Black Friday

We had our Thanksgiving dinner at the BierStein last night. We drove around downtown and Valley River trying to find a place that was open. We figured we could manage the bar at Valley River Inn, but they were packed with their holiday crowd. I called four restaraunts before we were able to find somewhere to eat dinner, but, unfortunately, none of us could finish our meals. I did, however, manage to finish my half pint of porter at least.

My brother was awake and coherent when we visited him before going home. We were able to joke around, and talk a little bit about calling his job and the travel plans he had made for Christmas. It was a very, very good moment. I was able to go to sleep last night without dread consuming my thoughts. As I texted my friends to give them the update, I knew they might think things were looking better and that it meant he was on the mend. But it does not. All it means is that he was awake last night and able to talk with us for about twenty minutes. It was simply the very first good moment of hopefully many more good moments to come, but it does not erase the fact that we will have to deal with just as many very bad moments until this ordeal finally ends.

Around four in the morning, Kev managed to pull the drain out of the top of his head. His hands have been mildly restrained, but it wasn’t enough to stop him. The staff waited to see how he managed since he had such good responses before going to sleep for the night. But, by 10am, he started to become too agitated again and they put the drain back in. Unfortunately, the fluid now coming out of the drain is a soft pinkish color, which means it is mostly cerebral spinal fluid that is coming out instead of the blood that needs to come out. The big problem today is that there is a blood clot in my brother’s fourth ventricle increasing pressure upon his brain stem. His neuro examines have continued to degenerate because of the pressure. His eyes are roving and his tremors have become worse. The doctor is going to begin the process of administering a drug directly through the catheter into my brother’s brain in the hopes of breaking up the clot and removing it from the ventricle to release the pressure on his brain stem. This will, in all hopes, allow the resiliency of the brain stem to help him slowly become a little bit more stable. This is the only procedure available to try and break up the clot to relieve pressure.

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The medicine is in his brain and he is sitting up with the drain clamped, waiting for the medicine to take effect. In an hour they will lay him back down, unclamp the drain, and we will wait to see what color of fluid starts to come out. Hopefully, it will be bright red! The drug will be administered every 8-12 hours for the next three days. Surgery and an induced-coma were both discussed as unviable options. This procedure will either work, or it will not. All we can do now is wait and see what happens next.

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I found a request for article submissions to a very small publication in Olympia, WA. The topic is Resiliency and Empowerment. I’m going to use this crisis as an analogy for my article. I’m going to write about how the Resiliency of the brain will be the ultimate factor for our hopes of restoring normal neurological functions of my brother’s brain after the pressure has been removed. This will be my analogy for the pressures we all experience trying to live in a post-modern world that has become designed for the profit of a miniscule portion of humanity. The Empowerment side of the article will be a reflection upon the struggles I have had to overcome with my experiences of being Type 1 Diabetic in what can at times be an uncaring healthcare system. I have learned through these struggles how to advocate for myself, and thus for my brother when he needed me, by shedding my culturally-implanted tendency to always believe in the efficacy of doctors and their medical staff. I do not believe my brother would have as good of a chance for recovery as he might have now if I had not stood up and vehemently argued with the ER doctor and nurse about their bigoted assumptions that my brother suffered primarily from mental illness, addiction or homelessness because of the way he looks and the clothes he wears.

Sometimes, in this post-modern (and ignorantly supposed post-racial) society, we tend to look without thinking. We believe we are capable of knowing what is happening around us without bothering to dig for deeper meanings or understandings. We believe that Progress will save us from our own socially-induced destruction. We know that some of the ways in which we live, and some the things we do, help to kill the planet’s ability to sustain life, but without Empowerment we are incapable of standing up and fighting for what we also know to be Right. The pressures pushing down on all of us from the society we live within are causing us to be sick. We forget how to stop and enjoy the rain, rather we curse how it will make us wet and late to the job we hate. But we have accepted these pressures because those in authority told us they are necessary. Authority does not inherently include the qualities of responsibility, integrity, or compassion. Those are qualities we must all choose to improve upon in our daily interactions with each other.

The tenets of Progress tell us that we need everything to be bigger, better, and faster. I believe these terms are correct, and we desperately need them, but I do not believe in our current definition of what these terms truly mean. What we need are bigger hearts and souls. We need a collective conscience that learns how to take care of and place value upon all life, not just human. Our skills of communication need to become better in the sense of how well we use them, not just how convenient they can become. Instead of increasing the scope of our military to create better access to bigger fossil fuel reserves, we need to start working on constructing better social structures within our nation that will help to increase the population’s abilities for collaboration, conflict resolution, and sustainable practices, in the hopes of replacing our current social trend of disposability and destruction.

Faster is obviously not a problem. As a child I watched Sesame Street on a TV with a handful of UHF/VHF channels and an antennae wrapped in foil but, by the time I was twenty, the internet was widely available in the home of everyone I knew. During the next twenty years of my life, I watched as the internet evolved from AOL dial-up to iPhones. All of this is to say that faster is not hard for us to accomplish. I would even say it is the nature of our current existence. But faster does not help us to solve the imminent problems facing us in our post-modern world. What we need is an immediacy in our attempts to apply a solution for our current trend of global extinction.

World War II proved to us how efficient our nation can be at providing an immediate change within our society to provide the necessary means for success. Women joined the workforce because of the war and, because they forced an immediate change in the way their place within our gender-structured society was accepted, we won the war. The same thing can happen now in our war against the multinational corporations that have hijacked our planet. We just need to learn how to pause and reflect about the events happening around us. Everything may be happening faster, but that does not mean they are happening outside of our control, or without the ability for us to adapt and adjust to our rapidly changing circumstances.

Resiliency is the key. It is our ticket out of the hell we have allowed into existence with our habits of giving license to outside authorities to take precedence in our lives. It is difficult to believe one is capable of being empowered when you feel crushed by the pressure surrounding you. It is unimaginable to think escape is probable if you are scared of freedom.

If we can find a way to eradicate the pressure pushing on my brother’s brain then he will have the most optimal chance of recovery because of his Resiliency. The same is true for our society. If we can find the strength and courage to reclaim the personal power we have given away in exchange for convenience, then there is every possibility our natural resiliency will help us to find a sustainable path into a future of peace and unity for the entire planet.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Kev finally woke up this morning and was able to say his name. He got the year correct, but guessed that it was July. He’s stable and aware. That is all the blessings I need on this day of Thanksgiving.

I spent the night in his room and watched as he went from not being able to keep his legs or arms up in the air at all, to being able to hold them up to the count of ten. I’ve never been so proud of him!! I was finally able to get some sleep and now I am sitting in the cafeteria waiting for shift change on the ICU to be over so I can get back on the ward. The sun is starting to rise and the clouds and trees are glowing with the sunlight that will grace us for the first hour of today. It is one of those mornings where I feel as if I am standing on God’s front deck looking out at the wonderous creation put forth as our playground.

Speaking of playgrounds, I had to cancel all my holiday plans for the end of this week. And I had it all planned out so well! I was going to have coffee with an old friend before going to a potluck at a new friend’s house. I was going to spend tomorrow morning with my fiddle teacher and her kids playing in the playground by my house before going to a Friend’s Giving dinner with my soccer teammates. Instead, I will be here at the hospital waiting for my parents to arrive when I will then go home, take a shower, and sleep. I didn’t sleep much last night, but I don’t mind at all. I was holding my brother’s hand when he woke up and started gagging on his nose tube. The poor guy. They have to keep his hands restrained until the drain tube is taken out, which may be a few more days if we’re lucky. . . longer if Lady Luck decides to skip town for the holiday. I will hunt that bitch down if she leaves my brother stranded.

