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Dumbass Quote Of The Day…

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…from the St. Rita’s Nursing Home trial, where the owners are accused of 35 counts of negligent homicide for refusing to evacuate the nursing home in the path of Hurricane Katrina.

A Dr. Brobson Lutz, identified as an expert in internal medicine and public health, and a paid expert witness for the defense, provides the money quote, in the Lake Charles American Press:


“If you evacuate, somebody is going to die,” Lutz said. You’re dealing with a frail, elderly population.”

The large percentage of “special needs” patients at St. Rita’s – those in need of extra medical attention – would have been even more at risk, Lutz said.


This proves one thing: even a doctor will whore himself out to say ludicrous things in court if the money is right. In Dr. Lutz’ case, his personal thirty pieces of silver added up to $5,000 in expert witness fees.

Apparently, abandoning your self-respect and your common sense comes pretty cheaply these days.

The patients who weren’t bedbound could have been evacuated in buses or wheelchair transport vans. The most frail patients, the bedbound ones, could have gone by ambulance with an EMT in attendance.

And trust me, there were ambulances available at the time.

You can bet that in the months prior to Katrina, they weren’t all that concerned with transporting bedridden patients to the Emergency Department on the flimsiest of medical pretenses. It happens all the time from nursing homes.

So why were they so afraid to evacuate them ahead of a freaking hurricane?

Answer: money. Always is.

If You Haven't Read Skywritings…

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get thee hence. A sample of Scully’s prose:


If I had the chance to be 20 again I wouldn’t. Time and memory is what has made me who I am. Events in my life, even the ones I’d rather not repeat, all served to awaken within me a stranger who was strong enough to survive it, to grow to change, becoming someone new and stronger. When I was a teen I thought 40 was ancient. Now I realize, to survive to middle age is to be slowly born.


Pilot, painter, Fed, shooter, and she writes like this. Damn.

There’s probably a reason she’s single.

Damned few men I know would be her equal, that’s why.

Things Learned in EMT Class…

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…when you only have one week to go before the National Registry exam, and everyone is a little stir crazy:

Re-enacting the resuscitation scene from The Abyss while you are supposed to be practicing the Cardiac Arrest Management skill station does not inspire confidence in your instructor.

When the instructor has the slightly homophobic student helplessly trussed up in a Kendrick Extrication Device, it is very disconcerting for the student if the instructor lovingly croons Just You And I while tightening the crotch straps. Seductively running your fingers through the student’s hair just makes him whimper louder.

Taking bets whether you can swallow a Combitube without gagging is even more disturbing when the people making the bets are male firefighters.

Referring to assessing for priapism as a “woodie sweep” will mark these guys as my students as surely as branding my name into their foreheads. Ditto for “nekkidize” and “Hello Sir, my name is Johnny Rescue with 911 Ambulance.”

Some guys are going to fail their Bleeding Control and Shock Management station if they don’t get over the fact that the femoral artery pressure point is very close to someone’s junk. For goodness sakes people, groping your fellow man is half the fun of EMT class. Learn to accept your latent homosexuality and get to fondling already.

It is impossible to make a firefighter-proof training manikin.

September 6th cannot get here fast enough, for all of us.

Depends On Where You Work, Grasshopper

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If you work at a transfer service it means Elderly Mobile Transport.

It may also mean Eggcrate Mattress Technician.

If you’re teh n00b at a Fire Department EMS, it means Every Menial Task.

But if you’re lucky, I mean really, really lucky…it means Emergency Medical Technician, and they’ll let you do really cool shit and chicks will swoon at the sight of you in your spiffy Batman belt and cargo pants, and people will love and adore you for saving lives and stamping out disease and pestilence, and all the people you saved will invite you to family gatherings as the guest of honor.

Or so I’ve heard.

For Those of You Who Have Served in Corrections…

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I’m referring to Holly, Matt, Babs, Digital Falcon and others.

Without further ado, I give you the most popular prison pickup lines:

“Interested in serving hard time?”

Damn, but you are sexy in stripes.”

“Soooooo, is that a zip-gun carefully carved out of a piece of discarded metal found on the floor of the prison license-plate manufacturing shop in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?”

“Don’t you prefer dropping bar soap instead of that liquid crap?”

“You know, normally I don’t give in in the first 30 seconds, but I guess I’m just a sucker for sheer muscle mass.”

“Nice teeth. They’d look so much better on the floor of my cell.”

“Due to a recent execution, I now have an opening for my prison bitch.”

“Who wants to marry a multiple murderer?”

“I’ve been watching you from across the yard for awhile now, and I knew if I didn’t work up the courage to just walk over here and ask you to be my bitch, I might regret it for the rest of my life sentence.”

“Bread, water or me?”

“Hold still while I staple this centerfold to the back of your head.”

“Stop by my cell later for a Lethal Injection.”

“That orange jumpsuit really brings out the red in your freshly healed knife wound.”

“Care to give Prisoner Johnson a weekend furlough?”

“Cinemax3 is doing another one of those Women In Prison movies soon…Wanna audition in my cell?”

“You’re new here… let me debrief you and introduce you to the penile system.”

“Wanna attend a chain gang bang?”

“You look even better in person than you did on America’s Most Wanted.”

“If looks could kill, you’d get 25 to life.”

“You’re getting your GED… wow, that makes me so H.O.T.!!”

How To Get Unvolunteered

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You know, say the Missus asks you to do the laundry. All you need do is put all her delicates in with the jeans and bath towels, and put the washer on HOT. Maybe throw in something red and non-colorfast.

You’ll probably not be asked to do laundry again, but make sure you have something in reserve to wear.

Well, Murphy shows us how to be unvolunteered in the Marine Corps.

Heh.

GiggleSnort

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The origin of blogging explained.

H/T to Mostly Cajun.

No, This Isn't Going To Turn Into A Sappy Blog…

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…full of flowers and kitties and mushy baby talk and thanking God for new blessings.

I do all that stuff, of course. Just not publicly.

I do it in private, talking with Babs. Usually when I’m trying to talk her into naked webcam action.

So far no luck, though. She’s stalwart, I’ll give her that.

I’d describe the last week as a whirlwind, but that wouldn’t be accurate. The whirlwind was the month I spent thinking it, wondering if she felt the same way, afraid to say it so soon. I spent my days anticipating the chance to talk to her each night, and spent my conversations with her wrestling my emotions, aching with things left unsaid. I was in turmoil.

