I'm A Cowboy

Hypothetical Bullets Branding Fact

Hypothetical Bullets

This post is totally hypothetical in nature and does not reflect any real life situation…

I was at a hypothetical meeting yesterday discussing a hypothetical event for a hypothetical company to be held on a hypothetical island in the middle of a hypothetical river
image

    Hypothetical parking plans took up 15 hypothetical minutes
    Hypothetical catering plans took up 30 hypothetical minutes
    Hypothetical attraction plans took up 45 hypothetical minutes
    Hypothetical security plans that hypothetically have to be approved by a hypothetical security detail of a hypothetical public official who hypothetically happens to be the former hypothetical owner of the hypothetical company took up 60 hypothetical minutes
    Hypothetical medical plans (which hypothetically is my part) took up 2.5 hypothetical minutes
    I’m saving the last hypothetical bullet LeSombre style for when the hypothetical rages sets in over the 147.5 hypothetical minutes of my life I will never hypothetically get back

But on the bright side… I got the kitteh fud!!!

Branding Fact

This is in response to Finn‘s question yesterday of: So what brand name is on Spaghetti Os can?

Chef Boyardee

This is a Can of Chef Boyardee.  Notice the little man at the top of the can with the white fluffy hat.  THAT is Chef Boyardee!

If you would like to know more about the great American Hero Chef Boyardee you can read his wikipedia entry

Campbell's Original Spaghetti O's

This is a can of Campbell’s Original Spaghetti OsSpaghetti Os is a trademark bought when Campbell acquired Franco-American in the early 1900’s.  There is NO little man at the top of the can with the white fluffy hat.

If you would like to know more about Campbell Soup, you can read their wikipedia entry

Any Questions

As you can clearly see, there is a huge difference between the two cans both in appearance and their actual contents… and therefore they should NEVER be confused.

And this mindless but passionate defense of a brand was brought to you by having to eat cold canned food for a week.

Which brings me back to my original point that seems lost on most who honed in on minute details.

Don’t sweat the small stuff.

It’s all small stuff.

Except the meatballs.

Those are JUMBO.

posted by NYC Watchdog at Wednesday - 06.10.09 @ 12:01 AM
categories:   I'm A Cowboy  Giving Cab Rides  Blogging

It’s Not Easy

The heat from the freshly minted summer season was wavily radiating off the pavement as we rocketed down the southbound Van Wyck Expressway.  “Why did we get dragged down here again?” I asked while whipping the steering wheel to the left as we rocketed off the Van Wyck Expressway and down onto the Belt Parkway.

“The Far East is hopping and they dragged all the Jamaica units to The Rock already,” explained Freakzilla as he calmly pulled up the history of the call that was unfolding, “Add in the munies getting toned out no radio response.  Time for their overtime tour change.”

Being pulled into another area was par for the course on 51D.  Even though our official Place At Rest (PAR) was located in the 112th Precinct, the Computer Aided Dispatch System (CAD) that FDNY used incorrectly identified us as being in the 102nd Precinct.  Due to its 1980’s antiquity the system would then recommend us first for a call that would be 9 miles away while a call that was literally around the corner from where we sat would go to another unit… while we were sitting there.  Of course with the warmer weather came a higher call volume, more municipal units out of service from seasonal Line Of Duty Injury (LODI) leaves or vacations, and therefore we voluntaries were left to pick up the slack, which at times involved us traveling to places the computer estimated well beyond our usual under 10 minute travel time.

We still beat the computer every time.

Our journey ended on a softly lit street lined with manicured lawns in front of one family homes in a Queens/Nassau County borderline community.  We parked in front of a fire truck that was disembarking the local firefighter first responders.  Freakzilla pushed the button to signal our onscene status as I climbed down from the cab and walked around to the side of our truck.  Slinging our combination trauma/oxygen bag across my back and grasping the stairchair in one gloved hand I began sauntering towards the side entrance where the firefighters were beginning to make a lined and orderly entry.