The guilt has finally started to creep in. There are so many things I feel horrible about:

  • I let my brother clean up his own vomit before the shit really hit the fan. Why couldn’t I have been a good enough person to wipe up the mess for him?!? Am I doomed to be a miserably selfish person who can’t even help my brother when he pukes?? How callous can I honestly be??!
  • I didn’t ride in the ambulance with Kev and I arrived too late to give them the earliest warning possible about his severe altered mental status. Would it have made a difference? I don’t know. But I think I wouldn’t feel so damn guilty about not being here when he needed me the most. At least I can hope that someone in that room, or in the hallway, listened to my words and will not make the mistake of assuming anything about a person in need of medical care in the future. Why is it so difficult for us as humans to keep an open mind when we encounter strangers?
  • I feel bad I wasn’t nicer to the chaplain. He found me this morning in the cafeteria, but I still don’t want to talk with him. I simply do not want to go through the inane formality of small talk. I have never enjoyed small talk. My brother and I are twins in this regard. As friendly and helpful as the chaplain is, I simply am not in the mood to talk about my job, or where I live, or what books I like to read, or any of the other meaningless shit that people concern themselves with when trying to be ‘nice.’ I don’t effing want nice! I want to spend my mental energy and social efforts engaging about issues that are interesting. I would love to get into a conversation about God and the origin of existence, but not while I’m concerned with only knowing if my brother will be okay or not. I wish I were a nicer person, and I feel guilty about not being a nicer person, but. . . oh, well.

I guess my baptism worked. Guilt is embedded within my soul.  I may not be a practicing Roman Catholic like my family, but damned if I didn’t manage to internalize all the sinful woes of being alive. I don’t pray to God because I do not believe in God. I am not atheist, or agnostic. I simply do not believe in any version of God that man has created because that version is only a timidly pale comparison to the real deal that our puny human minds are incapable of perceiving. I can understand the comfort to be found in having a simple three-letter word to describe something beyond description. I will at times self-identify as Spiritual, but then that starts getting closer to all the New Age mumbo jumbo that I am equally averse to. So, where does that leave me? Either saved from my doom, or doomed from my Salvation, I suppose. Either way, does it even matter?

I have one last guilt clawing at my conscience this glorious morning. I want to go home and do all the things I had planned for today and tomorrow. I have an apple crumb pie from Sweet Life waiting to go to a potluck and be eaten by a bunch of people I was looking forward to spending time with. What am I going to do with a pie and no one to eat it? Honestly, that’s the last of my worries, but it bothers me that my plans changed so suddenly right before they were about to come to fruition (but, let’s be honest, that doesn’t bother me nearly as much as the reason why I’m not following through on my plans). At least I have one silver lining that has allowed me an opportunity to focus on something good that has come out of all this mess.

The reason why I couldn’t ride with Kev in the ambulance, or immediately follow in the taxi, is because I have learned how to take care of my diabetes without thinking too much about it. It has become instinctual. It has become an inherent component of my existence. Without my ability to monitor and take care of my diabetes, I may very well have ended up being a second casualty for the paramedics when they arrived at my front door last night. Or, I may have woken up feeling very sick this morning from high blood sugar and having no way to manage it without leaving my brother to go all the way home.

I was on the phone with the 911 dispatcher when my pump decided to beep at me for having a low reservoir. If I hadn’t taken the time to change my insulin before heading to the hospital to spend the night then I would definitely not be feeling as healthy as I do this morning. I would not have been able to be here to talk with the neurologist who will be performing his angiogram in thirty minutes. If I had chosen to ignore my own health in preference to my brother’s, then both of us would be suffering more than we are at this moment. The other moment last night I am rather proud of myself for was when I was on the phone with my mom before the paramedics showed up and, as I was talking with her, I could feel something was not right. I immediately stopped what I was saying and doing, and told my mom I needed to check my blood. She waited patiently on the phone while I came to the realization that I was at 66! I opened the door for the paramedics while still trying to suck down my juice box and prevent myself from becoming incapacitated as well.

My brother is in for his angiogram. They will hopefully find the bleed and be able to fix it with a catheter, or they may find nothing at all. Worse case scenario is surgery, but keep your fingers crossed, please!! My parents are just south of Portland and will be here with me soon. All my friends are keeping me cheered with texts full of love and support. The ICU staff is amazing and a blessing!! I actually have so much to be grateful for today I can’t help but to think every Thanksgiving from now on will somehow be pale in comparison as well.

There is a piano in the main lobby, but since I can’t play it, I am planning on bringing in my fiddle later and practicing my Christmas music here at the hospital. I will bring some holiday joy to this party!!! Tis the season after all. . .

and the WINNER is…..

I am sitting in the ICU waiting room waiting for my brother to have a small hole drilled into the top of his head for a drain to be put in with the hopes of reducing the pressure in his head due to bleeding. This is not how I expected to spend the night before Thanksgiving.

Kevin and I live together in the house our parents helped us to buy. He lives upstairs and I live downstairs. Many people don’t even know I have a brother, or, if they do, they’ve probably never met him. My brother is a hermit, but in a good way. He is the sweetest, most-gentlest human being on the planet. I tend to make the joke that both our parents are passive-aggressive, and while I inherited all the aggressive, Kevin inherited all the passive. I am the loud one. I am the annoying one. I am the obnoxious sibling. I am the one who was locked out of our older cousin’s room as a kid while Kev was allowed in because all he did was sit quietly in the corner and read.

He doesn’t really like meeting new people. He will, and it doesn’t really bother him, but that doesn’t mean he likes it. I am the social butterfly, but he is my baby brother, and I will protect him against anyone who tries to cause him harm. I don’t know if he is going to be okay. It is 12:06 in the morning and he hasn’t been coherent since I watched him leave with the paramedics around 8:30pm.

It started around 6pm and it happened so bloody fast (sorry for the bad pun, but I need something right now). He threw up once in his room and then again in the bathroom. I didn’t understand what I was hearing at first because he never throws up. ***Update: they are performing the procedure for the drain right now. Dear God, please let it help.*** After throwing up the second time, Kev said he felt better and proceeded to clean up the mess. But he soon was in the bathroom again, retching, and I was on the phone with our mom trying to decide if I needed to call 911.

I waited about 30 minutes and then called the paramedics. Kev was lying in the bathroom with his blanket and pillow that I had brought down to him. He couldn’t stand because he felt so dizzy. The paramedics helped him onto his feet and out of the bathroom into the living room. He couldn’t walk by himself or keep his balance. I have never felt so sick and helpless in my life, and all I could do was think, “this is how he feels every time I have a nasty low blood sugar.” I can’t begin to count how many times Kev has helped me when I couldn’t help myself. He was the one who called the paramedics for me. I feel sick to my stomach because of how worried and apologetic he was for having to need my help tonight. I wish I could help him understand how much I am willing to sacrifice myself if it meant he would never need to suffer.

I didn’t always feel this way about my brother. As kids, I spent a long time resenting my brother for not being stronger like me. For not standing up, or even just standing by my side during times of trouble. He was always willing to let me talk him into doing something we shouldn’t, but then he was always the first one to run away and hide when we were about to get caught. That pissed me off. Yet, it never mattered how mad I might be at him if someone else were to think it was a good idea to bully him. I am the loud one. I am the one who will fight. I am the one to throw punches and destroy anyone who dares to hurt my brother. The words loyal, adamant, and resolved do not even begin to express how strongly I will fight to protect my brother.

I had to fight for my brother while we were in the Emergency Room tonight, and I know it helped him to feel a little bit calmer—or maybe it was just the sedative finally beginning to work, but I feel better thinking he knew, even within his delirium, that I was in the room protecting him, fighting for him, and his knowing that he was not alone helped him to find a little peace. The hospital chaplain has been sitting with me all evening and I appreciate his support, but I don’t want to talk with him. I want to try, but this is where my brother and I are very similar. I may be loud, but I am content with silence. Tonight, however, was not the night for my silence.

Kev had to be helped walking out of the house onto the gurney for his ride to River Bend Hospital in Springfield. He was completely coherent the entire time he talked with me, with our mom on the phone, and with the paramedics. By the time I walked into his room in the ER he was completely incoherent. He couldn’t straighten his legs, he couldn’t answer me when I greeted him, and I stood rooted in place in the doorway horrified to see him so delirious. It was the most terrifying and disturbing moment I can think of. The doctor started asking me questions about his mental health, if he had a job, did he drink or do drugs, where did he live, on and on. I answered her questions and watched as they wheeled him out for a CT Scan. When I called my mom, she was almost in tears as she told me about what had happened before I arrived.

