I had to have a virtual colonoscopy recently. The virtual part meant that after all of the awful prep, I went to a lab and they filled my colon with air and took CT scans, instead of putting me under anesthesia and doing a more invasive procedure. The gastroenterologist was being cautious with me because I have Ehler’s Danlos (a genetic disorder that causes thin skin and loose ligaments and can make internal organs more prone to injury), and he couldn’t get a clear enough idea from the geneticist of which type of the disorder I have so he assumed that I was too fragile for the real test. Thank God. The caveat, though, was that if they found anything on the scans that needed to be addressed, I’d have to redo the prep and go back for a traditional colonoscopy, Ehlers Danlos be damned. Honestly, the idea of going through the prep again sounded much more frightening to me than going under anesthesia and risking bleeding out.
Before I went in for the virtual colonoscopy, the lab sent the instructions telling me how to prepare. First, I had to avoid dairy and high fiber foods three days before the test, and then I had to drink only liquids the day before the test, with no pulp or food coloring, and then at a certain time I had to take two Dulcolax pills and then drink a bottle of Miralax mixed with 64 ounces of Gatorade, and then take two more Dulcolax pills, and then drink two different kinds of unpalatable contrast to make the colon more visible on the scans. The endless trips to the bathroom were nothing compared to the horror of trying to swallow those bitter, chemical-tinged liquids of suspicious density.
The saving grace throughout all of that prep was Netflix. I couldn’t really concentrate, both because my tummy was rumbling and because I was anxious about the results of the test, so I distracted myself with hours and hours of Netflix shows: there was an Australian teenage surfing show called Surviving Summer, and an American show called Sweet Magnolias, but my favorite was a show called Mismatched, set in Jaipur, India, about two teenage techies named Dimple and Rishi who spend the summer at an app development course. It’s romantic and funny and silly and full of teenage drama and even a few Bollywood-style dance numbers, and by the time I’d finished watching the second season the colonoscopy was over and I’d forgotten that I was listening to dialogue in Hindi and reading subtitles.
Even a few years ago, I would never have thought that I would feel so connected to a show set in India, with teenagers who speak a language I don’t understand, but Netflix has opened up whole new worlds for me. I’ve binged shows in Hindi, and Korean, and Spanish, and Italian, and of course English, that I would never have seen otherwise.
Don’t get me wrong, I’ve found a lot of duds along the way, and I’ve had to watch the first few minutes of a lot of shows I wish I’d never seen, but the number of wonderful surprises has made it all worth the effort.
. With the writers’ strike meaning that there are no late night shows on the air, and now the actors’ strike on top of that probably meaning that the fall TV season will be delayed, or replaced with reality shows, it’s a relief to know that I can always find something I’ve never heard of, but will thoroughly enjoy, on Netflix. It’s ironic, though, that the strikes are very much about the compensation problems with the Netflix streaming model, and yet Netflix and other streamers are the ones who are benefiting from the lack of network shows. I feel like I should feel guilty or disloyal for watching Netflix, but instead I’m just happy that I get the chance to discover so many actors and writers from around the world who I would never have seen on network TV in the United States. And maybe the strike will lead to these hard working creators being better compensated for making all of these wonderful shows. I hope so.
And now that the colonoscopy is over, and I know that I don’t have to have another one for five years, I’ve already found new shows to help me get through all of the vet visits and doctor visits that seem to be my lot this summer. There’s a great show from England called Heartstopper, based on a series of graphic novels about LGBTQ+ high school kids in love, and a Korean show called Extraordinary Attorney Woo, about an Autistic woman who becomes a lawyer, and they are both sweet and quirky and smart and surprisingly insightful and compassionate.
I wish I didn’t need so many distractions to help me get through each day lately, but I’m grateful that there are such good distractions available, and I’m hoping that, maybe, they will inspire more of my own writing. At the very least, they make me feel more hopeful about the world around me, and that’s no small thing.

If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my Young Adult novel, Yeshiva Girl, on Amazon. And if you feel called to write a review of the book, on Amazon, or anywhere else, I’d be honored.
Yeshiva Girl is about a Jewish teenager on Long Island, named Isabel, though her father calls her Jezebel. Her father has been accused of inappropriate sexual behavior with one of his students, which he denies, but Izzy implicitly believes it’s true. As a result of his problems, her father sends her to a co-ed Orthodox yeshiva for tenth grade, out of the blue, and Izzy and her mother can’t figure out how to prevent it. At Yeshiva, though, Izzy finds that religious people are much more complicated than she had expected. Some, like her father, may use religion as a place to hide, but others search for and find comfort, and community, and even enlightenment. The question is, what will Izzy find?