As I stepped onto the porch in the wake of the wafting scent of half-burnt barbecue I saw a slightly balding tall man with a grim scowl standing on the other side of the procession.  His arm was wrapped around a softly sobbing woman.  Once I reached the couple I placed my free hand on the woman’s arm and asked, “What’s going on?”

The woman looked up at me with red puffy eyes.  She was incapable of speaking and turned to the man.  With a somber voice he said, “Her sister is in the upstairs hallways.  I don’t know what’s wrong with her.  She’s barely conscious.”

As I was about to question him further, Freakzilla interrupted me from the doorway, ”Dawg, watch your step.  These bags are full.” I turned towards the doorway only to watch him walk through and into what appeared to be a cloud of haze in the well lit house.  I released my hand from the sobbing woman’s arm and moved into the entranceway of the home.

Once I stepped inside there was a definitive climate difference.  The air was hot, humid, stale and rotten.  I was standing in a large living room that took up most of the first floor of the house and was filled with white tied shopping plastic bags with a variety of print on them. 

Thank You said one. 

Come Again said another. 

Where I was standing they were abruptly up to my waist and progressively rose to the height of the ceiling against what were supposed to be the front windows.  I carefully followed a very narrow path that had been cleared leading to a staircase.  As I began my ascent, bags started flying over the banister into the main room.  Upon landing some of them opened and spilled their contents out. 

imageFeces from one bag. 

A take-out food tin with some sort of yellow goop from another. 

“What the hell?” I asked not sure who, or what, was tossing this shit around.

“They’re all over.  We’re just clearing a path to the patient so you guys can get her out,” explained a firefighter from the top of the staircase, “It looks like she hasn’t left here in over a year and at some point, the toilet stopped working.” I finished my climb and followed another firefighter’s pointing finger to the end of the hallway where Freakzilla was finishing a set of vitals on a pale hefty woman in a state of undress who was slumped against the wall on her toilet.

I unfolded the stairchair as he undid his blood pressure cuff.  “We need to get her out,” he said unfolding the sheet that had been on the chair seat.  “It looks like heat stroke but we can’t treat her here.  There are fleas and roaches all over.  I don’t know what else and I really don’t want to find out.” I nodded in agreement and moved in to grasp her under her arms.  Once my hands were locked, my body pressing against her hot pile of flesh, Freakzilla nodded his head and scooped her legs.  With a pull and a twist she was in our chair.  After another quick adjustment we wrapped her in the sheet, more as a protection of her modesty than anything else, and strapped her into the chair.

I glanced around the cramped room.  The wallpaper was peeling with dark brown stains from the ceiling down in long streaks.  The mirror appeared to have spots of fungus growing on it, and was cracked open enough to reveal a medicine cabinet with brown medication bottles strewn on its shelves.  “What’s in there?” I asked nodding my head towards the medicine cabinet.

He glanced back before saying, “It’s all empty psych meds.  The scripts are over five years old.  It’s definitely a cocktail for depression, maybe some schizophrenia or bi-polar on the side.  I’m not sure what she’s supposed to actually be taking and I don’t think the family actually knows either.  The guy told the firefighters its their first time here in over a year at least, if not more.”

I carefully pulled her out of the room and was able to swing her around so that I could push her instead.  Freakzilla reached into the bag strapped to my back and pulled forth a non-rebreather mask, running the oxygen hose over my shoulder, and then he placed the mask over the patient’s face before stepping in front to lead the way.

“One David are you in here?” called a voice from the doorway, “It’s medic Four Young.”

“Yeah we’re coming down with the patient,” I called back, “We can’t treat up here.  Get your truck set-up for a heat stroke.”

“Yeah we see the problem.  We’ll meet you outside,” the voice called back.  With that Freakzilla grabbed a hold of the bottom of the stairchair and we carefully carried the patient down while the firefighters made the original path wider so that we could wheel the patient out.  Unfortunately once we got down we realized the path still was not wide enough as the new bags were pushing down forcing others further out.  Instead of accidentally ripping one of the bags open and spilling its contents out to step in or roll through, we carried the patient right out the doorway and into the cool, crisp, and clean air outside.