Kev was in the ER for more than an hour before the taxi was able to drop me off. My mom had called the hospital to get information and spoke with a nurse. My mom was infuriated because of the way the nurse had immediately begun to ask questions about my brother’s mental health and living situation. The nurse had asked all the same questions the doctor asked me when I walked into the room a half hour later. My mother had emphatically informed the nurse that Kevin had been completely alert when he had spoken with her a half hour earlier on the phone, and when the paramedics helped him from the house. My mother’s intelligent impression (from a lifelong career of being an RN) was that the nurse had simply looked at my hermit brother, heard his ramblings, and took that to mean drugs, alcohol, homelessness, or mental deficiency. I was now irate.

The next time the doctor came in to talk with me was to tell me that my brother had a bleed in his brain and they were waiting for the neurology team to confer and decide on the next step. I demanded to know why the information my mother had provided to the nurse was not adequately provided to the doctor as a means to initiate a quicker response to the possibility of a stroke or an aneurism. The doctor, of course, gave me her litany of bullshit answers only geared towards the medical necessity of not admitting someone might have made a mistake. She finally made some halfhearted attempt at an apology for something meaningless, but I don’t remember what. I simply told her it was good of her to try and make an apology, but I did back off and simply let her speak.

Kev was moved into another room after his scans and that is where I came face-to-face with the nurse who had talked with my mother. I was adamant in demanding to know why she had failed to provide relevant information to the doctor in a timely fashion as to increase the chances for my brother’s recovery. She claimed the paramedics had brought my brother in with the description of saying he had been suffering from fatigue. I called her out, in front of everyone in the room, and said her reply was “Bullshit!” specifically because she had spoken with my mom who had specifically told her that my brother was coherent and alert only 30 minutes prior. I loudly accused the nurse of making assumptions about my brother, and hampering his opportunity to be healed quickly, because she made the assumption that he was either a drunk, drug addict, homeless, or mentally disabled. I accused her vociferously in a room full of emergency medical personnel who were all staring at me speechless, and right next to where my brother was struggling for his life.

Of course, the woman tried to tell me there was no way she had made any assumptions, but I called her out on that as well. I informed the entire room, “I am a Type 1 Diabetic so I know damn well how easy it is for someone to be ignorant enough to think drugs or alcohol is the problem simply because a person is incapable of speaking for themselves! I have had the exact same ignorant assumptions placed upon me when I have been low, so I know damn well what it looks and feels like when someone makes those assumptions.” As a result of my tirade, a security officer was called into the room to keep an eye on me. I had already promised my mom to not get kicked out of the hospital (I am the loud, annoying and obnoxious one, remember?). What amazes me is how every one of those medically trained individuals could not recognize how controlled my anger was every time I would back down after getting the answer I was demanding.

The security guard didn’t stay for very long. It was easy to see his presence was not honestly required. I did have to smile while I stood next to my brother’s bed and texted my mom to let her know I had Security called on me, but that I had managed to not get kicked out yet. The only other outburst I made the staff suffer through was when I was trying to get the most basic of information from the doctor. She had come back to tell me that the neurologist was having trouble with his computer at home and couldn’t get a clear picture of the scan to study. The angiogram had been scheduled for the morning, but no decision had been made about whether to put in a drain or not. It was looking like an aneurism, and the hope was that lowering his blood pressure would help the bleed to self-heal.

“So,” I said, “you’re telling me that his brain is bleeding, the doctor can’t read the scan well enough to determine if a drain needs to be applied, the angiogram is scheduled for the morning, and the only thing we can do until the doctor is able to actually read the scan to determine if a drain will help or not is to wait and hope that my brother’s brain stops bleeding all on its own. Is that correct?”

“Yes.”

Well. Okay then. “So,” I asked her, “can you give me a guess, or an estimate, or a time range as for how long it might take before he is moved into the ICU?” This question received a very long and convoluted response that simply refused to answer the question. Finally, one of the male nurses (who had been called in earlier because of my unpredictable behavior) said to me, “a couple hours, maybe.” I thanked him and looked back to the doctor and sweetly said, “that wasn’t so hard. At least he answered the question for you because you never did bother to answer the question at all. It isn’t a very difficult question. Hell, it almost has an answer as easy as ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ It certainly beats the hell out of me why you can’t be bothered to answer such an incredibly simple question.” Okay. Maybe they were smart to call in the security guard earlier, but everyone in the room listening to me was perfectly aware of how reasonable and cognizant my questions were. But, just to be on the safe side I did demand of the doctor, “am I asking too unreasonable of a question for you?” She had no further replies.

By this time the hospital chaplain was in the room to replace the security guard as my watchdog. I was not in the mood to put up with being ‘handled’ and I told everyone to leave the room and go away. When they stood and looked at me, I reiterated, “you are doing nothing to help my brother at this point. I do not want you standing around hovering. Please go away.” And they left. Except the chaplain. He was a very kind and supportive man. We simply sat in silence. At one point he asked if Kev would mind having his hand held and I told him it was okay. Later in the evening, he asked me, “is there any kind of thought or prayer I can say for your brother?” I smiled and told him the truth, “anything good will help. Thank you.”

I sat by the gas fire in the ICU waiting room, waiting for the drain to be put into the hole drilled into the top of my brother’s head. The chaplain sat with me and we waited in silence. Now I am in my brother’s room waiting for him to wake up. The most optimistic outcome will be that Kev wakes up and is aware and able to talk. The doctor is expecting this to be a long hospital stay, but hopefully only for a week or so. Worse-case scenario. . . well, I’m not exactly sure what that is, but I’m hoping we won’t have to find out. My parents tried to drive down from Bellingham tonight, but were exhausted by the rain and are trying to sleep in a hotel room in Tacoma. I am sitting on a chair in my brother’s room that can be pulled out into a bed, but I’m not ready to sleep. I want to watch my brother sleep and believe he will wake up and be okay. I want to tell him I love him and I’m sorry for being such a pain to live with at times. I want to let him know, considering he has one tube coming out of the top of his head, one coming out of his nose, and a tube collecting the piss right out of his kidneys, that he wins. For life. He now has the lifetime achievement award for being sicker in the hospital then me and my diabetes have ever been. Damn him. This is one contest I never wanted to compete in, let alone lose.

 

Red — Sexual Harassment

Red and I did not speak about the text he had sent me on that Sunday morning after the work Christmas party. I figured it was a moot point. I assumed we would never talk about it and go about our lives as if the incident had never occurred. At least, that was my hope. A few days after the first text, Red sent me an innocuous text informing me that he would not be attending some social gathering a group of people from work had planned. I did not respond for the simple reason that I did not want to engage with Red on any level. He had been keeping his distance at work as well, and I felt safe believing his attraction would wither and die out in time.

A few days later, though, I received another text from Red:

Have you thought about inviting me over? I can make you feel real good. I know how to treat you like a real man should.

I remember this text because, immediately after I read it, I decided to get stars tattooed on my hands. It was an impulsive decision, but I desperately felt the need to do something that celebrated my independence from expectations placed upon me from external sources. The guy in the tattoo shop was initially reticent about tattooing me in such an exposed area. His comment, “hand tattoos can kill jobs,” was met with my own quip, “what jobs?” He laughed, shrugged, and commenced to design the stars that are forevermore prominent whenever I reach out into my external world.

The text Red sent me was again in the early morning and I sat at the library, waiting for the tattoo shop to open, while composing my response to him. This time, I was not willing to let the incident go without challenge because I wanted it to STOP. I do not remember my exact words, but I do remember bluntly informing Red that I did not appreciate his disrespect for me by not accepting my previous answer of NO when he asked me if I was willing to be more than friends. I told him in no uncertain terms that I was angry with him for reducing our friendship to sex, and that I was absolutely NOT interested in him. I graciously informed him I would not tell anyone at work about his pressuring me, but that I did not want to be friends anymore. I told him to please stop texting me, that I was willing to work peacefully with him, but I wanted this situation to be dropped. His reply was simple: “Sorry. I misunderstood.”

It was at this point when I began to realize how I might have misled him by answering “yes” to his question about feeling the attraction when he had trapped me in the back office. From my experiences over the years since this moment in time, I can now easily recognize how mindlessly I had internalized my perceived role of what it meant to be ‘feminine’ and ‘polite’ and ‘nice.’ Even as I began to realize my mistake, I felt guilty for having caused the “misunderstanding.” I honestly believed I was partly at fault for what was happening to me. I knew Red was acting like an asshole, but I did not find the fault to be entirely his. Instead, based on my social conditioning, I believed his divorce was to blame, or his drinking, or his pain and distress, or conversely it was my lack of maturity, or my inability to respond effectively to his comments, or my inadequacy in how to handle a situation where a man shows more interest in me than I am comfortable with.

