I remembered when I told my dad he had colon cancer.
The surgeon couldnāt wait for my dad to wake up from the sedation so he handed me the photographs and charts.
The surgeon had places to be, after all, and my dad hadnāt slept well in probably years so we all just let him sleep.
At least the medical staff werenāt in a rush to get us out of the small dark cramped room.

At least no one came in to roll my sedated dad out into the hall or have me roll my sedated dad out into the hall so they could maximize their profit by turning that table.
My childhood best friend died in the parking lot of a Chicago hospital because the hospital staff discharged her too soon after her surgery.
Right there in the parking lot.
Dead.
I donāt know if thatās ever fully sunk in.

Recently, my great aunt was discharged from a Madison hospital following a surgery only to be helicopter-lifted back to the hospital the next night as she was also discharged too soon.
She didnāt die.
So⦠I do appreciate how the hospital didnāt roll my unconscious dad outside the building as soon as the colonoscopy was done. That left it to me to tell him he had cancer but whatever.
They left us alone and thatās all my dad really wanted at that point.
When I was a Care Manager, I developed a close relationship with transportation providers as hospitals would just roll my people out of the hospital and push them beyond hospital property so the hospital wouldnāt be liable if a monster ate them or they froze.

There my person would then sit on the sidewalk in their wheelchair and gown.
⦠in the Wisconsin winter and sometimes at night.

So, every once in awhile, a hospital social worker would have the time and will to look up the name of the personās Medicaid worker (me) and then call to ask if I could pull a rabbit out of a hat and get a transportation provider to pick the person up in an hour.
āOmgYES. Thank you so much for calling me.ā
Usually transportation providers demand 48 hour notice as they engage in strategic logistics with their schedules.
Which is why I developed relationships with transportation providers⦠so I could call them and ask if they could send someone⦠jack rabbit now.
Anyways⦠hospitals may house heroes but our American health system as a whole is motherflipping terrible.
So itās kind of remarkable my dad and I werenāt in the hospital hallway when I told him he had cancer.
When it comes down to it, itās all about the money and maximizing that profit.
I go back in time because last month I tried to schedule my second colonoscopy before age 45 (which is the age when insurance companies deem the test āpreventativeā) due to my family history and I asked my health insurance if it was covered.
I canāt even make sense of the response I got. What I do know is that I wouldnāt pay over $10,000 for it.
Okay.
Pocket change.
And I laugh because⦠why even get the preventative tests? The last time I got a test to alleviate worry was for the genetics test when I was told – in contrast – Iād get what my mom had. Aka my worst fear would come true if I didnāt die first from something else.
That didnāt alleviate my worry at all.
Itās like going in for mammograms with ādense breastsā. Which apparently most women have, FYI. The results are: āDunnoā.
Or āSchedule a (more expensive test).ā
The first time I got the result of ādunnoā I asked for more clarification because it sure seemed like there should be a point in getting a mammogram.
The clarification was⦠āYeah. We canāt see anything. You probably donāt have to worry.ā
Science at its best.
Anyways, back to the point of preventative tests⦠so you go in and pay a bag of money to know you probably DONāT have cancer.
Or
You go in and find out you do have cancer.
And now you canāt afford the treatment.

Very few seem to be able to afford cancer treatment in America. We resort to Go Fund Me, criminal acts and other such money-raising endeavors.
I helped with enough treatment fundraisers for my cousin who had brain cancer FOUR MOTHERFLIPPING TIMES so this was

followed by

followed by

(in the case of my beloved cousin).
I fully support treatment fundraisers. My cousin had a little boy and he wanted to extend his time with him for as long as he could.
Cancer treatment is a super personal awful reality and everyone experiencing it should be left alone while having to make any of those decisions.
However, if and when I get cancer, there is No Way Iām smiling my face off to have people tell me to keep fighting and other well-intended but highly annoying things.
On top of it all, Iād be smiling my face off while still paying off the $4000 colonoscopy co-pay as I wouldnāt have come even a little close to reaching my insurance ādeductibleā.
So Iād still be paying off the diagnostic test charge while campaigning for my chemo fund.
Nope.

āNO WAYā is what Iām saying out loud to myself while waiting for an evening behavioral mental health screen with a youth who reportedly āstabs everyoneā.
Everyone?

I think thatās irrational emotion-fueled overtalk, personally, but I guess Iāll see.
As maybe tonight I will find myself laying on the Milwaukee streets, bleeding out, staring at the stars for the last time, because the parent was being literal.
And then I would never again have to consider setting up a payment plan for a test to make sure I donāt have cancer.

So, in short, Iām going to stop telling people who arenāt seniors to get preventative tests if they have Blue Cross Blue Shield. Just skip it.
For me and my house, we will have cancer (my husband ādoesnāt goā to the doctor).
So cancer it is! If I donāt get stabbed to death tonightā¦
For the record, I love my job. I accept potentially getting stabbed while doing it because Iām out there, helping.
But there are presently only four of us following up on all the mental health referrals received on behalf of children and youth in Milwaukee County as the rest of our 10 person team are ārescreeningā over 900 kids this summer due to a significant change in Medicaid coverage.
Insurance, insurance, insurance!
I drafted this post 2 months ago so⦠apologies! So much has happened itās felt overwhelming to try to sum it up here in a readable way.