As I came through the door I could hear a cracked voice screeching, “It’s not easy!  Don’t judge me!  It’s not easy!” cried the woman who had been unable to speak less than five minutes before.  “Don’t you judge me!  You have no right to judge!  It’s not easy!” she continued to screech as Freakzilla and I carried her sister past her and down to the path that lead to the street.

“It’s not easy…” she sobbed as we rolled her sister to the waiting medic truck, …to love the mentally ill… echoed in the silence of my mind.

No.  It’s not easy.

51D1 The stories on this blog are in compliance with HIPPA regulation.  Identifying details have been changed to protect the patient’s identity.  If you think I am talking about you, I assure you that I am not.

In March 2000 I opened The Parkway Hospital EMS Unit 51 David (51D).  The unit was dispatched by the Fire Department Of New York Bureau Of Emergency Medical Service to emergencies and incidents that were called in through the New York City 911 system or from either the FDNY Fire Suppression Communications Center and the New York City Police Department.  The unit served primarily western Queens from a home atom of 102A.  The assigned Cross Street Location (CSL) for the unit to standby was at Queens Boulevard and Union Turnpike.

We were the only unit to come out of The Parkway Hospital and we entered into a cut throat territorial system from which we had to carve our piece.  During my time there I worked primarily the overnight shift starting my week on a Thursday night and ending on a Sunday night.  They were 12 hour tours, 48 hours a week, and 36 of those hours were usually spent with my partner known as Freakzilla… and I could have asked for no better.  We were The Lone Wolves In The Wild Wild West.

With an average nightly call volume of 10+ calls, there were a lot of things we did.  There were a lot of things we saw.  There were a lot of people we touched… and who touched us with their stories.  Due to things beyond our control, both political and budgetary in nature, in May 2005 Freakzilla and I took truck 5900 on it’s last ride as 51D.  While the unit may not be in the system anymore, its spirit of having the knowledge, the ability, and the desire to get it done lives on…

Photo Credit: IMG_5266 by Pacino77

It’s EMS Week!

Do you know what week this is?

Take a guess?

If you guessed Boot Whore Week, well, you’re wrong.

Of course if being wrong looks so good… then no one should ever be right.

imageIf you guessed EMS Week, you’re right!!!

This week, May 17-23, is National EMS Week.  During this week EMS Agencies will be performing outreach and safety activities such as open houses, car seat checks, blood pressure screenings, and blood drives.  Agencies will also spend the week honoring those who have displayed exemplary performance and remembering those who have made the ultimate sacrifice in fulfilling the call to serve others in their greatest hour of need.

So sometime this week… give an EMT or Paramedic a hug for performing their duty unflinchingly while being overworked, underpaid, and sleep deprived.

Then go take a bath in Lysol because who knows where they have been.

posted by NYC Watchdog at Monday - 05.18.09 @ 12:01 AM
categories:   I'm A Cowboy

Big Eared Jim And The Rotting Foot

It’s hard for people on the outside to understand why we do what we do.  There are spiritual benefits in the act of helping another.  There are financial benefits in getting a paycheck at the end of the week.  There is the benefit of social interaction with your co-workers.  The biggest benefit though is the rush of the call.  The sense of accomplishment when its over.  Even though it can be weeks since you do a really “good” job, there is an overall uber euphoric feeling when you do get one that just cannot be matched elsewhere.

It was around two o’clock in the morning.  Freakzilla and I were curled up in the front of our ambulance watching the comings and goings at Club Kalypso.  Nestled under the El train, the doors to the club would swing open and closed every minute or so allowing the reggae beats from within to wash over us like rhythmic waves.  The fluctuations between the flashing strobes harboring light hearted fun inside and the shadow encased corners for dark deeds on the outside was spellbinding.