****Please notice how each one of those excuses above focuses either upon Red, as a man, being influenced by negative circumstances, or upon me, as a woman, who is in some way defective or inferior. THIS IS THE RESULT OF BEING BORN AND RAISED WITHIN A CULTURE THAT ASSIGNS MORE VALUE TO A MAN THEN TO A WOMAN. These cultural beliefs hurt women and I am sharing my understanding of how it hurt me.****

At the time, I only told two people at the pool about what had happened. A year or so later, I also ended up telling Bill Kuzmer and Luke, one of the younger lifeguards who worked with Red, because they both asked me why I was no longer friends with Red. Luke eventually ended up taking sides with Red and I lost my friendship with him as well, but he was the young lifeguard who Red had been selling weed to during the early mornings while upstairs in the staff breakroom. The early morning Building Supervisor had told Fryer her concerns about Red and Luke, but Fryer never did anything about the situation. At least, to give him the benefit of the doubt, he never did anything that anyone else on staff could easily recognize as being an action taken against the possibility of drugs being sold on the Park District’s premises.

Luke eventually lost his job as the early morning Building Supervisor a year or so later, after he was arrested for possession of cocaine, but I do believe it was because he quit. He was rehired again some time later, but he quit that time, too. I do not believe he was ever threatened with the loss of his employment, but I do not know. This may seem like an unfounded rumor, but it was only last summer while working with a younger lifeguard, who had been a swimmer on the high school team and was now in college, when the old story came up again in our conversation. He told me during an early morning Saturday shift about Red selling marijuana illegally to someone at the pool years ago. I asked him how he knew about it and he told me that his mom, who had heard it from Bill Kuzmer, had told him. This is exactly how information at the pool is officially shared and communicated: Gossip and Rumormongering.

Bill Kuzmer, on the other hand, simply agreed with me that what Red had said was disturbing, but he never provided me with any advice on how to proceed dealing with the situation. When Fryer finally got around to investigating what had occurred and asked Bill if he knew anything about me and Red, Bill replied, “he asked Sam out on a date and she said no.” At the time, though, when Bill agreed with me that Red’s behavior had been inappropriate, I took this to be validation for being justified in my anger towards Red, and my choice to avoid him at all cost.

My mom would tell me that I needed to tell Fryer about the texts, but I had erased all of the texts. I honestly expected if given enough time, then the situation would resolve itself by simply going away. I was not capable of recognizing what had happened to me as being Sexual Harassment. I had always been taught that Sexual Harassment happened when a boss told you to do something sexual and you were fired for saying NO. I thought Sexual Harassment was nudie pictures on the wall, being called “babe” at work, having my ass grabbed or my tits pinched. I did not understand how being stared at could be a form of Sexual Harassment, and was illegal.

For the next three years, I worked six days a week with Red, and I performed my shifts with an ever-increasing knot of dread, disgust, anger, and frustration growing more solidly within my heart whenever I would catch Red looking at me with his glassy eyes. Every time Red was in the water teaching a lesson, he would find a way to be underneath the guard stand and he would stare up at me. Every single day. Every time I was in the water teaching a swim lesson, I would look up and see Red standing above me on the deck and discussing my teaching techniques with someone else, many times he would be speaking with Fryer. I became so incredibly distressed and uncomfortable wearing my bathing suit at work, that I felt to be blessed with a miracle when I finally switched from syringe therapy to a pump, and could no longer spend time in the water being disconnected from my insulin. The extreme discomfort I felt every time I caught Red staring up at me taught me how to conduct my lifeguard scan while effectively managing to NOT make eye contact with anyone in the pool. It was during these three years when I lost my ability to smile, and show joy and gratitude with the people in my life, and at my job. Three years of being gripped by the detrimental effects of such negative emotions are the basis for my claim of having suffered through undiagnosed PTSD.

During those three years I tried to work through my emotions without professional help. I had been required to speak to therapists while growing up and I came away from those experiences feeling as if the specialists were only good at making me feel worse about myself then I felt before even walking in the door. I struggled with the volatile combination of anger, disgust, and resentment and tried to find a way of simply going to work and not being consumed by my emotional turmoil.

There was one day when Red decided to confront me in the back office to demand that I stop ignoring him. I can still distinctly feel the intense acrimony and rancor I felt as I tried to maintain my dignity and simply told him to leave me alone. I used to teach a classroom full of seventh graders, so I know how to be a broken record repeating the exact same instructions over and over and over again until something finally manages to penetrate the thickest skull. Red intensified his demands to the point of scaring the other staff away, but all I could do was stand in place and tell him over and over and over again, “NO means NO!” until he finally walked away.

This period in time was also the beginning of the severe and pervasive harassment I have received from the administration of the Park District. It began with Fryer ambushing me in the back office, much in the same way Red had done earlier, to tell me about some new complaint he had received about my attitude. I was never given the exact nature of the complaint, a name of who was complaining, or any kind of description as to what I was actually doing wrong. So, not only was I trying to deal with the destructive emotional leftover from my experience with Sexual Harassment, but now I had paranoia being incorporated into my daily perspective of life, and of myself. I lost the chance to develop stronger friendships at work because I was perpetually terrified that anytime I spoke with someone I may be offending them, and I would get another reprimand from Fryer. During this time, I simply stayed away from the people who could have helped me. Hindsight is always 20/20, and it is only with hindsight I can truly appreciate the extent to which I allowed myself to be isolated and ‘cut off from the herd,’ as to become easier prey.

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The only other time in my life I have had such adverse repercussions for my ‘attitude’ was while I was living and working in Las Vegas before my diagnosis. I was angry all the time. The slightest incident would send me reeling into a fit of vitriol. Cognitively, I was able to recognize the absurdity of my quick temper and intolerance, but that did nothing to alleviate the anguish of always feeling and being angry. One night, I even came home from work and grabbed the yellow pages to spend the evening looking up every therapist, psychologist, and psychiatrist I could find, in the hopes of learning what was wrong with me so I could fix it. Luckily (Ha! That’s a good pun), I was soon diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes and I learned the anger came from severe and persistent hyperglycemia, which is curable with the administration of insulin.

Unfortunately, beginning regular injections of insulin does not cure the long-standing effects of hyperglycemia immediately. In fact, the very action of insulin dropping my blood sugars to more acceptable levels (or even lower into the hypoglycemic range) also became an instigator for foul-tempered mood swings. After the first year of trying to live with Diabetes, I finally made the choice to leave my job in Vegas and move back to Eugene. I wanted to work at the pool with the people who I trusted would support me through the transition into my new insulin-dependent life. My greatest hope was to have the opportunity to learn how to manage and control my formidable glucose-influenced emotional rollercoaster in a safe and friendly environment.

*********************************************************************

During the three years after Red sent the texts, I would also receive complaints from patrons about my behavior and attitude. At the time, I did not necessarily take all of the patron complaints seriously because I recognized many of them as coming from individuals who were associated with Red, either from his role as a swim instructor or as one of the swim coaches. I know for a fact Red encouraged one of his private lessons to write a letter of complaint about me, and to drop it off at the main office, because the early morning Building Supervisor, who was a good friend of mine, overheard Red and told me about it.

Yet, I still did not consider telling any of this to Fryer. My years of association with Fryer had taught me that it is seldom worth the backlash of bringing a problem to Fryer that bothers him, because he will only take his frustration out on the messenger, and rarely do anything to solve the root problem. I believed there was no point in telling Fryer about what was happening unless I told him the whole story about the texts (which I had foolishly erased), and tried to explain how Red made me feel by looking at me. I simply was incapable of breaking past the wall of silence I had constructed, or the feelings of shame and embarrassment, to complain about something that seemed so minor—until I was conclusively pushed into action by the impetus of being verbally assaulted by Red at work.

Dale Weigandt, the Park District Superintendent, ultimately became involved the day I had to sit upstairs with him and Fryer and be told about a nasty letter that had been sent anonymously to the main office accusing me of shouting at and attacking patrons and coworkers. I remember feeling horrified—and being absolutely positive that the letter had been written and sent by Red. Dale told me that he did not put much faith or credibility into anything said by someone anonymously, that he believed such people to be cowards, but that the problem of my behavior and attitude was becoming unacceptable.