Saying it erased all that. No more whirlwind. Just…peace.

That’s the best way to describe it. Peace. As in, no more searching, no more simply treading water hoping not to drown. She brings me peace.

The funny thing is, some of you guys recognized it before I did. I can be a dolt that way. We both treasure all your comments and well wishes over the past few days. They mean a lot.

So even though I intend to return to toilet humor and thinly veiled sarcasm forthwith, I hope y’all will indulge me if I lapse into something sappy now and then. That’s what happens when you’re in love.

New Post Up…

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…on Star of Life.

Enjoy.

Let Me Introduce Y'all To Mia…

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…and her daddy, The Wanderer. He’s a nurse, and Mia is his daughter.

Mia’s story does not have a happy ending, but it’s one he had to write. Have tissues handy.

I debated posting this link. Wanderer’s pain is raw, and it’s real. It seemed voyeuristic, in a way, to read the story. It seems vaguely unseemly to point other people there.

But Wanderer wrote the story as catharsis, and he could use some support. He hasn’t given up.

And ultimately, what better way to honor Mia than to have thousands of people know her story?

Read all three parts. Don’t comment here. Comment on his blog.

On Courtesy…

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I’ve been lucky in that I get precious few trolls here on my blog. As long as I’m not ranting about fibromyalgia or nursing homes, I don’t get many negative comments.

I run a reciprocal blogroll on my sidebar, as a courtesy to readers who were nice enough to link me on their blogs. Most of them I follow in my bloglines feeds, but keeping up with all of them is an impossible task.

There are a few of them which hold fundamentally different views than I.

Sometimes we vehemently disagree. They stay linked anyway, because even though we may have different perspectives, they remain courteous, and I try to do the same.

Somehow, I linked a worthless prick on my blogroll, someone so bitter and jealous of anyone else’s good fortune, that he can’t resist the urge to pick a fight with me by insulting someone I care about.

Well, that ends today. Courtesy offered only lasts as far as courtesy returned. Said worthless prick is deleted from the reciprocal blogroll as of today.

Go seek professional help, Worthless. You need it.

Otherwise your alligator mouth might overload your hummingbird ass.

Boy Meets Girl

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Boy meets Girl.

Boy flirts with Girl, because boy is a) an incurable smartass, and b) will do anything for a laugh, and c) is secure in the knowledge that it can never go anywhere.

Because you see, Boy has issues. From early adolescence, Boy had pretty much held himself aloof from other people. Boy didn’t want to seem like a misanthropic loner, so humor was the weapon he used to keep people at bay. He wore it like a mask to disguise himself. It became his schtick, to make people laugh. After a while, the act became so much a part of Boy that he found it hard to separate himself from the act.

Most people liked the act. Others thought Boy was an arrogant smartass, or even worse, not someone who could be taken seriously.

And Boy pretended it didn’t bother him, all the while secretly despising people who weren’t smart enough to see behind the mask.

And then one day someone peeked behind the mask, and didn’t shrink from what she saw. Boy fell deeply in love with this someone, and married her. They spent eight wonderful years together, and two not-so-good years. During that time, Boy and Someone had a beautiful child, an imperfectly perfect little creature who taught Boy and Someone things about spirit and love and determination that they would never have known otherwise. Boy thought it would last forever.

Alas, Boy was wrong. Old habits die hard, and Boy didn’t realize until it was too late that he wore that mask and used that act with Someone far more than he realized. Boy’s first clue that Someone wasn’t happy was the day he came home from a trip, and found the note Someone had left behind, the note that said she felt like a roommate, not a wife or lover. Someone wanted a divorce. Boy was devastated.

Boy spent many nights being angry and bitter, and telling himself, “See, people can’t be trusted. You’re better off never loving anyone.”

Boy came very close to reverting to the same ugly person he was before he met Someone, the person that used to laugh at the people that liked his jokes, only his was a laugh of scorn.

It was some weeks before Boy learned that Someone had been seeing Someone Else, been sharing her thoughts and feelings with him – the ones she wouldn’t share with Boy.

And Boy was consumed with such an all-encompassing rage that he contemplated ending Someone Else’s life. Actually, he did more than idly contemplate. But Boy took a long hard look at himself and stepped back from the abyss.

He came to understand that he was at least partly to blame for Someone leaving. He took her for granted. He didn’t make her feel loved.

Even with the most important person in his life, he still wore the mask. He still did the act.

And Boy vowed that he would never again become the person he was. He would drop the act, and take off the mask. He would share more of himself, because frankly, going through life alone sucked.

It was hard. Even now, Boy finds it easier to keep up the act. That’s why he’s using this silly little device of writing about himself in the third person, even when he’s talking about something serious, like loving someone.

Boy spent that first year and a half falling in and out of what he thought was love, seeking to find that feeling he had with Someone. He had his clumsy dating adventures, some of them with very nice women, but none of them lasted. Boy was still getting used to this sharing himself thing. In the process he hurt some wonderful women, and he still regrets that.

But eventually Boy sorted it out. He quit pining over Someone, and even became friends with her again. He still cares a lot about her. She taught Boy a lot about himself. Boy also learned he could be more open with people, show them a little part of himself, and they’d still laugh. He discovered that people liked his humor, but they didn’t shy away when he dropped the act and shared something painful and personal.

On the contrary, they showered him with understanding and affection. Boy was absolutely amazed, and humbled.

But there was still that part of Boy that he never showed to anyone else, the part only Someone had been allowed to see. And Boy began to despair that he’d ever again find someone he liked in that way. He had pretty much given up.

He still believed in fairy tales and white picket fences. He believed in happily ever after, and ’til Death do you part’. He just didn’t think it was going to happen.

Then one day Boy met Girl. There was this something about Girl that he couldn’t quite put his finger on, but Boy was powerfully intrigued. Girl was definitely not what Boy had always thought of as his type. Boy linked her blog, and started flirting with Girl in the comments. He was pretty shameless about it, partly for the reasons listed, but also because Boy couldn’t deny that he really was attracted to Girl.

Girl laughed him off, because she could see through Boy’s bullshit, and Girl was pretty enough that being hit on was nothing new to her. Girl had issues, too. She had been lied to before.

