This coronavirus is
creeping me out, if not freaking me out.
I’m trying to find the balance between panicking and hoarding and acting
dumb like Trump and saying this is just another cold or flu. I did buy two packs of paper towels and
toilet paper, though. The other day,
Scripps College here canceled all its public events for the time being – pretty
disturbing and depressing, but probably inevitable, as the college would look
stupid doing nothing as U.C Berkeley, Stanford, U.S.C are switching to online classes. But, on the other hand, Claremont McKenna
College is still holding its public lectures.
Meanwhile, since
long before the epidemic, I’ve been thinking of how we care for or not care for
one another. Here is my latest column,
published in Friday’s Claremont Courier.
AT
EACH OTHER’S MERCY
It wasn’t what I had in mind.
It never is what anyone wants, friends kept telling me. Nobody wants to have to go to the
hospital. Nobody wants to be taken to
the E.R.
But there I was, in the E.R. It wasn’t so much that I was in the E.R –
that was bad enough. I was there again,
yet again.
This was the second time this year I was in the E.R. I had already gone
once in January. I was really hoping I would
make it through February without having to go.
But no. I was right on track to
meet last year’s record, when I went to the E.R thirteen times.
As I’ve said before, they should just reserve a bed for me (preferably
in a private room). “Oh, yeah, that guy. Right over there.”
This trip lasted five hours. Only five hours. That was well short of the usual eight or ten
hours. In January, I was there all
night. Literally. And at least I didn’t end up staying at the
hospital, as I did for a week in December and three other times last year, once
for three weeks.
Still, I didn’t get home until almost 9, when I was starving and finally
able to have dinner. And I wasn’t able
to do pretty much everything I was planning to do, I was looking forward to
doing, for those five hours. Good thing that
I was able to eat what I was planning on and looking forward to eating and that
it didn’t take long at all to get ready.
Still, it was five hours, I felt, taken from my life.
I have come to realize that this was perhaps – perhaps, hopefully not –
a new norm in my life. Let’s just say
that this was one of the dramatic changes in my life since having to have
spinal surgery three years ago at the end of last month. As I have written about in recent months, the
surgery left me much more disabled, needing much more help and having to adjust
to, or find, a new life. Yes, I was
already disabled before the surgery but didn’t have all the medical problems I
now have. Before the surgery, I usually
saw a doctor perhaps two, three times a year. Now, in addition to all the E.R
visits, I seem to have a doctor’s appointment once a month on average.
As I said, not what I had in mind.
None of this was.
Then, as I was lying there in the E.R, something else happened that I
didn’t have in mind. I heard moaning and
screaming and then saw someone writhing in pain on a gurney going by. Nothing unusual there, perhaps – this was the
E.R after all. But it was
disturbing. Even more disturbing, from
all the commotion and what I heard being said by the staff and sometimes the
woman, including profanities as well as pleas and expressions of gratitude, it
was quickly evident that this wasn’t a normal E.R visit. (Or was it?)
After a short while, it became clear that the woman needed to go, and
perhaps was having difficulty, going to the bathroom – did she have a bad
urinary tract infection? – and I saw her being supported as she stumbled back
down the hallway, apparently to the restroom.
Was this woman homeless? Was she
mentally ill? Was she coming down from a
trip, bad or good? All of the above? Regardless,
she was having a physical problem, was in serious pain and needed help.
She continued to moan and cry out and to say “thank you, thank you” and
to politely make requests (“May I have a female nurse?”). The male nurse kept
urging her to use the restroom and told her that she would be taken to “another
unit” where “we can give you a shower”.
And the commotion continued, with a staff member wondering if a gown
should be used when dealing with the woman and a woman complaining that there
was “a woman in the men’s room.”
I heard all of this and saw bits and pieces of it as I laid there,
waiting for the help I needed, wondering how long it would take, thinking about
I was once again having to rely on the care and expertise of others, and I
wondered. Was this woman getting the
help, all the help, she needed?
Why was there such a commotion, in this place, of all places, where
anything could happen? Was the staff
really prepared to deal with this woman?
Or was it that the staff was not prepared for such situations?
After all, I have read that hospitals and jails deal with and
accommodate the homeless and mentally ill on pretty much a steady basis. It is said that the homeless and mentally ill
routinely go in and out of hospitals and jails, sometimes going from one to the
other. It’s also said that this is more
or less passing the buck, that this isn’t the way for the homeless and mentally
ill to get the help that they need.
Was the woman, I wondered, not what the E.R staff had in mind, just as
she wasn’t what I had in mind, that afternoon, that day, ever? Why did it seem like this? I wondered as I laid there waiting.
Let’s face it: the homeless and mentally ill are never what we have in
mind. It is upsetting when we see
someone walking by aimlessly, muttering or shouting to no one. It is disturbing when we drive around in Los
Angeles or Pomona and see tents lined up along the sidewalk or clustered in
medians.
It’s not what we have in mind.
It’s certainly not what we have in mind here in Claremont. But, as was discovered about ten years ago
after years of denial, a fair number of homeless people, some of whom are
probably mentally ill, are in Claremont.
We just don’t see many of them.
Many spend the night in Claremont, where they feel safe, then make their
way to Pomona, where there are more services for them (not to mention perhaps
less notice from police), for the day.
We all need care, we all need help, at least every once in a while. Some, like me, may need more assistance than
others, and some may need even more and more. As Governor Newsom pointed out at
length recently, we have the responsibility to see that everybody, especially
the homeless, gets the support they need.
We are at each other’s mercy.
Or, as
I once heard it put and as should be all the more so here in Claremont, we are
each by all the others held.
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