If I were to be ambushed by this particular meeting again, as the person I am today and after having learned all that I have in the past three years, I would say to Dale and Fryer, “Why are you bringing this letter to my attention at all? If you give no credence to the cowardly rantings of a person not willing to share their name, then WHY are you sharing it with me?!? How can you possibly sit there trying to convince me that you have no assurances of the validity of an anonymous claim, yet you use it as a way to blame me for the very accusations that the anonymous letter is describing?!” But, as we all know, I was not smart enough, or brave enough, to stand up and speak out for my rights at that point in time. NOW, however, is a much different story!

I did not share my suspicions about the nascency of the anonymous letter to Dale or Fryer. It felt, at the time, as if it would simply turn into a session of ‘he said/she said’ and that is a particular game I have never had any interest in playing, with anyone, for any reason. I was smart enough, at the time, to instinctually know I would never have a snowball’s chance in Hell of winning that game. I may not have been able to articulate my instinct at the time, but I do believe the intervening years have since given me the ability to critically analyze and better understand the social construction of Sexism, which gradually became the dominant discrimination encasing my experiences at the pool concerning my invisible disability.

I can’t elucidate my reluctance to inform Fryer and Dale about my experiences with Red any further. Mostly what I remember is just wanting it to all go away. I didn’t want to talk about it, to think about it, to describe what had happened, or to somehow exasperate the situation even more. I did not believe that divulging my problem to Fryer would somehow help me. At the time I was worried that telling would simply make the situation worse. I did not want to confront Red. I just wanted him to leave me alone!

Intro to Public Education

In February of 2016 I wrote a short comment on an article for the Environmental Politics class I was taking at Lane Community College. I have a couple hours before I head out to the gym with my friend, and then trivia at BeerGarden. I thought for my post today I would revise my original comment and add in some new perspectives I have concerning the role of education for making a sustainable society.

The article was titled ‘Global Warming’s Terrifying Math,’ written by Bill McKibbon, and it talks about the numbers that have become generally accepted as the limits imposed upon the use of fossilized fuels to prevent climate control failure, and why the fossil-fuel companies are allowed to get away with ignoring these numbers. Planet Earth has been scientifically assigned the official position of not being capable of temperatures rising more than two degrees Celsius without imminent catastrophe. We have already raised the average temperature of the planet just under 0.8 degrees Celsius, and that has already caused far more damage than most scientists originally expected.

Scientists estimate humans can pour roughly 565 more gigatons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by mid-century and still have some reasonable hope of staying below the two degrees limit. The amount of carbon already contained in the proven coal and oil and gas reserves of the fossil-fuel companies is 2,795 gigatons, and it is this fuel which we, as a society, are currently planning to burn—a number fives times higher than 565.

Alone among businesses, the fossil-fuel industry is allowed to dump its main waste, carbon dioxide, for free because, until a quarter-century ago, almost no one knew that CO2 was dangerous. Our current economic system is controlled by the industries who directly profit from the special pollution break, supported by our politicians and government, which allows them the success of staying alive past the point of no return. The fight for our future survival will depend upon our collective ability as citizens to force the fossil-fuel industry to stop their destruction of our future as a species. In the economists’ parlance, we’ll make them internalize those externalities.

A strong point of the article was the explanation that big fossil-fuel companies’ willingness to fight for the prevention of regulations controlling the release of carbon-dioxide is because the reserves still technically in the ground are already economically aboveground—those reserves are the primary assets figured into share prices, the principle upon which companies are borrowing money against, and are the holdings that give the companies their value. But, given the afore-mentioned math, it becomes painfully clear that the planet has an enemy, a rogue industry, reckless like no other force on Earth, that will indeed help to usher in a rapid, transformative change, because building a movement requires a good enemy.

I believe Public Education can be used as a strategy by which to usher in our transformation as a society. By teaching our children, and ourselves in the process, how to recognize the forces influencing our private and public spheres, we can learn how to regain control over our lives, and how to live in new ways that help to mitigate the damage already done. It is a time for emphasizing collaboration over competition, resolution over conflict, community over isolation, sustainability over disposability, and tolerance over fear.

Social Movements are how things in society get changed for the better. We have a long history of such movements proving the point. Learning how to create, build support for, and sustain a social movement for change is challenging in the extreme. So much so, in fact, that many movements fail as a result of a lack of awareness for what needed to be done next in order to succeed. Many people lose faith when they perceive the movement as having failed to create the change they worked so hard for. Social change is a process governed by a more glacial pace of time then most people usually encounter in their daily lives.

I want to teach children how to critically analyze Social Movements as a way to choose the cause they are willing to fight for, and then show them the direct and nonviolent strategies and tactics that are needed to succeed, as well as helping them to recognize what success looks like, and how to maintain their momentum and motivation for the long haul. We must become comfortable with the understanding that ‘success’ will not be seen in our lifetimes. But it is for those future lifetimes that we must begin to make sacrifices today. The younger an individual can begin to learn how to fight for survival, and how to WIN those fights, is a necessary component of an education for sustainability. And I do believe that the ultimate purpose of Public Education should be the continuation of the Public.

I believe it is appropriate, and necessary, for public education to have a desirable political socializing effect upon children, whereupon they learn how to become active citizens who not only know how to live well in the world and create changes for social and ecological justice, but who will think critically in dealing with unpredictable problems, as well as competently knowing how to communicate and share their thinking processes with others in a collective atmosphere.

Whew. I’m done for today. I have more thoughts on these ideas, but this is only the beginning. Hell. I haven’t even begun to scratch the surface of what I believe, why I believe it, and what the hell I am doing about it (insomuch as I can). I’m going to work on tomorrow’s post until I’m finished with my bitter and then I’m headed home to catch my ride for tonight’s entertainment.

I hope all y’all have a wonderful evening as well during this year’s turkey week!

Life’s Unexpected Absurdities

A few years ago, we had a lap simmer at the pool who wound up floating face down in the water and not moving. It was my responsibility to blow my whistle and alert everyone to the emergency and jump into the water and rescue her. I remember rolling her over onto her back and noticing how grey her face was. We pulled her out of the water and commenced to perform CPR.

I had a bitch of a time trying to open her airway enough to actually accomplish blowing air into her lungs. As my coworkers performed compressions on her chest and attached the AED pads, I struggled to lift her neck high enough and pull her head back to get some air into her lungs. I think at one point I managed to blow air into her stomach, but I am still doubtful to this day that I ever managed to get air into her lungs. We later learned that the emergency doctors at the hospital had diagnosed her as being “morbidly obese” and this was the reason for my inability to effectively administer oxygen.

Fryer was the scheduled Building Supervisor, but he was busy performing his ‘daily hot tub inspection’ in the sauna outside. He never heard my whistle. He had no idea we were in the middle of a medical crisis and needed all hands- on deck. Those of us who were working hard to try and save this woman’s life in a timely manner had to send one of the water exercise instructors outside to fetch Fryer.

Fryer later recalled what his first thoughts were when the woman we sent to get him stood in the doorway of the sauna; he almost said to her, “either get in, or close the door,” but she finally managed to tell him there was an emergency inside. According to Fryer’s recollection, he sighed and made his way into the building he was being paid to supervise. The first thing he saw was every one of his employee’s being paid to work down on the opposite end of the pool performing CPR upon a patron. Fryer finally began helping the team after the AED administered a shock, after 911 had been called, and after the pool deck was cleared of patrons. Essentially, Fryer was able to make his way over and help me try to pry open her airway in the hope of providing her with the optimal chance of survival by providing her system with oxygen. Even with his help the attempt was unsuccessful.

Fryer did participate in a round of compressions, but without wearing personal protective equipment, which can be viewed as superfluous, but anyone with experience providing healthcare in a First Responder’s role knows how much emphasis is put on the need to protect one’s self as paramount in any situation. I felt offended at the time watching Fryer, and another long-time employee, performing compressions without wearing gloves. Particularly after this other employee had pushed me aside in order to perform the compressions. I mentioned his lack of gloves, but he ignored me as all of his concentration was upon the task of performing the compressions.