Boy and Girl started talking privately, and struck up a friendship. Soon the conversations became a nightly thing, and they would go on forever and take unexpected turns and Boy would laugh and think and argue, and then look up to see that six hours had passed. Some of the conversations would delve into very dark places that neither Boy or Girl felt comfortable letting people see. Yet they did anyway.

And the months passed, and the flirtation grew and Girl started to wonder if Boy was really serious. Boy was, but he was also scared to death, because he didn’t think he was in Girl’s class. Still doesn’t.

Then one day Boy realized that the highlight of his day was those conversations, and that Girl had become his best friend. He found himself thinking about her at odd hours, and smiling with the whisper of her name on his lips. Boy realized what he had seen in Girl from the beginning; himself. Not himself as he was, but himself as he could be.

Boy fell in love with Girl. He was scared to admit it, because the last and only other time he had felt this way, he had gotten hurt.

Boy also considered that not admitting things like that was the reason his love for Someone had died in the first place, and how he had vowed to never let that happen again.

So Boy took a deep breath, and dropped the act. He told Girl how he felt, fully expecting her to tell him to get lost and never speak to her again.

But she didn’t. She told him she felt the same way.

And just like that, Boy’s life changed. And in the weeks since, it has only gotten better. The future looks like a better place than it did even a month ago, because Girl is a part of it.

*******

A couple of months ago, Mark jokingly asked Girl on her Blog Talk Radio interview, “Hey, do you think you’ll ever give AD a chance?”

Well Mark, she did.

I love you, Babs.

Failure To Thrive

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“My God,” breathes my partner, Terry Parker. “Who the fuck would do something like this?” He shakes his head, his voice laden with anger. A vein bulges on his forehead and the muscles of his jaw bunch as he talks. The fury on his face belies the gentleness of his hands as he tenderly loops an oxygen cannula over the infant’s ears.

Afraid to trust myself to talk, I attach the lead wires of the cardiac monitor to the adhesive electrodes before I attach them to the baby’s slack, translucent skin. With a child this small and fragile, pressing them on could leave bruises.

With a career of any length in EMS comes a certain measure of psychological protection against the brutality man can visit on his brother. All the calls blend together in a vague morass of mangled meat, broken glass and cries of pain in the back of your mind, and they don’t even spoil your dinner. You do what you can, and you move on.

Except when it’s a child.

Rule #1 in the male ethos is Do Not Harm The Weak. Even among the world of criminals, those who harm women and children are considered beyond the pale. One especially does not harm one’s own wife or children. Men are supposed to protect the ones they love. One reason I got into EMS was the desire to care for people who could not care for themselves.

It is this knowledge that causes my hands to tremble a little bit as I attach the electrodes. I can put a mask over my features while I go about doing my job. I can even smile, if the situation demands it. It’s quite convincing.

My hands are my tell. Those who know me well, and there are precious few, know to watch my hands. It’s in them that you can see the rage that I can’t mask. When I’m trying to master a bestial urge to do harm to someone, it bleeds over into my hands. They know what to do even when my brain is pleading restraint.

“He’s going to Oneida North, to the PICU,” Jay Taunton, the ER charge nurse, tells me quietly. “Dr. Bellard is accepting.”

Donna Bellard will be all over this. She’ll see this for what it is, and there will be hell to pay.

“Where are the parents?” I ask mildly. At the word ‘parents’, Terry snorts in disgust.

“Grandmother is outside in the waiting room. The mother should be back any minute.”

They don’t fucking ride in my ambulance,” Terry states vehemently, and a little too loudly.

“You said we could ride with him,” says a voice over his shoulder as a young woman walks into the room. She looks accusingly at Jay.

She looks normal enough, just trashy. People like her should have to wear a brand, so we can recognize the monsters among us.

“You take your own car. And don’t follow us too closely. As a matter of fact, don’t follow us at all. Just ask for directions to the PICU when you get there,” Terry orders, making no effort to conceal the hostility in his voice. I throw a warning glance his way.

“I’m not leaving my baby,” she tells me flatly, looking to Jay for support.

How motherly, for a woman who has nearly starved her own baby to death. And I’m with Terry on this. I don’t want you in my rig.

Jay looks from me to her, and makes his decision. “The paramedics have the final say. You take your own car to Oneida North.” He keeps his voice even, but his face communicates clearly whose side he’s on. He can’t resist adding, “It’ll be a while before you can see him anyway. The people with Child Protective Services will want to have a word with you.”

She glares at him defiantly, and he stares back, arms folded across his chest. She looks away first. “I brought his car seat,” she tells me.

“Keep it,” I tell her shortly. “We won’t need it. We have a papoose harness we attach to the stretcher.”

“He likes his mobile,” she protests, indicating the brightly colored Fisher Price doohickey hanging from the handle of the infant seat.

Bullshit. Right now he barely has the strength to breathe.

“It’ll just get in the way, and I can’t resuscitate him sitting in an infant carrier.”

She just looks at me uncomprehendingly.

“He’ll probably die on the way to the PICU,” I explain bluntly, hoping to wound her in some way with the words. “I’ll need to have him on a firm, flat surface to do CPR.”

Her eyes tear up, and she flees the room, but not before first kissing the baby on the forehead and whispering softly to him,” You hang in there, little man. Mommy loves you.”

I stifle the urge to vomit.

After she’s gone, Jay finishes giving us report. “She claims he’s been eating regularly and drinks formula without any problems. He got sick over the weekend and has had vomiting and diarrhea since Friday. We’re calling it failure to thrive.”

‘Failure to thrive’? Like it’s this baby’s fault he’s a living skeleton? They were starving this kid to death, pure and simple.

“He didn’t get like this in a fucking weekend, Jay,” I tell him. “He didn’t get like this in a month. How much does he weigh?”

“Just over nine pounds. He weighed almost seven pounds at birth, and should’ve doubled that by now. Fourteen pounds or thereabouts, and he’s almost five pounds below the curve.”

“You called CPS for real?” I ask.

“Yep,” he confirms, “for all the good it will do. She has three other kids, all of which have been reported for neglect in the past. We know her well here. CPS places them with their grandmother who, unless I’m mistaken, is now living in her daughter’s spare bedroom.”

