deserving more

by: brownfemipower

Tue Oct 30, 2007 at 16:57:00 PM PDT


so as you know, I've had incredible back problems the past week.  i just had to take a moment to note, that today, i went to the doctor for the first time in years and years with *real* health insurance--that is, insurance that is not poor people/county offered health insurance.  I got to go to a real doctor (as opposed to a medical student) at a real office (as opposed to a makeshift building transformed every tuesday and thursday into a doctors office)--and lawdy lawdy, it was like i was in heaven or something.  the doctor even told me, well, instead of getting you all drugged up with pain medications, let's see what we can do to make sure that this doesn't happen again. it was like angels came from the heavens and shared with me a piece of what the lord must promise to those who have clean souls.

i was on pins and needles the whole time, however--asking every five minutes--are you sure my insurance covers this?  are you sure my insurance covers that?  i want to make sure my insurance covers that!! please don't schedule me for anything until i've checked to make sure my insurance covers that!!! 

i am waiting for the reply of four different emails to the same person begging them to make sure that everything is covered.

if you have ever wondered, what's so wrong with being poor--this is it:  if somebody is gentle with you, if somebody takes time to talk to you, if somebody wants to help you heal instead of drugging you until the pain goes away, if somebody believes you when you say it hurts--there must be a mistake.  there must be something wrong, somebody must be tricking you or must've filed the wrong paper work or fucked something up some where. 

it's not right, it's not normal or natural, for a poor person to walk into the doctor's office and not expect an all out fight with the office bill collectors, roughness and shortness in conversation from the doctors, raised eyebrows in disbelief from all concerned and a final dismal of "well, you're insurance doesn't cover it anyway, so take lots of aspirin and you'll feel better eventually." 

even the 'good' doctors--the ones that honest to god care--they're medical students, and they just don't know. i had a medical student one time who, upon hearing i had two children, proceeded to use the largest fucking speculum he could find in his arsenal for a vaginal exam. now, i understand that is a god's honest mistake--two kids delivered vaginally logically must equal huge vagina, i guess.  so i dont blame the kid.  but the speculum made me bleed.  his ignorance caused pain and hurt to my body.  but it was ok, because i expected nothing better. and of course, once he realized that he was causing me physical pain, he stopped and tried to fix things--but what does a dude say or do for a woman whose vagina he just accidentally tore up when she's got her feet in the air, her ass in his face, and her bleeding vagina in his hands? 

but again--i wasn't outraged, i wasn't devastated, i wasn't upset.  he was inexperienced, and that's all I, as a poor person, deserve or had the right to expect.  i even told him (with my hands over my eyes to hide my tears) "oh, that's ok!". god only knows well intentioned abusive help is much easier to bear when the alternative is no help at *all*.

it's been a very rough few weeks for me.  somebody i love is dying.  the city that person lives in, my home, my soul, is dying.  the people in the city, the people who loved me, embraced me, showed me how to grow up in hell and still have a soul that bleeds magnificent ruby red, they're losing a war for their lives that everybody thinks they have no right to even be fighting.

my family, my friends, my loved ones, my community members, my people--we deserve kindness.  we deserve tenderness and healing and relief and compassion. our cells, our hearts, our bones, our brains, our guts--they all deserve the peace of health and healing.  they all deserve the calmness of certianty--certianty that the kindness we are receiving isn't a trick. 

flint, my love, i know the answers are more complicated than "stop eating bad food" or "grow a garden" or "find a friend with a car".  I know the answers are more liberatory than "get the hell out the ghetto" or "shut your legs".

and more than anything, flint, i know you deserve the answers given so freely to those with money and security.  i know you deserve it because everyday, you fight the war that they won't-- so that *they* can survive--security, self-assurance, and peace of mind, all in tact.

i know you deserve it, because i deserve it--and i am you and you are me.

~en lucha

(this was cross-posted at my blog brownfemipower.com)

brownfemipower :: deserving more
Tags: (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
deserving more | 3 comments
thanks for sharing (0.00 / 0)
Thank you for speaking for SO many people and writing the post that you did on your blog and on curethis.  It is heartwrenching (and very personal to you) so extra thanks for sharing the experience.