We were busy wiping liquids and flecks of what were later identified as tapioca pudding from the patron’s mouth as we tried to open it wide enough to accept receiving oxygen. After all the years of feeling anxious being tested by Fryer for my skills of performing CPR, First Aid and rescue techniques, and the way he would hammer home the need to always wear gloves, I felt almost betrayed by noticing what was missing, but being ignored when I tried to point it out to my ‘superiors.’

Our patron lived. The paramedics arrived and took over and eventually escorted her to the hospital. I remember feeling embarrassed watching my boss, who loves to tout the necessity of looking “professional” to all the new lifeguards every summer, standing in his bathing suit and talking to the paramedics. My belief in the merits of professionalism has never been in accordance with Fryer’s application of the concept. A few months later the woman was back and swimming laps in the pool again, this time with a continuous glucose monitor stuck to the back of her arm. But, with all being said and done, we did our job and we did it well. Fryer included. I do, after all, believe he did everything he could to the best of his ability.

My story does not end there, though.

My story continues with the next day finding me coming home after work and curling up in my chair to take a short nap. That short nap turned into a nightmare ending with me being in the emergency room until two in the morning.

My housemate came home a few hours after I sat in the chair to find me incoherent and mumbling. My memory is of having woken up hours later than I expected freezing in my chair and not being able to get up and grab my blanket. I remember my housemate walking in the room and asking me what was wrong. All I could manage was to try and tell him that I was cold and wanted the comforter from my bed (I remember trying to lift my arm to point towards my bedroom and failing). But he couldn’t understand me. He was smart enough to call the paramedics and I sat in my chair watching the blue and red flashing lights stop outside the window. It is the only time in my life (to this point) that I have had to have the paramedics called on me.

One of the paramedics rampaged my kitchen looking for carbohydrates they could feed me to help raise my blood sugar. To this day, I have no idea why he went into the cupboard and found the one hamburger bun someone had left behind from a barbeque the summer before. I cannot understand, for the life of me, why he did not hand me one of the three different kinds of granola bars I keep in the cupboard, or any of the dried fruit sitting next to the granola bars. Instead, the paramedic took the hamburger bun, an egg and a slice of cheese from the fridge, and then took the time to cook me a sandwich!

By this time, I had contacted a friend from work to give me a ride to the ER, and to alert someone I would not be going into work the next day. When she walked in through my kitchen door and saw the paramedic cooking an egg on my stove, she immediately recognized him and asked, “Hey! Want some bacon with that?”

That morning (yes, the morning of this exact same day), my friend had decided to cook some bacon for breakfast in her pajamas. Unfortunately, the smoke from her breakfast caused the smoke alarm to go off. Normally this is not a problem, and it wouldn’t have been this day also, but my friend failed to hear her cell phone ring when the alarm company called to check if the alarm was authentic or not. When the alarm company couldn’t reach my friend, they started calling her list of emergency contacts. The first two contacts didn’t answer for one reason or another. By the time the third person on the list was contacted, the alarm company had also dispatched the fire department.

My friend, having finished cooking the bacon and clearing most of the smoke out of her house, finally heard her phone ring. The third person on her emergency contact list had left work and was rushing to my friend’s home and calling with the desperate hope that it was all somehow a horrible mistake. Luckily the third contact was able to turn around and head back to work, but, as my friend laughed on the phone while standing in her smoky kitchen in her pajamas, she realized the sirens she heard in the distance coming closer were coming for her.

She managed to throw on her robe and meet the first responders at her front door. After she apologized for causing such a fuss by taking the time to cook bacon for breakfast, my friend offered the firemen some of her bacon. She went back inside to her kitchen only to confront both of her cats on the counter eating the last of the bacon.

We sat in my living room laughing about the absurdity of life as we all waited for my blood sugars to rise and stabilize. My friend finally took me to the hospital and stayed with me until the doctor cleared me. A simple hypoglycemic event such as mine (even though anything so serious should not be hallmarked as simple) should not have kept me in the ER for more than a couple of hours, but this trip was accompanied by an irregular heart rhythm that needed to be monitored. All I really remember from the night was having my friend continuously bring me new blankets from the dryer down the hall because I was so incredibly fricking cold!

Diabetes affects me in very unpredictable ways. It is only recently I have even begun to comprehend how strongly stress can affect my ability to manage my disease. The stress of saving a woman’s life the day before was enough to send me into a cascade event culminating in the need for paramedics to intervene. I am becoming better at learning how to manage my diabetes and maintain my health as much as possible, despite the stressful curve balls life enjoys hurling at me. It is a relief to know that a monumental element within my life, which used to contribute to my increased levels of stress, has finally been eradicated. I am quite positive that walking away from the pool has increased my expected lifespan by a couple of years. I am extremely grateful to be in a position where my health and well-being are the driving force behind my days, from the moment I wake up to the moment I close my eyes in exhaustion.

Discrimination is a ‘Bitch’

Every three months I see my doctor concerning my diabetes. During my visits we talk about any questions or concerns I may have, we try to analyze the data downloaded from my pump, we determine new strategies to be incorporated in my management techniques, and we end up chatting about my job at the pool. The other morning, I told her I quit my job and her face lit up with pleasure. Most of our meeting was spent talking about the issue of discrimination and how it tends to infiltrate our daily experiences without challenge.  Over the past year, my doctor and I have had many conversations regarding my attempts to inform Fryer and the Park District about my emotional and behavioral disability, while still having to mitigate the effects of simply being female and labeled as a ‘bitch.’

But first I want to share my good news — my A1c was 7.6, which is amazing!

Back in May, my A1c was 7.6, but that was after a hard year of dragging it down from a 9.2, and my intention was to bring it down even lower. By August I had succeeded in dropping to a 7.2, and I was anticipating a 6.8 today because of the incredibly stable glucose levels I have sustained for the past three months. My first reaction to seeing the 7.6 was to groan and feel slightly dejected, but I have learned in the past ten years to not take a number seriously. After all, it is only a number. A basic lesson I have cultivated while living my diabetic experience is that numbers are capricious, with the only constant being that the good numbers will come, and then go with no explanation.

After analyzing the data retrieved from my pump, listing all the blood sugar levels that have been entered for the past month, my doctor was able to determine that my debilitating early morning and afternoon lows seem to have finally disappeared. The rest of my numbers were in a steady range between 100-200. My A1c had increased because I was actually healthier than I had been when my A1c was lower three months ago! Tricky, tricky Diabetes!

When I explained what had happened at the pool leading to my decision to walk out, and how my diabetes had been a core factor in the incident, my doctor and I discussed the ways in which women are expected to behave in public. We talked about how easy it is for men to be disagreeable, unpleasant, or even straight up rude, and not be held accountable. Yet, as women, we are immediately labeled as ‘bitchy,’ ‘up-tight,’ or ‘unreasonable’ simply for behaving in a manner analogous to men. The ability, and willingness, to proscribe different values upon the exact same behavioral traits being expressed depending upon the sexual organs of a person’s physical body is GENDER DISCRIMINATION.

I suffered gender discrimination at the pool. Before this last summer started, I wrote a letter to Fryer explaining one of my ‘reasonable requests’ under the Americans with Disabilities Act was to begin my shifts at the exact same time every morning. This one action has been huge in helping me to manage my glucose levels and is directly relevant to my lower A1c. I informed Fryer of the letter in advance, and that I would be including a letter from my doctor as confirmation of my disability. I asked him if there was any specific information he would appreciate being included in my doctor’s letter, and his answer was to tell me that he simply didn’t want to receive a letter that gave me “carte blanche to act like a bitch.” HIS COMMENT WAS GENDER DISCRIMINATION

Back when I first began to understand how many of the ‘problems’ Fryer was blaming me for, in terms of my ‘attitude,’ were actually caused by fluctuations in my blood sugar that were detrimentally affecting my personality, I attempted to educate Fryer and Dale about this new insight into my disease, and how it affected me. I tried to make an analogy to Fryer’s well-known bad-tempered moods, which have culminated in full-blown tantrums where Fryer has had to be avoided at work because of the backlash. When I pointed out Fryer’s own personally disruptive and troublesome moods (that are not the result of a dysfunctional endocrine system) his immediate response was to label his moods as being a result of times when he is “focused.” THIS DISTINCTION IN LABELS IS GENDER DISCRIMINATION.