“So the kids are still there in the house. What a fucking joke.”

“I know, I know,” Jay sighs. “This time we reported the grandmother, too. She was stupid enough to list herself as an alternate contact, with the same physical address. Maybe this time we can get the kids removed and into foster care.”

“What was his blood sugar?” I want to know.

“Seventy,” Jay answers tersely. “I figured it would be lower.”

“Why no IV?” I ask as Terry straps the papoose harness to the stretcher and opens the Velcro flaps. It’s designed to fit over the mattress of the neonatal isolette in our NICU transport rig, to keep the tiny infants secured should the ambulance come to a sudden stop.

“We wanted him out of here in a hurry, and the acceptance came faster than we anticipated. I can help you get one before you roll with him,” he offers.

“I’ll get an IO in the truck,” I decide, looking down at the infant as I fasten him gently in the harness. His skin is translucent, every vein visible. Problem is, they’re also tiny. His skin hangs loose in folds on his arms and legs, and every rib stands out. His head looks abnormally large. His respirations are labored, but I notice no wheezing or nasal flaring, no stridor or grunting. He just looks as if he is too weak to breathe effectively, which is probably true. He looks like one of those little toy gnomes with the wild hair, except that this baby is nearly bald.

Babies are supposed to be r
oly-poly and chubby at his age. He should be babbling and cooing, not staring around wildly, with his head lolling around like a bobble head doll. KatyBeth looked healthier than this when she was born.

“That’s what I told the Doc,” Jay tells me. “We requested you specifically. Your dispatcher gave us some hassle about it.”

I’m too busy and too worried to register it as a compliment. Normally, Huge Corporate Behemoth EMS would have sat on this transfer for an hour, unwilling to take a 911 truck out of the rotation rather than page out a transport team.

We got the call on my personal cell phone rather than the company pagers. My supervisor had asked our location, and I had told him what he already knew; we had just cleared from our lunch break and were only five minutes from St. Matthew’s. He’d gone on to ask if I’d be willing to take the call, even though I wasn’t next up in the transfer rotation. Normally when our supervisors ask you to volunteer, it effectively means ‘do it or you’re on my shit list for the rest of the shift.’ Bubba was different. If he asked a favor, it was just that; a personal request for a favor, one he’d repay one day. So I took the call.

I’m wishing I hadn’t now, though. Terry rolls the stretcher into the truck and I clamber in behind it, scrambling for an IV setup before he even gets the stretcher latched into place. I motion for him to climb in behind me as I search through the cabinets. “Get me a BVM and lay out my airway kit, would you?”

Terry efficiently does as he is asked, ducks out the side door, and in thirty seconds we are pulling out of the ambulance bay. Before we even leave the hospital complex, I have an intraosseous needle in the kid’s left tibia. He barely flinches when the needle pierces the bone. He has not uttered a whimper or a cry since I first laid eyes on him less than twenty minutes ago, just looked around with that wide-eyed, desperate stare.

The intraosseous needle protrudes from his leg far more than it should, even with the needle shroud screwed down as far as it can go. It just stands up there, precariously in place, much like a nail that hasn’t been driven all the way in. There’s no fat there to help hold it in place, and I’m afraid to let it go to reach for anything.

Cursing under my breath, I hold the needle with my left hand and scramble through the cabinets with my right, searching for gauze to use for padding. I find a box of individually wrapped 4×4 gauze squares, and manage to overturn the box and shower the stretcher with the individually wrapped packets. I tear open several of them with my teeth and manage to extract them from their wrapping, and I fold them, wedging them under the flange of the needle shroud. Still holding the needle with my left hand, I open a roll of gauze and quickly wrap yet more gauze over the flange, making several wraps all the way around his leg. Only then can I let go of the needle to tape the gauze in place.

Law #7 of EMS: A good tape job will fix almost anything. That is, if the tape doesn’t rip his fragile skin off when you finally get around to removing it.

I draw up a fluid bolus through the three-way stopcock and push it in. It takes only a few seconds. Perversely, when you’re administering fluid to a child who weighs half what he should, administering IV fluids only takes half as long. I am not in the mood to be thankful for small favors.

I quickly scramble back to the captain’s chair at the head of the stretcher, and watch the baby’s breathing closely. My intubation equipment is laid out on the head of the stretcher, right above his head. Terry has laid out the laryngoscope, a couple of tubes, KY jelly. I have capnograph tubing to monitor exhaled CO2. A suction catheter. A bag mask resuscitator. Tape. All carefully prepared and standing ready, in the devout hope that we will need none of it. That’s EMS Karma; if you have it ready, you won’t need it. If you really need it, it will be in the bottom of the bag or the very back of the hardest-to-reach cabinet. That assembled laryngoscope is my talisman to ward off Bad Things.

Still labored, and getting irregular. Fifteen minutes through rush hour traffic to Oneida North. God, I hope we make it.

I open the manila envelope with all the paperwork in it, scanning quickly through the baby’s lab results and documentation. The story of an innocent child’s abuse at the hands of his mother is all laid out right there, captured in numbers and dry medical prose. None of it would mean anything to a jury. Precious little of it means anything to me, to be honest. I’m a pretty fair hand at interpreting lab results, but I can’t make much sense of this picture. There are too many values accompanied by a LOW or HIGH modifier. The only thing I’m able to glean is the baby’s name, Benjamin.

It’s a mixed blessing. He’ll be harder to forget with a name to go with his face.

Train wreck. Too many things wrong at once. So what now?

I pick up the BVM and gently squeeze a bagful of air into his lungs. My left hand dwarfs his face as I hold the mask in place.

You manage the ABCs, just like you’ve always done. Get him to the PICU alive. Piece of cake, AD. Just breathe.

I gently squeeze the bag, trying to time the ventilation to coincide with his own sporadic attempts at breathing. I settle into a rhythm, and Benjamin’s oxygen saturation and heart rate mercifully remain steady.

The hum of tires over ridged pavement makes me look up, and I peer out the back window to see we’ve turned onto the interstate, and Terry is driving down the breakdown lane, passing the stalled rush hour traffic. Every thirty feet or so, there is a segment of experimental surface, designed to rapidly drain rainwater from the roadway. Our tires passing across it beats a steady tattoo of hums. It’s a pretty decent rhythm to ventilate by. After sixty seconds or so, he seems to perk up a bit and breathe a little better. I take the opportunity to check circulation while he’s making a decent respiratory effort on his own.