This is our holy day service.  It is here that we sit to commiserate over the week past while those inside the club push the past week a little further along.  Usually the high point is signaled by the sounds of gunshots or the slick silence of highly polished metal separating meat from bone to release the red flow.  Our service is one that culminates in in pain and misery.  For those poor wretches we accept into our sanctuary and administer communion to them in the form of oxygen and bandages.  Deliverance comes with glow of rotating lights and the wailing banshees released from the box.  This is how it usually goes in the “good” times.

However on this night our lord, our dispatcher Marcus, called down to us in his raspy voice from up above, “One David, I need you for the intox.” My partner and I looked at the microphone, neither of us moving to take it.  “One David, I know you’re out there.  Answer the radio or I’m giving you the tone,” he called again.

While still staring at the microphone my hand disobeyed my conscious mind and reached out to lift it from its cradle.  Gently raising it from its resting place I brought it towards my mouth, caressed the cool plastic on the side and spoke my prayer, “Drop it on the screen.”

With that, our altar flickered to life and the bell chimed.  My prayer had been answered almost as soon as the words had passed my lips.  Clearing the top from the clutter of potato chips and peanut bags we could read that the commandment set before us was one of ill repute.  It was at Continental Avenue and Queens Boulevard, within the hole of the underdwellers.  Freakzilla shifted our iron temple into drive, bathed the street in the glow of our red rotators, and pierced the rhythm of the night with a blade of wailing sound sending us on our way.

A Helpless Addict by Tong!? on FlickrEasing into the bus stop at Continental Avenue we ground to a halt as I brought the microphone forth once more and announced, “One David eighty-four.” Somewhere in the city someone was snickering at our misfortune.  Had it been a trauma call, they would have tried to snap it from under us without a second thought.  Instead this is something to occupy us while the real sick and injured are cared for by that snickering someone else.  Regardless we have a mission to fulfill.  The sooner we get it over with the better.

Freakzilla is already out of the truck with the stairchair and headed down into the hole as I reach inside for the bright orange trauma bag.  I sling the bag over my shoulders, slam the side doors shut, and follow his lead down the cement staircase.  The staircase ends in a white-tiled passageway lined with the flicker of fluorescent lights and the acidic smell of rot riding the cool breeze of displaced air as the mammoth metal worms make their way through the city’s underbelly.  About a hundred feet futher the corridor turns to the left.  It is around this corner that I can see my partner speaking loudly to an as of yet unseen and unheard companion.  As I walk to the turn, the rumble from below begins and the smell of decay grows stronger still.

I round the corner as the rumble mutes out all other sounds, yet my partner stands beside the wall with his lips still moving looking down.  My eyes fall upon the object of his unheard words.  Leaning against the wall, with his soot stained dungaree sheathed knees drawn up to his chest is Big Eared Jim.  His blond curly locks are stained with dirt and grime as they hang over his vacant gray eyes, and his olive drab army jacket is draped around him like a cloak.

“…an’t let you stay.  You need to go,” my partner finishes as the rumble disappears in the distance.  Big Eared Jim just sits there.  He is a veteran of the Gulf War suffering from a long list of ailments and who is a semi-regular transient in this area.  Since we see him about once a week, we consider him to be a “frequent flyer”… and more often than not he is really flying when we get him.  His primary choice of medication was alcohol, but he’ll gladly take any pain meds he can get.  Normally Big Eared Jim is more than happy to hop into the ambulance.  That isn’t the case tonight.

I kneel down through a more dense cloud of rot and extend a hand past his vacant eyes while asking “Jim, what happened?”

His muscles twitched for a second.  Then his eyes came back to life and he tells me, “I is havin’ seizes an mu foo hurts,” while finally unclasping a hand to point and indicate the foot on his right.  I look down to see the left foot covered by a combat boot and the other wrapped in gauze stained every color of the rainbow.  His foot is decomposing right out from under him.  To make matters worse he’s in alcohol withdrawal and probably having petite mal seizures because of it.