It is unfair, and illegal, for the pool to hold me accountable for displaying behavioral traits that are exhibited by other members of the workforce (especially by my male boss), but to only hold me accountable, and to consistently reprimand me for not changing my ‘attitude’ — especially considering that my unacceptable behavioral traits are a direct result of the stress and anxiety I have been experiencing at work because of being sexually harassed, and retaliated against, during the past six years. My ‘attitude’ has been a direct consequence of my disability created by diabetes and the hostile work environment Fryer helped to create by marginalizing me. The Park District’s continued unwillingness to change their ‘attitude’ towards me, and for continuing to blame me for being diabetic is DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION mixed with GENDER DISCRIMINATION.

This is why I quit the pool. I had enough. I was no longer willing to participate in my own suffering by allowing them the opportunity to continue discriminating against me because I am a diabetic female.

The Equal Employment and Opportunity Commission (EEOC) guidelines state that it is “illegal to harass a woman by making offensive comments about women in general.” During my meeting with Fryer and Dale at the end of the summer in 2017, I was given an ultimatum to either quit my job (and receive a good reference from Fryer) or remain employed at the pool under the condition that one more complaint would result in immediate termination of my employment. I chose to remain because I was not prepared to be unemployed, but I wanted to make sure that my bosses were aware of the difficult relations I was having with one of the water exercise instructors at the time, so if she were to make a complaint, at least it wouldn’t be coming out of the dark. When I told Fryer about my difficulty getting along with Jakki, Fryer simply replied, “Well, if she has a problem then she can pull up her big girl pants and deal with it.” That statement, in those circumstances, was extremely offensive to me as a woman. Especially considering the fact that the complaint made against me, resulting in the ultimatum, had come from a man at work who wasn’t even in the same department as me. I wanted to demand why John in Maintenance was not told to “pull up [his big boy] pants and deal with it.” Instead, I was still under the belief that I was required to respect the authority my bosses held over me, so I let the offensive comment go without challenge.

Research shows that service-based industries, in which employees rely on customer approval, can breed an environment of harassment, but 73% of sexually harassed women never report incidences because:

“If you do come forward, you’ll be labeled a ‘troublemaker’ or a ‘bitch.’ More importantly, you won’t be believed.”

—Gretchen Carlson, former Fox News Channel host filing a sexual harassment suit against Fox News chairman and CEO Roger Ailes in 2016

Men most often have the power to determine if an organization will prevent and treat sexual harassment—or allow it to spread. I believe the same statement is true concerning gender discrimination. After all, sexual harassment is nothing more than the recognizable face of discrimination against a woman for being a woman in a man’s world. Women who deviate from the gender norms attributed to them by exhibiting traditionally masculine personality traits, or who simply are employed in supervisory roles, are especially likely to experience harassment in their work environment. This was true in my case, at least.

When men are competent they are perceived as being forceful. Women who display the same traits of competence are conversely seen as being aggressive. I was a victim of this particular brand of discrimination based upon my gender. My prominent personality traits, which include my tendency to be assertive and refuse the arbitrary roles expected of me by society in general, allowed my coworkers and bosses to label me as being ‘bitchy.’ I was given less latitude in being able to ‘get away with’ similar types of rude behavior that Fryer, and other men I worked with, were commonly known for exhibiting.

This is where the intersection of racial discrimination joins in making a rather special case out of my experiences. Despite the Civil Rights’ Movement, and educational gains within the black community, many black women still struggle to overcome stereotypes that paint them as ‘aggressive’ or ‘difficult to work with.’ Many black women who are immersed within a mostly white, male-dominated setting (such as my employment status at the Park District) will find themselves assigned with the stereotype of being the ‘angry black woman’ simply because of our intelligence, our out-spoken-ness, and the confidence we have in our skills and capacities.

My experiences, and struggles, at the pool have taught me to recognize how my diabetes affects me. I am now capable of explaining these traits to my next employer. I wish my previous employer had felt enough respect for me to listen more and learn with me over the years. I wish I didn’t have to walk out on my friends. I wish the world was a fair place to live in. I wish women didn’t have to struggle with being called a ‘bitch.’

But wishes are like farts. At worst, they stink and then dissipate. At best, they simply go unnoticed.

Thoughtful Reflections

I had an entirely different post written and edited ready to be published. I was going to make some final touches this morning when I went out for coffee, but I forgot my flash drive.  When I finally got around to grabbing a beer with my dinner and publish, I forgot my flash drive. Again.

So. This is what I started writing this morning and what I am finishing right now with the last of my beer (a bitter at Falling Sky, in case you’re interested).

Spending my time writing instead of working has been cathartic. I know my writing pretty much sucks at this point. I also know it is only my mother, and two or so random friends (with a couple of strangers added to the mix), who are the only people reading this crap. But that doesn’t stop me from wanting to say Thank You! Even if this is the only post you have ever begun to read, and you have absolutely no intention of reading to the end, I still would like to Thank You!

I need this time to process and untangle the knot that has been residing in my heart for the past six years. Many of the friends I left behind at the pool never had the opportunity to know me without the influence of the knot of dread that has been harboring in my breast since I lost my friendship with Red. I wish I could have had more time to experience being the person I am, without the stress from harassment and the high blood sugars it causes, while working at the pool, but I know it would be of no use. The people working there believe they know who I am. They believe that the crabby, grumpy and unpredictable Sam is the real Sam I am. How can they possibly understand how much of my personality is hijacked when I am stressed, or hyperglycemic, or tired from managing my diabetes all night instead of sleeping, when I have only begun to understand how diabetes affects me for myself?

The stress derived from my encounter with sexual harassment resulted in my strenuous struggle with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. I was never officially diagnosed because I never told anyone about what happened. I suffered in silence for years. I feel free now knowing I will no longer suffer, nor be silent, but that knowledge does nothing to erase the emotional knot I have been living with since I refused to have sex with Red. This knot has become an entity within myself. It can, at times, be a puppet master pulling at my emotional strings and causing me to behave in obstinate and cantankerous ways that are misperceived by those who don’t know me as being ‘bitchy.’ But, I am not a bitch.

I repeat, I am not a bitch. I am a strong-headed, loud mouthed, sarcastic, and fundamentally independent woman. I speak in a manner that is blunt and direct with no flowering or sugaring of words (after all, I am diabetic and don’t need any more unnecessary sugar in my life). My manner can be abrasive, offensive, and judgmental, but I never speak with the intention of causing harm. I may not be very nice most of the time, but I am always kind.

The problem is that my kindness is easily disguised, or hidden, by the puppet master crawling around in the dank safety of my heart’s infernal knot. This damn knot has been an insufferable curse I have never been able to truly escape, but, over the years, I have learned how to begin releasing the negativity infecting my heart’s true purpose born from the traumatic experience of harassment. I no longer blame Red. There is no need. I accepted long ago that blaming anyone is useless and more harmful to myself then to them. I was lucky enough to not leave the pool before I had the experience of knowing that I had healed from my trauma caused by Red’s actions.

On the same morning when I had my encounter with Amanda (which became the crucible of my decision to quit) I finally had an encounter with Red that was as calm, peaceful, and uneventful as the days before his solicitations for sex. Being able to speak with Red, to have him speak back respectfully, and feeling safe enough to hand him a pen to write with, proved to me beyond a doubt that whatever problems Amanda believed she had with me were of her own making, and existed within her own mind. What I had ‘done’ to upset her so much was more a consequence of her own emotional immaturity and past behavior. The maturity that evolved from my personal suffering over the years had already made its mark. My diabetes, however, that is an entirely different story, and the foundation upon which the Park District has been capable of marginalizing both me and the issues I brought to their attention.

Red — the Text

On a normal work day at the pool six years ago, while sitting in the back office waiting for my turn to rotate, Red came over and sat in the chair next to me while wearing his street clothes before heading home. He was struggling with his second divorce and had been dealing with his situation in unhealthy ways. Several other employees believed he was spending a majority of his time inebriated and worried about his safety while riding his motorcycle at night. On a different day, while we were working a shift together, Red told me about getting drunk over the weekend and taking a sledgehammer to a wall in his house he had tiled into a mosaic for his wife. They were still married at the time of this incident, but Red was living in his trailer. It was during this time when one of the Building Supervisors also suspected Red of selling weed to a younger male lifeguard on staff.

