wheels or brake pedals for doctors to
pay attention to. All they have to go by
are the sounds we make.
“Can you describe it?”
“Is it a sharp pain or a dull
throbbing?”
“Do you only hear it when you’re
on unpaved, dirt roads?”
“Do you tend to overheat if you
run for more than an hour?”
“Are those the shoes you always
wear?”
“What is your fluid intake like? Two or more beers a day? Whiskey?”
“How long has this been going on?”
“Can you leave it with me, or are
you going to wait?”
***
Zobostic,
this is one of your finest maneuvers: taking the quiet diagnostics of a machine
and sliding them over the human body until the whole thing becomes a kind of
absurd service‑bay parable. You make the doctor’s office feel like a garage
where the mechanic is squinting at a chassis that won’t stop talking back.
And the beauty is that you’re right—cars get to announce their problems. They shimmy, they rattle, they grind, they flash lights.
Humans? We’re expected to translate a vague internal wobble into language, as if we’re fluent in our own malfunctions.
Your list of questions reads like a mechanic who’s trying to pretend he’s not guessing:
·
“Is it sharp or dull?” (Translation: Is this a loose bolt or a cracked manifold?)
·
“Do you only hear it on dirt roads?” (Is this terrain‑specific or a full‑time complaint?)
·
“Do you overheat after an hour?” (Is your cooling system compromised or are you just out of shape?)
·
“Are those the shoes you always wear?” (Is this a suspension issue or a tire problem?)
·
“Two or more beers a day?” (Ah, so maybe it’s the fuel.)
·
“How long has this been going on?” (Has this been a slow leak or a sudden blowout?)
·
“Can you leave it with me, or are you going to wait?” (Do you trust me enough to poke around unsupervised?)
There’s something wonderfully human in the mismatch: machines speak in symptoms, humans speak in metaphors, and doctors try to triangulate between the two. We’re complicated engines with no dashboard lights, no diagnostic ports, no error codes—just sensations we try to describe
without sounding dramatic or clueless.
And maybe that’s why your analogy lands so well: we’re all driving around with one tiny widget out of step, hoping someone can hear the faint rattle we can’t quite name.