Saturday, February 24, 2007

Brain fracture


Well, I took the other half of the CPR course today, which was first aid.

Bad idea.

Not because I don't like thinking about frothy blood-tinged vomit or bone fragments poking through flesh, or because I don't find joy in winding bandages around the limbs of questionable home-daycare workers who are filling their first aid certification requirements, but rather because this particular class had some archetypal classroom issues I had understandably long repressed.

Once a few years have elapsed since you dragged a backpack around a campus, it can be tempting to view one's school years through wistful beer goggles of poor memory and romanticism: it was all learnin' for the sake of learnin', and scribbling in notebooks at the cafe. Except that often, classrooms are dotted with ineffectual teachers and deeply annoying students... sort of like first aid class was today.

You know the types. Let's start with the teacher, a harmless buffoon of a dude, who largely instructed through the overuse of rambling, semi-related anecdotes of the sort that might issue from an overly-talkative guy you don't really know who has cornered you at someone's party. You had this teacher in school, of course. He was definitely a self-proclaimed renaissance kind of man, who wanted to tell you all about his life's exploits just slightly more than he wanted to teach facts, and thus found some sort of ungainly way of harnessing personal tales to the occasional stray piece of relevant information, in this particular case, imparting disorganized first-aid factoids via real-world bar brawl interventions he staged as an EMT. I learned very little other than the fact that your head will fall to the side if you sever your trapezius muscle by falling through a plate of glass, and if an intoxicated fisherman jams a pocket knife into your shoulderblade, you should leave it there for the paramedics to remove.

Strangely, he began the class with an exercise in which we were asked to diagnose the possible cause of a theoretically downed woman in a parking garage, age of 35, suffering from chest pains. The contents of her purse were painstakingly described and listed on the blackboard as supposed clues: a cell phone, a compact, a brush, Lucky strikes. Being that we were a ragtag band of local denizens, none with a medical degree, we unsurprisingly failed to correctly guess the woman was suffering from a birth-control-induced pulmonary embolism. Oddly, no innocent-bystander first aid tips were provided; but we were however and incongruently warned throughout the remainder of the course: "treat what you see, and don't try to diagnose."

And yet, this was not even the worst part of the course, because oh yes, the course included That Woman, you know the one, posessed of no apparent self-awareness whatsoever, eminating a sort of force field of craziness, older, and presuming the entire class to be a personal discussion between herself and the instructor, in which she was gradually attempting to replace him (I'm reminded of this episode of The Office, in which David Brent hijacks a training session to perform his original composition of Freelove Freeway, although of course, that was much, much funnier). Inappropriate Woman's antics included:
  • Mocking the teacher for telling an unfunny joke, by laughing like a horse, snorting, and rolling her eyes
  • Answering every one of the instructor's frequent rhetorical questions with a mildly ill-timed out-loud response
  • Literally screaming SUSAN! at her daughter, also in attendance, who turned up the volume of her cell phone to maximum, and then called the phone, mid-class, as a joke
  • Interrupting every EMT adventure story with her own mostly unrelated story about her own far worse and more numerous personal injuries
  • Interrupting the instructor's rare forays into actual first aid instructions with her own helpful examples and tips ("I should have been a nurse. I really should have.")
  • Picking an argument with a fellow student about whether syrup of ipecac should be given to poisoned children
  • Diverting the discussion about offering first aid to diabetics by discussing her own "hypertensive" eating regimen, including hourly doses of cheese, which she showed us in her purse
Lord, as if those were the only examples. There were others. What frightened me most of all is, this woman allegedly is employed as a home day care worker. People willingly leave their defenseless, tiny children in her care, all day long, in exchange for cash.

It was my luck to be paired with this woman and her daughter for the practice bandaging session, in which they cut off the circulation in my left arm, and tied the bandage in a knot which I could not untie.

Let us note for the record that if you happen to go down on my watch, I am not entirely sure I will know how to assist, although a certification card in my wallet might suggest otherwise.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Goodbye, my friend

Please visit moments from Mo's life in her photo retrospective.

Why?

Oh why, are you not watching Extras? Because you're missing stuff like this.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Do not resuscitate


I am obsessed with weird dolls. We've talked about this before. Thankfully today I encountered a whole new class of prosthetic people who frighten me more than ever.

CPR dolls.

I was in a CPR class this morning, as would be any mother in her right mind who ever saw a baby gag momentarily on a piece of banana. Among other things, I learned:
  • That in Vermont, Louisiana, Minnesota, and Quebec, failure to act laws require you to assist a downed victim. Live anywhere else, and you are free to pretend you didn't notice.
  • You can't be sued for trying to resuscitate someone, as long as you are neither accepting cash nor pretending to be an EMT. Or something like that.
  • I have no idea how to spell resuscitate, and had to look it up.
  • Defibrillators talk.
  • You should not necessarily put your mouth on a strange person unless you have a funky mouth thing with a tube. An EMT wouldn't.
  • The entire subject of bodily trauma and death scares me even more than the clown from Poltergeist.
But back to the dolls. The ones we dealt with today were textbook CPR: a pile of limbless, block-chested grownups and a duffel bag of babies. Nothing particularly alarming about these pulmonary puppets, other than the insidious inner fears you might project upon them while blowing into their chest cavities through a prophylactic barrier. However, as I later found out on the trusty interweb, things in resusci-doll territory get even scarier than your own imagination.