I'm so sorry that you experienced what you did, and so upset that it's a reality for too many people.  I see this in my county hospital system too, where I work.  We don't treat people as people oftentimes.  I try so hard in my daily work to go out of my way with love, humility, compassion, and really try to see what's going on in the big picture for patients I work with.  And I hope to work ALL my damn life for poor and very poor people, to serve them with tons of love and good quality care. 

Your post makes me want to cry, to know that's what a lot of patients in my hospital system go through.  Thanks for providing an insight into the psyche of someone who's at the receiving end of this system's abuse.

Personal blog: Los Anjalis


you could submit this (4.00 / 2)
Thanks for this post, laying out the issues so clearly/gracefully/powerfully.

Have you heard about this project on wealth/class/redistribution? http://jenangel.word...
I think health issues are so intertwined with  this stuff, your piece would make an awesome submission.

I have been thinking about this issue of deserving from another place - as an upper class  person with a chronic illness and access to lots of resources to help me deal with it. Sometimes I feel guilty for having them; especially when despite all of my resources I can't get my diabetes "under control." But really, the answer is not that I shouldn't have the resources I need but what you said -  that everyone deserves access to resources they need and dignified care.

I hope that the next few weeks are not as rough as the last few for you.


among the things that suck about being poor (0.00 / 0)
it is a struggle in free clinic world to keep the perspective that our patients deserve the same treatment that they'd get if they were insured.  it's the difference between coping and settling.  you know that if you had a laboratory that would accept your samples, you could offer the slew of blood tests that would allow you to use first line drugs instead of second line drugs for high blood pressure and diabetes.  you know that your patients need yearly eye exams and regular dental care but you can't find an eye clinic or a dental clinic that will take them.  you know your patients could use better food and a couple days of rest, but they can't afford it and you can't make it happen.  so you cope.

the trick is not to settle, to recognize that you're not done yet, that the clinic isn't in its finished form-- the trick is to look directly into the eyes of anyone who tells you that what you need isn't practical "in this setting" and to quietly repeat that it is the standard of care, it is the standard of care.


deserving more | 3 comments
About
What is health justice? How are health & human rights fiercely connected to the wellness of our neighborhoods? How do we reframe policy debates? How do we continue dreaming and building instead of just reacting & surviving? And how do we support each other in our healing?

Cure This is an online space for storytelling, discussion, & radical transformation. Create an account to write a diary or comment. Questions or thoughts: lotusfeet [at] hotmail [dot] com

News: CureThis was part of an exhibit in Chicago: "Visual resistance in feminist health movements, 1969-2009" [link]


RSS Feed links
Subscribe to Cure This in a feed reader!

 Cure This front page feed

 Cure This Diaries feed

Technorati Profile

Add to Technorati Favorites


Event Calendar
July 2010
(view month)
S M T W R F S
* * * * 01 02 03
04 05 06 07 08 09 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
* * * * * * *
<< (add event) >>

Active Users
Currently 0 user(s) logged on.

Menu

 Make a New Account

 Username:
 
 Password:
 
 

 Forget your username or password?

Support CureThis
Donations will go to the costs of running the site, including monthly hosting and the web designer's volunteered services. Thanks gratefully.

Follow us on Twitter

Archived featured posts







Search




Advanced Search

Blog Roll/Organizations
abortionclinicdays
apophenia
dailykos
enough enough
epidemix
ezra klein
feministe
flip flopping joy"
freakonomics
feminists with disabilities for a way forward
global health policy blog
guerilla mama medicine
harbor family med blog
health affairs blog
health beat blog
the health care blog
health care renewal
a healthy blog
intueri
la vida locavore
los anjalis
open medicine
natl physicians alliance blog
racewire
social medicine portal
think progress
wsj health blog
well (nytimes healthblog)
women's health news

Powered by: SoapBlox