Five minutes, maybe seven. You’re gonna make it there, Benjamin. Just keep trying.

Benjamin is too tiny for even our infant BP cuffs to fit properly, and I usually don’t pay much attention to blood pressure in babies his age anyway. I feel instead for a brachial pulse, pressing the inner surface of his upper arm, between the biceps and the triceps. My fingers seek for a pulse, obliterating it with too much pressure. He’s just so frail, that even the gentle pressure of my fingers is enough to occlude the artery entirely. I close my eyes and concentrate, wishing I had the hands of a pianist instead of the blunt instruments I was born with. I lighten the pressure of my fingers, and the pulse suddenly appears, thrumming life against my calloused fingertips.

One-seventy, but strong. Or does it just feel that way because there’s no fat in the way? He could use some more fluids, though. His heart rate should have come down after that bolus.

I peel back his diaper to find it dry. There is a dark stain in it, still smelling strongly of concentrated urine. Someone has put a wee bag on him, a tiny little adhesive bag designed to catch urine in infants. There is an opening for the baby’s genitalia and an adhesive border designed to stick to the surrounding skin. This
one is empty. His skin hangs in loose folds, his hipbones prominent under the concealing diaper. Benjamin’s inguinal ligaments, which normally would be buried under baby fat, stand out like ropes under his slack skin, like a bikini photo of some anorexic actress.

Only this baby didn’t choose to starve himself to the point of death. His parents did it to him. Goddamn them.

I draw up another fluid bolus, turning the stopcock and pushing the fluid into his marrow cavity. As thin as he is, I can almost imagine seeing his veins engorge as the saline reaches his circulatory system. Instead, my reward is seeing his heart rate slow over the next three minutes, finally settling at one-fifty or so, and steady.

Doing good, kid. Keep fighting. We’re almost there.

As I move back up to the captain’s chair, I peek through the window between the module and the cab. I can see Oneida North in the distance, the hospital tower looming over the surrounding forestland. We’re close, but with the traffic at a standstill, it will still take us another few minutes to travel the last mile and a half. The highway north out of town is clogged with commuters heading to the bedroom communities on the north end of the parish.

We have lights and siren, and Terry is using both, but right now my ambulance doesn’t feel very mobile. The rig slows down drastically as Terry is forced to yield for people turning off the main highway, or the occasional panicky idiot compelled to swerve into the path of an ambulance. The staccato tattoo of tires humming over the experimental pavement slows to a crawl, too slow to ventilate by. I find my own rhythm instead.

Little guy, I’d like to choke the breath right out of your parents, because they don’t deserve to draw breath on this planet, and if I were you I wouldn’t waste my breath on either of them…

The truck lurches as Terry cuts the corner a little close on the turn into the Emergency Department, running the rear wheels over the curb. “Sorry!” he calls back apologetically.

“The lump on my head accepts your apology!” I retort, grinning as I roll up my airway kit and stash it on the bench seat. I toss the BVM onto the head of the stretcher and remove the bag of IV fluids from the clip on the ceiling.

“The fucking parents are already here,” Terry reports darkly as he opens the rear doors. “God only knows how they managed to beat us to the hospital.”

I say nothing as I follow the stretcher out of the rig. For the past fifteen minutes, I’ve at least been able to concentrate on doing my job. Now I have to face his parents again. I don’t trust my ability to control my temper.

In front of our rig, there is a jacked up Ford pickup sitting in the middle of the ER ambulance entrance with its emergency flashers blinking. Benjamin’s mother is leaning against the wall outside the security doors. With her is a thin guy with a ponytail hanging out of the back of his greasy ball cap. His hands are dirty, and a Confederate flag tattoo adorns his right forearm. He’s wearing a tattered tee shit with a big cotton boll on the front, with the caption “It’s a white thing. You used to pick it.”

Benjamin’s loving daddy, no doubt.

Oooh, my baby! What happened?” sobs his mother accusingly, leaning over the stretcher and smearing big crocodile tears all over his forehead. It’s an Oscar-worthy performance. Terry and I don’t even break stride, forcing them both to walk alongside the stretcher.

“Hey, hold up a minute,” the father says angrily. “We wanna see our boy!”

“He’s unstable,” I tell him tersely as Terry keys our pass code into the security keypad. “I had to help him breathe all the way over here. They’ll wind up putting him on a ventilator in the PICU. We don’t have time to stand in the hallway and visit.”

“On a ventilator?” Trailer Trash Mom wails in anguish, following us into the ER entrance. “What does that mean? He was breathing just fine when I left him!”

“He wore out,” I tell her, and then let my mouth run away with me, “probably because he has no energy reserves. Lack of food will do that to you.”

“Now what the fuck does that mean?” explodes Racist Dad. “What you trying to say?”

I ignore them both and keep walking, cursing my runaway mouth and my temper. My hands are shaking again.

“Hey big boy, I’m fuckin’ talkin’ to you!” spits Racist Dad as he grabs my left arm. I stop walking, jerking Terry to an abrupt halt.

Let. Go. Now.” I tell him through gritted teeth, with all the menace I can muster. We lock eyes, and I silently will him to get stupid. I’ve got eight inches and 100 pounds on him, and the vision of his skeletal kid still swimming in my brain.

Go on, swing. Take a shot, Redneck Boy. Please give me a reason.

Racist Dad blinks first, and snatches his hand away, masking his cowardice with a contemptuous sneer. “This ain’t over, old son!” he shouts at my back as Terry and I pause at the ER exit, waiting for the doors to swing open. “I’m reportin’ yer ass, and I’ll have yer fuckin’ job!”

The doors swing open, and we almost run headlong into the security guard going the other way. He’s puffing as if he’s been running, and he has his radio in one hand. He looks at Terry in surprise, and his eyes narrow as he looks over my shoulder at the scrawny redneck standing behind me with his chest bowed out.

“Problem, AD?” he asks suspiciously.

“Yeah Tommy, these people are lost,” I answer, jerking my thumb toward Racist Dad and Trailer Park Mom. “They either need an escort out of the hospital, or directions to the PICU waiting room. Whichever.”

