I’ll admit — it’s a semi-irrational fear that I have of getting a fishhook stuck through my skin.
It may date back to the days when my father’s office was just off the Emergency Room. HIPAA hadn’t been born yet. I would cut through the Emergency Room to get to his office.
Which was a trailer.
Yes, it’s what you picture — the kind of structure that fills trailer parks.
When I got into the trailer, his office was on the left, opposite his secretary’s desk. Sometimes she was transcribing his dictated notes and would let me listen to his voice on the transcription machine as he said things like, “The patient was a white female, age 47, who presented with…”
Clearly another HIPAA violation. But HIPAA wasn’t a thing then. And I wasn’t paying attention to the words as much as his voice.
True story: These days I recognize people by their voices. More than once I would have walked right past my high school boyfriend had he not greeted me by name.
The other day, another person that I knew years ago walked past me and said, “Hey, Sal!”
The words got my attention, but the voice identified the speaker. I immediately knew him.
I mean, seriously, most men over the age of 70 look remarkably similar to me: gray hair or balding, scruffy beard, blue jeans, etc. Add a baseball cap and I’m sunk — until I hear their voice.
But I digress. I guess that’s how it is with stream-of-consciousness writing.
So, as a kid, I would cut through the Emergency Room on a daily basis. My pattern was to swim at the gym after school and walk to the hospital for my ride home. I would wait for my father to finish his day and we would walk together to his vehicle which was ALWAYS parked in the farthest spot available.
“It’s good exercise,” he would say as I complained about walking to the car.
One time, I saw one of my classmates in the ER. He had stabbed a pitchfork through his foot. Actually, through his work boot, and his foot, and out the other side. He was crying and cursing, obviously not having a good day.
I remember his name — but I won’t say it here. HIPAA and all that, you know.
The fishhook thing must date from those days. I think I saw someone in the ER with a fishhook in their cheek.
My father said, “They’ll just push it through and cut the barb.”
He made it sound easy.
But then, he didn’t have a fishhook in his cheek.
I remember my father explaining to me how the manure pitchfork through the foot presented a particular problem because of the risk of infection. Should they just pull it out? Cut the tip and pull it out? I think that’s what they did.
It doesn’t matter. The prompt for Stream of Consciousness Saturday wasn’t pitchfork. It was hook.
I can’t decide if I like stream-of-consciousness writing or not. It feels like a bunch of blather.
What do you think?
Good stories, Sally. I’d rather a fishing hook in my cheek than a pitchfork through my foot. Preferably my butt cheek!
Hahaha!
Loved this, Sally β that fishhook fear totally makes sense to me after those ER glimpses!
Much love,
David