“I am strongly attracted to you and I was wondering if you would like to be more than friends.”

After he spoke, I immediately felt trapped by Red’s body position, which effectively put me in the corner between the wall, the counter, and Red himself. I felt distinctly perturbed knowing that if I were to try and move away, I would not be able to pass Red without touching him. Wearing my uniform exposed my thighs and cleavage more than I am comfortable exposing in public when I wear my own clothes. The extreme vulnerability I experienced while feeling exposed and trapped became instantly entangled with the combined emotions of disgust, resentment, and anger, which consequently became devastating for my psyche and emotional well-being over the next six years. The closest Red had even come to asking me out on a date was a month earlier when he had casually mentioned taking me out to lunch one day, then never mentioned it again.

I looked into Red’s eyes. They were glassy, but they were also the eyes of a friend I had trusted and confided in for the past three years. I had sought this man’s counsel and advice concerning my own recent trauma from an emotionally abusive relationship I had remained too long involved with because of the love I felt for the man’s three-year-old daughter. Red was a friend I had been grateful to share many personal issues with over the past few years.

My fist instinct was to use a response that would not cause further harm to Red’s feelings. I knew he was in pain. I knew he was suffering from his divorce, and I believed his pain was affecting his judgement. I believed Red was reaching out blindly for comfort and not truly aware of the line he was crossing with his behavior. I wanted to spare him the embarrassment I was sure he would feel as soon as he sobered up enough to realize what he had said.

“Thank you, but I only want to be friends. I appreciate you telling me how you feel. It means a lot to me.”

I felt relieved when he seemed to accept my answer, but then he turned to me and asked, “do you feel the attraction?” Unfortunately, I interpreted his question to be asking me if I had felt his attraction to me. I told him “yes,” but it was a couple weeks later before I finally realized he had been asking if I felt attracted to him. A few days before this moment, I had hosted a potluck for a group of coworkers at my house and ended up feeling profoundly uncomfortable around Red because of the way he intensely stared at me with his glassy eyes. I consciously spent that evening, in my own kitchen, doing what I could to persistently keep someone else between us.

Again, Red seemed to accept my answer and I was relieved to think the situation was over, but, a few weeks later, we had the work Christmas party at a bowling alley, and I had to leave early because of the acute discomfort I felt in Red’s presence that night. I remember the intensity of his stare, the way he would focus on me in the crowded room. I wanted to play air hockey at one point, but Red was the only person who would play. I had fun, because it was air hockey, but I felt so remarkably awkward because of his undeterred attention. After the game ended, my friend Paige asked me why Red had been acting weird while we played. I told her what had happened in the back office and how it made me feel. Paige asked me what my plan was for responding to the situation. We talked about Red’s obvious drinking, and all the other various manifestations of his emotional turmoil, and Paige agreed that my idea to simply stay away from Red, and give him the time and space necessary to pull his life back together, was sufficient.

Paige agreed to leave the party and drive me home early because of Red’s proximity and increasingly erratic behavior at the bowling alley. During the drive home, Paige and I discussed how inappropriate the situation was, not only because of Red still technically being married, but because he is old enough to be my father. I am, in fact, closer to the age of his children then I am to him. This was the only time in my life when a man who is distinctly my elder has ever made such a strong pass at me. I did not know how to politely tell him to leave me alone. The worst he had done at this point was to look at me and tell me how he felt. I believed, at the time, that he was doing nothing wrong, but that I was simply having a hard time dealing with his affection. I can recognize now how I had internalized my role as a passive female who is intent on not hurting a man’s feelings. Especially a man who is in a position of authority, such as Red was, by his age and his role as a Building Supervisor at work.

The next morning, I received a text from Red. At first, I was simply angry he had sent me a text and woken me up at 6:30 in the morning on the one morning of the week when I didn’t have to get up to go to work. Then, I read the text:

Invite me over. I want to show you how a real man pleases a beautiful woman. I want to please you the way you deserve. Let me show you how good I can be. I do bite.

From the instant I read his words I was consumed by a wave of stifling anger and deep disgust, not only for the implication I would be so easily interested in having sex with him, but for the absolute sense of betrayal and disrespect I suffered in the process of reading his text. I immediately erased the text before going back to sleep. I absolutely believed Red had gotten so stinking drunk after the work party that he sent the text unaware of what he was even doing. I wanted no evidence to the fact the text ever existed! It never remotely occurred to me that I might need to save the text, or that the situation would escalate. I believed the best thing to do was ignore the text, pretend like it never happened, and allow Red the opportunity to recover his dignity without further embarrassment for either of us.

*Pause*Breathe*Reflect*

Day 7

I feel no doubt. I am not sad. The guilt is minimal and underwhelming. The anger no longer bubbles to the surface with ease. I regret not seeing my friends, and the awkward position my actions may have put them in.

But, I do not regret walking out of my job one week ago. It was the right choice. It was healthy, self-serving, liberating, and the most ethical choice I could make at the time. I conducted myself with dignity and integrity. Even though I knew my actions would cause harm I was never, at any moment, intent on hurting anyone. I don’t know if that makes a difference for anyone else, but I feel comfortable with my belief that it makes all the difference for me.

This blog has become my full-time job in the past seven days. I wake up in the morning, putz around the house or watch a movie, and then I go out into the world to sit among the public and write the post to be published for that day. I’m actually quite sick of this routine already. My posts this week have become erratic and rather pedantic for my taste. Each post has been a reaction to my action of walking away from the pool. I either sit at Townshend’s, Falling Sky, or The Wandering Goat typing my post for the day and publishing it immediately. This technique was helpful at first. It allowed me to spend the daylight hours of my first week being unemployed feeling as if I were accomplishing something significant. But, let’s be honest, that’s bullsh*t.

Being able to purge my thoughts and feelings into a post written and edited thirty seconds before publication was constructive because it helped to organize my thoughts into a narrative. I now have an idea of how my story should be told. I realized with my post last night that I want to put more thought and time into telling my story. I want to have more reflection upon all the interconnected elements of my experience as I write about them. I want to decrease the amount of reactive emotion being incorporated in my writing, and instead learn to focus my storytelling on the issues of disability discrimination, gender, race, sexual harassment, hostile work environments, obsolete administrative structures, effective communication, retaliation, rampant rumormongering, and the harmful damage caused by the process of labeling others as ‘different.’ These are the issues that I struggled to learn how to recognize within my experiences at the pool, but they are not the only issues I am concerned with in our society.

A decade of living with diabetes, instead of building a career in education, has given me the unprecedented ability to step back from everything I know about our society, and truly begin to understand what it is I want to educate our young about how to survive within our society. Survival for the human species, and planet Earth, will depend upon a shift in global attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors. If we continue to live the way we are currently, then we will kill all life as we know to exist. I want to teach kids how to change their world by modeling for them how I change my world everyday. They will need to deeply understand the concepts of community resilience, local government, sustainability, reduction of consumption, a renewable energy-based economy, collaberation and cooperation, as well as conflict resolution skills, which are all woefully neglected within the pedagogy and currriculum of our nation’s public education system. I want to use public education as a vehicle for helping students to create a global community built upon the values of self-sacrifice, stewardship, and civic duty.

These ideas are too big for me to write about while drinking a pint, or three, of beer at the deli. So, this is my last post to be written in public and published immediately. I had an image in my mind of writing everyday and telling my story in pieces, but the strain of keeping my thoughts flowing in a linear stream to make each post directly connect to the next is not working for me. Instead, my story is simply going to come out in random chunks. Each day will still be met with a published post, but each post will no longer be an attempt to tell my narrative in a linear fashion. I will be jumping from chapter to chapter of my life, telling the stories I have accumulated over the years of experience I have lived through.

My plan (for now) is to label each relevant story under the category of either Education, Diabetes, or Pool. That way, those interested in reading my stories can choose which narrative to follow. I think this may work. I have high hopes. *shrug*

Otherwise, my daily posts are going to be random stories from over the years that may actually have nothing to do with my disease, my time at the pool, or my convictions about public education (I have climbing stories up the wazoo!). The only thing connecting all the various narratives will be the simple fact they all happened to me at some point in my life. That is, after all, what this blog is ultimately about: me. 

Thank you for taking the time to read my blatherings. I appreciate the support and love your action of reading provides me!