“No problem,” he growls, striding purposefully into the ER. Tommy is a retired cop who no longer carries a gun, but he’s still formidable. We were mortal enemies in my teenage years. Many were the times he rousted my friends and I for loitering at the usual teen hangouts. A few of them, punks like Racist Dad, were brave enough to take him on. Usually only once.

In the PICU, Dr. Bellard greets us grimly outside Room Six. Apparently, the anger is still pretty obvious on my face.

“Problems?” she asks, concerned.

“Not so much with him,” I sigh. “I gave him two fluid boluses, and his perfusion’s okay. Had to assist his breathing a little bit, too.”

“Why didn’t you intubate him?” she demands.

“Because I was able to ventilate him just fine with a mask,” I reply defiantly. “You want I should do something invasive to the kid just because I can?”

And just like that, she backs off. “All right, AD,” she says, laying an apologetic hand on my forearm. “You did good. Nobody likes these kinds of calls.”

Donna Bellard and I have a strange relationship. She’s the local expert on child abuse and neglect, and her testimony in court
is devastating. Prosecutors love her. She’s a little strident in her opinions, however, even going so far as to say that spanking your child constitutes abuse. We’ve clashed, often heatedly, yet I’m about the only medic she’ll ask to guest lecture in any of her courses on the subject. Right now, I’m glad Donna Bellard is taking care of this kid.

“Just put his parents in jail when it comes time to testify,” I sigh. “We’ll call it even.”

“You got it,” she promises.

I unwrap Benjamin from the papoose, place him gently on the scale sitting at the bedside, and hand off his IV fluids to a nurse whose name I can never remember. As soon as I roll my stretcher away, a swarm of nurses descends on his tiny frame, assessing, weighing, measuring, drawing blood. Dr. Bellard calmly gives orders, stethoscope pressed to Benjamin’s chest.

You’re in good hands, Bemjamin. Let’s hope it stays that way.

I pull up a chair at the nurse’s station and write my run report, filling the entire narrative section and a full continuation page with all the facts while they’re still fresh in my head. I choose my words carefully, trying to stick to cold, clinical terminology while still painting a clear picture of Benjamin Braelyn Parker’s condition, a picture that even Joe Sixpack can easily understand.

The voice of my paramedic instructor rings in my head as I write. Write it so that it can be understood by twelve people too dumb to know how to get out of jury duty, he had told us repeatedly, and for God’s sakes, spell correctly.

I finish my report, clip the pink carbon copy to Benjamin’s chart, and follow Terry downstairs in silence. Racist Dad and Trailer Park Mom are nowhere in sight, but their redneck mobile is still blocking the ambulance drive, doors locked and engine off.

“Hold up a minute,” I order as Terry starts to back out of the ambulance drive. “I’ll be right back.” I trot back into the ER and stick my head through the doorway of the nurse’s lounge. Tommy the security guard, chatting with a nurse over a cup of coffee, looks up quizzically.

“Hey Tommy,” I grin wickedly, “there’s a big redneck mobile out there parked illegally in the ambulance drive. How about having it towed?”

“And I don’t see anyone around here it might belong to,” he winks conspiratorially. “Yeah, towing it seems like a fine idea.”

Vignettes From the ER

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1110 hours

“Well howdy, AD!” the ward clerk greets me as I hustle into the ER. “Keeping banker’s hours this morning, are we?”

“My pedicure ran a little long. They had to change grinder blades twice. Please tell me that bloodthirsty horde in the waiting room is just someone’s family, and not patients waiting to be seen.”

“No such luck. Two more just signed in. It’s Drug Seeker Noah’s Ark Day. They’ve been coming in two-by-two.”

“Lovely. Who’s the Doc?”

Candyman.”

“Oh God. Shoot me now, please.”

1315 hours

“Hey, AD? Podunk EMS just called. They’re bringing in Princess again.”

“Damn. It. All. To. Hell. They say why?”

“Knee pain, fell a week ago.”

“Lemme guess. Drunk again?”

“As a boiled owl, according to Paramedic With Potential.”

“Good, then he knows where to put her. As long as she can sit in a wheelchair and maintain her own airway, she goes to the end of the line.”

1502 hours

“Hey dude, I need some water.”

“Huh, where did you come from?”

“From in there,” he says, pointing to the Quiet Room. “I got food poisoning.”

And a blood alcohol of 324, I muse, flipping through his chart. Amazing how that can upset your tummy.

“You’re not deathly ill any more? Sure you can hold it down?”

“I think so,” he nods weakly.

“Sure thing,” I say, filling a cup from the cooler. “Sign this for me first, please.”

“No problem,” he says agreeably, yawning as he scribbles his name. “What was that?”

“The paper that says you can go home as soon as you’re sober enough to walk. Thanks for the demonstration.”

“Huh?”

“Exit’s down the hall and to the left, sir. Don’t forget your water.”

1625 hours

“We have a problem,” the ward clerk informs me grimly.

“Shit, more patients?”

“No, but the ones in the waiting room are complaining.”

“About the wait? Tell them that waiting time is a consideration in choosing a restaurant, not an ER. If they’re well enough to bitch about the – “

“No, not about the wait. They’re complaining about Princess.”

“What’s she doing? Singing 100 Bottles of Beer On The Wall? Tell them she needs a good backup chorus. It’ll keep ‘em busy.

“No, they’re complaining that she’s drinking out of a whiskey bottle in her purse. Getting belligerent, too. Says she’s tired of waiting.”

“Well, we can’t have that. The drunker she gets, the longer it’ll take to sober her up.”

“Who are y’all talking about?” Candyman wants to know.

“Knee pain in the waiting room, Doc. Apparently she’s resorted to a little nip for medicinal purposes, and demands a room befitting her regal stature.”

“Knee pain? Let her wait her turn. Knee pain isn’t gonna kill anybody.”

“We can only hope.”

1835 hours

“Only twenty five minutes until your shift ends, Doc. Hang in there.”

“Twenty-three minutes and forty-five seconds, actually. 44, 43, 42…

*ring ring*

“ER, this is AD.”

“AD, we need Dr. Candyman on the floor.”

“Shit. Does this mean you’re not ready to take the telemetry patient we’re admitting?”

“Not right now. We have a patient crashing and we can’t get a line.”

“Okay, he’ll be right there.”