Let's start out in the shallow end: Mrs. Bates. Featuring "intramuscular injection sites at the deltiods, right gluteal muscle, and at the thighs" and "interchangeable male/female genitalia with full-functioning catheterization," "Advanced Grandma Chase" looks harmless enough, but I am not entirely sure I would want her in my hallway closet.

For only $289, you could own Fat Old Fred, the politically incorrectly named "typical cardiac arrest victim" who is, as the name implies, fat and old. He comes complete with the requisite "elderly physical appearance," and his own "extra fat layer." As the Boy Scouts are wont to say (that is, in addition to "gay kids should not be taught how to put up tents and tie square knots,") be prepared.

Looking like something exhumed from Stephen King's Pet Sematary, CasPer the CPR dog, with his "sanitary replaceable airway" and his "femoral pulse," is sure to give the late-night driver pause as he or she speeds down badly-lit residential neighborhoods on the way to Taco Bell. Can I just stop right here and say how badly that book scared the crap out of me in the 6th grade?

But oh, it gets even scarier. Everything has a worst-case scenario, and CPR manikins are no exception: meet Terry Trauma. Forget what I said about the scariest image I have ever encountered on the internet. Terry actually scares me more. (Actually, is that true?). As a bonus, Terry comes with "two heads, a rigid rescue head and a second head for sanitary CPR training." We should all be so lucky.

If you have ever had vague anxieties about what you might do in an emergency situation, just meditate for a moment on Terry Trauma. There you are, hanging out at Starbucks, drinking your half caf mochaccino, and there is Terry Trauma on the floor right in front of that little table with the creamers and straws. And oops, did I mention that he's your best friend? What the hell are you going to do?

For god's sake people, get out there and sign up for CPR.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Worst interview ever #2: Hospitality pit-brawl

It's time for me to tell you all about Worst Job Interview Ever #2, except that I'm falling asleep and my laptop battery has 20 minutes left. Let's get to the point.

It went something like this...

I was in college, and desperate to secure one of approximately 19.4 summer jobs available in the entire county in which I attended school. It so happened that, to greedily maximize its grossly handsome school year profits, the college rented out its squalid blocks of dorm buildings as some sort of summer "satellite" hotel (for what sort of squalor-loving, hallway-bathroom craving guests I'm not entirely certain).

These dubious accommodations were entirely staffed and operated by an aggressively extroverted team of can-do college sophomores, making minimum wage. Campus jobs were the gold standard of summer employment, for reasons that I can't comprehend in retrospect: teams of fresh-scrubbed college kid rubes did all manner of lowly tasks around the campus for a pittance, and fought for the privilege.

My battery is now at :15 so I'll get to the point: I wanted one of these jobs. And so I donned my 20-year-old's version of an interview suit:
  • oversized, thrift-store man's vest from a cheap suit
  • pair of pinstriped elastic-waistband harem pants from Ross Dress for Less
...and reported for the interview.

Imagine my dismay when, rather like an early round of eliminations for American Idol, I was corralled with a startling number of desperate young fellow-hopefuls in an interview room, which as it happened, was a vast conference table headed up by a brisk woman with a hard smile and a barking voice. "Welcome, future hospitality team!" she brayed.

Uh oh.

She then handed out a series of scripts to the crowd, and informed us that we would be role playing as satellite concierges, as she read off an increasingly difficult series of hotel challenge scenarios. Whoever had the hardest smile and the barkingest voice, whoever was the loudest and pushiest and smiliest and bossiest and most outgoing and steam-rollingest, would make it to the next round. The others?

They would leave.

Let us break here to enjoy an actual quote from a recent personality profile I was compelled to take at work:

She may be seen by others as distant, unfeeling, skeptical, not interested in people, and even arrogant..."

Um.

And so, I just stood there watching my fellow concierge-wannabees barking and role-playing and one-upping for only but a moment, and then I slinked out a side door, and walked home with my head hanging in defeat.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Mo kitty: Unwell

Update: Mo Kitty underwent a blood transfusion after a recent overnight brush with death; she has stabilized and is awaiting a bone marrow biopsy to determine if she has cancer. Let's hope she comes home soon.

***

Tiny dog's own Momo Kitty is currently at the vet hospital after a few days of suspiciously listless behavior; she is suffering from severe anemia, which could indicate very bad things, or very treatable things. Right now, we are not sure which.

Mo would like your agnostic well-wishes directed her way as she awaits her diagnosis.

For those of you not acquainted with Momo Kitty, here is her story of origin.

That is all.