So this post is documenting how very upset Iāve been with our health system this summer, death, how I wonāt do chemo⦠and also⦠working too much. Brain tired.
Words.
Pictures.
Enthralling and mildly upsetting material, I know.
In any case, thanks to any of you who have read and keep reading these silly posts and who have offered support. You are the best.
Hope youāre all staying safe and doing the absolute best you can. Itās been so crazy out there with all the natural disasters and world violenceā¦

I hope youāre holding on.
For me, all I really need is whiskey and Jesus to keep trucking.
And love love love.
Love is the answer unless you happen to be the CEO of a health insurance company.
Itās highly unlikely a corporate CEO would be reading this.
Regardless, in the unlikely chance that this is happening, I have the least amount of love for you, mortal.
But you still get some anyways.
You CEO fuck.
For everyone else, sending much more love to you.
š¤āØ
grrrrrrrrrl, i love you.
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Haha YES! Growl growl growl⦠thank you and love you, BBF. š¤š
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love your postsĀ”!!!!!
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Oh Jenny! Iāve been thinking so much about you and A. Hope youāre both doing as well as can be expected. Sending love! šš„ŗ
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Your presence is a gift and a balm. ā¤š
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My beloved B⦠love to you. Always. šš
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I feel exactly the same way! Our country is SO broken and there are those politicians who are trying desperately to make it even more broken. Please take medicine out of the hands of over paid uncaring CEOās. Put back the laws that prohibited them being paid such ridiculous amounts. (It didnāt hurt our family and my Dad was one of those who couldnāt make more than a certain percentage more than his lowest paid employee!)
Glad youāre still around and still writing š
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Right? My goodness!!!!!!!! Itās so TRUE!!! š©š¤š¤š¤š¤šš¤š¤
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Having worked in the USA healthcare system many years ago as an RN and in my beloved Canada. I still can not comprehend the US system in such a rich country.
Canada by no means is perfect but at least I didn’t have to think about Go Fund Me for the serious health crisis experienced in my family.
Your post here is Brilliant and my heart goes out to you, your family and your clients. You are blessing to all of them.
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Awwwwwwww youāre the best! Wish we could be in Canada!!!! Sending you and your family the best! Thank you so much!!!! šš¤
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It has crossed my mind more than once that it might be worthwhile to emigrate to…almost anywhere else…if anything big-scary happened to us, healthwise. And then when fascism looked like our inevitable future, I actually got so far as beginning research on healthcare in the Caribbean. Thank all the gods I’m feeling some hope on that front, so I stopped. For now. š¤
šTake care, friend.
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Oh YEA! I kept trying to go back to SCOTLAND! But no one would hire me back in the academic world as getting a visa has become extra extra extra tricky Iām told. Or I was. This was years ago. I highly support looking elsewhere to live!!!!! ā Researching never ever hurts (well, THATāS not true) š but all we can do is really hope for nothing big-scary and⦠make our plans š„°āš
Love to you, š¶Lisa.š¶
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Oops.
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Not letting me like today. But I do!
Hey, if you can deal with the heat (me, not so much), look into Thailand. Very cheap to live there, fantastic healthcare. My nephew Craig teaches English as a second language–online–he could live anywhere, but he loves Thailand. Gorgeous snorkeling, and the food is, of course, amazing. His money goes much further there than here. He gets a massage two or three times per week! Thai massage! For $3! (Ever had a Thai massage? I swear I leave this plane.) He came home for a while, but missed his life there too much, so he’s back in Thailand again.
I don’t expect you to leap at this option, but someone who follows you might. š About Me – Vagabond Disposition will take you to Craig’s blog.
And this is what happens when I attempt to make a comment in the middle of the night…š
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Not letting me like today. But I do!
Hey, if you can deal with the heat (me, not so much), look into Thailand. Very cheap to live there, fantastic healthcare. My nephew Craig teaches English as a second language–online–he could live anywhere, but he loves Thailand. Gorgeous snorkeling, and the food is, of course, amazing. His money goes much further there than here. He gets a massage two or three times per week! Thai massage! For $3! (Ever had a Thai massage? I swear I leave this plane.) He came home for a while, but missed his life there too much, so he’s back in Thailand again.
I don’t expect you to leap at this option, but someone who follows you might. š About Me – Vagabond Disposition will take you to Craig’s blog.
And this is what happens when I attempt to make a comment in the middle of the night…š
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Oh honey! This silly blog and site is held together with safety pins. Haha thanks for trying to like the post! š Thanks for sharing your Craigās blog! I hope someone checks him out! Thailand, eh? Love it! Good for him! A $3 massage?!?!!!??! Gak!!!! A completely different world! š¤
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Playing catch up on your blog as I head to Madison for my sister’s bachelorette party. Obviously made me think of you. Love you and your writing, as always. I hope you didn’t get stabbed. ā¤ļø
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Love you, honey. Hope youāre having fun! Youāre so close! Iāll go outside and scream your name. Not stabbed⦠the kid was lovely.
Hugs hugs hugs hugs.š¤
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Why does it always seem so hard to try and take care of ourselves medically? Grrr…
Glad you didn’t get stabbed and that your work is rewarding – something to offset the US health care douchebaggery. No getting cancer either, ya hear?
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Right???? My word⦠why is it so $$$$ and also pointless-feeling to try to acquire quality healthcare. Young parents I work with tell me they only get to see their family primary physician (his clinic serves a lot of people in a certain area) when they are in active childbirth. Smh I tell them all⦠there are other doctors and theyāre close and they take Medicaid too⦠itās just such a crazy soulless system.
Aw! Not stabbed! Rewarding work! Yes yes yes⦠it does help so much. And⦠Iām now on the art committee for the kids we work with⦠they can display their work and the city leaders come. So awesome.
Hugs to you, dear! No cancer! āš
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