“What did they want?” Doc sighs.

“They need you to start a central line. Looks like you won’t be getting off on time after all.”

“Shit. You got it here?”

“Go. We’ll keep the Vicodin Hordes at bay while you’re gone.”

1910 hours

*ring ring*

“ER, this is AD.”

“AD, Doc Candyman needs you in Room 124, STAT.”

“Shit,” I groan, closing the lid on my half-eaten Chinese takeout. “I’m coming.”

I sprint to Room 124 and find Doc Candyman cursing under his breath. The charge nurse has already rolled the crash cart to the bedside. Not a good sign.

“What kind of fucking Mickey Mouse hospital has central line kits with nothing but the catheter in them?” he fumes, loudly.

“Apparently, this kind of Mickey Mouse hospital. What’s missing?”

Everything, dammit! No introducer, no guide wire, no nothing! What a fucking piece of shit!”

Uuuhhh, Doc? Is she conscious?”

“Fucking cheap-assed, penny-pinching sonsa - huh? Oh, her? No, she’s out like a light. And she’s gonna stay that way if we don’t get some blood into her soon.”

“Be right back, Doc.”

1915 hours

“Okay, we have a laceration tray with syringes, needles, sterile drapes and forceps. We have a peritoneal lavage tray we can cannibalize a Seldinger wire, introducer needle and dilator from. Anything else you need?”

“Just glove up and gimme a fucking hand.”

1945 hours

“This ain’t working, Doc. We’ve missed three femoral attempts and two internal jugular attempts. Any other ideas?”

“Shit. We can call Friendly Surgeon and see if he can come put one in.”

“It’ll take him an hour to get there. Better get on the phone now.”

“I don’t think we have an hour.”

2000 hours

“Damn, is that what I think it is?” Doc Candyman wants to know.

“Yep. It took some doing, but it works. We got the blood going.”

“I wonder what’s the record for oldest patient to ever get an intraosseous needle?” he muses.

“I don’t know, but I just shattered my personal best. By eighty-five years.”

“Thank God. Friendly Sur
geon is still forty minutes out.”

[And I didn't do it with any newfangled drill thingy you kids use these days. Nosirree, I did it the old-fashioned way, using persistence and brute force. Back in my day, we had to put in our intraossoeus needles in by hand, and by God, we were grateful.]

2115 hours

“Hey Doc,” I ask as I chart with one hand and shovel cold broccoli beef into my mouth with the other, “refresh my memory. What do they call the region directly above the vagina?”

“The mons pubis,” Favorite Doc answers absently, scrolling through CT images on the viewer. “Why do you want to know?”

“I’m charting on the land whale with the abscess right above her hoo ha. The clinical term slipped my mind.”

“Well, technically the structure right above the vagina is the clitoris.”

“Damn. Is that where it is? No wonder my wife left me. All this time I thought she had tired of my boyish charm and my witty repartee.”

2315 hours

“Damn AD, where you going with such a grin on your face?”

“Home! I have a cyber date with a beautiful blonde.”

Ewwwww. I don’t need to hear about you surfing internet porn.”

“Nah, it ain’t like that. She keeps trying to entice me into naked webcam action, but I told her I won’t put out until we’re married. I’m old fashioned that way.”

“Riiiight.”

Okay, Another Bleg

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This is the last day you can vote. If you can, please, please purty pleeze go over to VA Joe’s and vote for America’s Wounded Heroes as your favorite charity. At stake is a healthy donation to kick start a worthy cause, and we’re currently in fourth place.

If even 1/10 of you guys that visit here every day voted, we’d have second place sewn up. If even half of you voted, we’d run away with the $1,200 first place donation. Plus, we’d all win the everlasting respect, admiration and gratitude of the Loopy Libertarian over at Chromed Curses, and really, who wouldn’t want that?

It costs you absolutely nothing to vote other than a few mouse clicks and five minutes of your time. If you’d like to actually contribute to the charity, go to the site and send ‘em a little lucre.

So go vote. Let’s start an ADalanche of votes their way. Five hundred votes by midnight, people. That’s what I’m asking. I’m monitoring out-clicks, and I know your IP addresses. Don’t make me get all Sally Struthers on your asses.

Besides, if we win, I’m buying us all ice cream.

Go vote!

Let Me Introduce Y'all To Sam…

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…a new EMT in the blogosphere. Here’s hoping her story turns out to be an interesting one. Looks good so far.

Drunks: Perpetual Job Security

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YouTube Preview Image

As long as there are stupid people and alcohol in close proximity, there will always be a place for EMS. Occasionally, you find a drunk thoughtful enough to actually injure himself, like this guy.

Because All The Other Cool Kids Are Doing It

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This Is My Life, Rated
Life: 6
Mind: 6.9
Body: 4.9
Spirit: 9.2
Friends/Family: 4.8
Love: 5.4
Finance: 6.8
Take the Rate My Life Quiz

Scored higher on the love section than I thought I would have a few months ago. You meet the most amazing people in the most unexpected of ways.

The Psychic Price We Pay

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I’ve often believed that every paramedic carries with them their own personal cemetery. Everyone there is someone who died in our care, someone whose face we can’t forget because we wish we could have done more for them, or we blame ourselves for the perceived mistakes we made, or simply because the call affected us emotionally. If you’ve worked in EMS for a while, there may be quite a few headstones there.

And I really don’t trust someone who says they’ve never seen those faces or felt those emotions. I think those things are the psychic price we pay for having a soul.

It’s not always easy to banish their faces from our memories, as Blue Ridge Medic found out today. Sometimes all you can do is simply make peace with the ghosts.

Drop by and give him some support, would you? He could use a little affirmation.

Well, That's a Good Question…

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In fact, in the November 13, 2003 issue of CBS MarketWatch, EMS was listed as one of ten most underpaid jobs in the US. The report, which was based upon information from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, reported an average annual EMS salary of $25,450. The only professions in the survey that had lower salaries were restaurant dishwashers, consumer loan collection agents, preschool teachers and slaughterers and meatpackers.

Money quote from an old article by Bryan Bledsoe in JEMS magazine.

But hey, buck up little trooper!

We get paid in job satisfaction.

And chicks. Lots and lots of chicks*.


*85-year-old emphysema patients, usually.

Many Thanks…

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…to Epijunky, she of the mad Photoshop skilz and paramedic class-induced peptic ulcer. She’s feeling a little down after medical problems forced her to drop out of paramedic class. Y’all drop by her blog and give her some encouragement, won’t you?

Thanks also to Wyatt Earp, of Support Your Local Gunfighter. Wyatt, if you ever need a favor, I’m your huckleberry.

And welcome to the blogroll, by the way. If you guys have never visited SYLG, make with the clicky and give him a read. He’s goooood.

A Bleg…

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…for any of you Photoshop wizards out there.

I need your skilz.

I need some fairly decent resolution images of the stamps/brands similar to the ones seen in Mythbusters – you know, the ones that say CONFIRMED, or BUSTED, or PLAUSIBLE – written in a welding bead on rusty metal.

Or hell, anything suitably industrial-looking would be fine.

I need the images for a presentation I’m doing with a friend of mine, and the images I find on the internet just suck.

If anyone can help a poor Ambulance Driver out with such a gift, I’ll…

…be damned grateful. Or pimp your blog. Or write a post on the subject of your choosing. Or…something.

Because I sure as hell can’t pay you money.

Drop me an e-mail if you can help a brutha out.

New Chapter Up…

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…at Star of Life.

Welcome to Holland

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I am often asked to describe the experience of raising a child with a disability – to try to help people who have not shared that unique experience to understand it, to imagine how it would feel. It’s like this……

When you’re going to have a baby, it’s like planning a fabulous vacation trip – to Italy. You buy a bunch of guide books and make your wonderful plans. The Coliseum. The Michelangelo David. The gondolas in Venice. You may learn some handy phrases in Italian. It’s all very exciting.

After months of eager anticipation, the day finally arrives. You pack your bags and off you go. Several hours later, the plane lands. The stewardess comes in and says, “Welcome to Holland.”

“Holland?!?” you say. “What do you mean Holland?? I signed up for Italy! I’m supposed to be in Italy. All my life I’ve dreamed of going to Italy.”

But there’s been a change in the flight plan. They’ve landed in Holland and there you must stay.

The important thing is that they haven’t taken you to a horrible, disgusting, filthy place, full of pestilence, famine and disease. It’s just a different place.

So you must go out and buy new guide books. And you must learn a whole new language. And you will meet a whole new group of people you would never have met.

It’s just a different place. It’s slower-paced than Italy, less flashy than Italy. But after you’ve been there for a while and you catch your breath, you look around…. and you begin to notice that Holland has windmills….and Holland has tulips. Holland even has Rembrandts.

But everyone you know is busy coming and going from Italy… and they’re all bragging about what a wonderful time they had there. And for the rest of your life, you will say “Yes, that’s where I was supposed to go. That’s what I had planned.”

And the pain of that will never, ever, ever, ever go away… because the loss of that dream is a very very significant loss.

But… if you spend your life mourning the fact that you didn’t get to Italy, you may never be free to enjoy the very special, the very lovely things … about Holland.

Emily Perl Kingsley

I first read that essay almost five years ago, back in the days when The Missus and I were still searching for meaning, wondering why we had been given this imperfect gift of a daughter with limitations and physical challenges.

I mean, why us? Why not some other parents? We did everything right. No smoking, no drinking. I took folic acid supplements. She took prenatal vitamins. We made every appointment. We read What To Expect When You’re Expecting. We picked out names. Bought toys and baby outfits.

And still we got a daughter with half her brain destroyed.

Meanwhile, the five-dollar-per-trick crack whore had a relatively healthy baby in the isolette right next to ours. A perfectly beautiful child, whose mother visited not once in the month she was there.

Something in that short little essay, not even four hundred words, resonated with me from the first moment I read it. I could see its parallels not only in fatherhood, but in my own career. It’s an eloquent primer on how to deal with loss and move beyond shattered expectations, a lesson in how disillusionment can blind you to the true value of the gift you’ve been given.

I’ve said before that I believe God gave me a special needs daughter because that’s the challenge I needed to become the man He meant me to be. I only hope that I’m on that path. God knows I stray from it often enough, but I try to keep plodding in the right direction.

And my daughter is my compass.

I’ve heard it many times, people complimenting me on what a good father I am. It honestly never occurred to me to be otherwise. I don’t understand the men who choose not to. I didn’t know if I could actually be a good father, but I meant to try.

Night Lightning Woman reflected on her blog recently on the little victories that replace those conventional milestones when a family is given this great gift of a special child. In it, a woman with a profoundly retarded child said:

“I don’t know why she was born the way she was…but she’s been such a gift. She has taught my whole family so much.”

Babs wrote of the institution she visited as a nursing student, a place where handicapped or retarded children were abandoned by parents oblivious to their gifts, parents who refused to see the beauty of Holland. Babs did, though.

Don Gwinn and his wife took in the twin boys of a troubled family member, boys who were developmentally delayed, and raised them as their own. They make their living teaching special needs children. Ask Don if he’d rather be teaching Honors English to sullen and spoiled teenagers instead.

Firefighter Girl is a single mother, raising a daughter and an autistic son on a paramedic’s salary. Even on Mixman’s bad days, I doubt she’d trade rocking him to the music of Miles Davis for a day in the park with another kid.

All of them have an appreciation for the beauty of Holland.

Tomorrow, I take my daughter to her first day of school. She’ll start pre-K with kids her age, kids without any physical limitations. I’m told that in all likelihood, once she finishes this year, she’ll be able to skip kindergarten and go directly to the first grade.

She’s going to make friends, and she’s going to encounter bullies, and she’ll probably meet a teacher or two who can’t see beyond the brace on her leg to the bright child who happens to wear it. I just hope she finds a few who challenge her mentally like her mother and I challenge her physically.

I think she’s going to take to school like a duck to water. Me, I’m going to try (unsuccessfully) not to cry, and pretend I won’t miss the time I’ll no longer have with her.

It’s okay, though. I’ve come to love it here in Holland, and I’m ready to show off my Rembrandt.

Yeah, What She Said

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The Loopy Libertarian urges all slackers who haven’t yet voted to do so.

America’s Wounded Heroes is currently in third place, with other charities nipping at their heels.

Swing by and give them a vote, would you?

The cause is good, and it costs you nothing but a few clicks of the mouse.