Freakzilla sets up the orange canvas chair with a white sheet over it while I grabbed a quick set of vital signs.  Once I was done, we each grabbed underneath an arm and we get Big Eared Jim up and into the white sheet.  Once Big Eared Jim is in the chair we wrap him like a mummy and strap him in like he’s going to be a fighter pilot.  Freakzilla rolls him to the bottom of the stairs while I sling the trauma bag over my shoulders and onto my back.

Going down into the hole is never the issue with only the equipment your carrying and gravity going in your direction.  Coming back up however is usually a different story.  Freakzilla turns so that his back is against the top of the chair with his hands holding onto the handles at the top.  “Ready,” he calls out.  I bend down and grab the handles at the bottom of the chair that are right next to where Big Eared Jim’s feet are resting on a metal bar.  I tilt the chair towards him and when he calls, “Lift!” then that’s what I do.

The chair goes up and onto his back as he begins the ascent and I lift from the bottom.  One step after another and we’re soon moving up the staircase with the patient seated between us.  Big Eared Jim seems to get heavier and heavier with every step I take… and with every step his rotting foot gets closer and closer to my nose.  Even though I’m breathing through my mouth the stench has crept into it as well.

Step after step.

My eyes begin watering.

Twenty-four steps total.

Finally we break through to the street level and into the night air.  I’m able to set Big Eared Jim and The Rotting Foot down to draw in a breath of cool smoggy New York City just before I begin to gag from the stench.  Freakzilla rolls him over to the curb next to the back of the truck.  I open the back doors and pull the stretcher out.  Once it is set-up we grab the sheet under Big Eared Jim, Freakzilla gives the nod, and we swing him over onto the clean mattress with the aroma of rotting meat hanging in the air.

We work silently, strapping him into place on the stretcher and loading him into the back.  We’ve been partners for a year and with that sort of committed work relationship there are just some things we don’t need to talk about anymore.  I climb into the back to sit on the bench next to Big Eared Jim and Freakzilla closes the doors after me.

There I am locked in the back with the smell of death.  I try to ignore, and I take Big Eared Jim‘s vitals again.  Not surprisingly, they’re better than my own.  Freakzilla climbs in upfront and we pull away from the curb.  I grab my paperwork and begin writing things out.  The stench assails my sense again causing a rise in my gorge.  I begin to feel lightheaded, and when I look down everything become blurry.

Instinctively I reach over Big Eared Jim and grab an oxygen mask.  I unwrap it from it’s plastic and attach the hose to the oxygen flowmeter that I crank to 15 liters per minute.  Big Eared Jim looks up at me, brushes his hair away from one gray eye, and says “Oh tanks.  Jus wat I nee.” A look of disappointment crosses his face when I place the mask over my own nose and mouth.  I inhale the sterile stale air and my eyes are back in focus.  The lightheaded sensation dissipates and I continue with the paperwork.  Big Eared Jim just leans back and enjoys the ride.

Once we get to the hospital we roll Big Eared Jim in without hesitation.  There is a welcoming chorus from the nurses who haven’t seen him in a month or so followed by promises of a desperately needed shower, clean clothes, and even an extra slice of the salisbury steak.  The triage nurses directs us to a bed where we can slide him over on the sheet, bid him adieu, and get our paperwork signed.

Big Eared Jim will probably be there for a week while they clean, debreed, and treat his infected foot.  They’ll get him back on medication that he won’t be able to afford once he leaves.  We’ll end up repeating this process but it’s the least we can do for someone who already gave for his country.  More importantly, until he gets out and can pick up a Forty ounce to self medicate, to keep the seizures away he’ll get his fix through regular medication.

The same kind of fix that we got from bringing him to the hospital… because we’re all addicts in our own ways.

51D1 The stories on this blog are in compliance with HIPPA regulation.  Identifying details have been changed to protect the patient’s identity.  If you think I am talking about you, I assure you that I am not.

In March 2000 I opened The Parkway Hospital EMS Unit 51 David (51D).  The unit was dispatched by the Fire Department Of New York Bureau Of Emergency Medical Service to emergencies and incidents that were called in through the New York City 911 system or from either the FDNY Fire Suppression Communications Center and the New York City Police Department.  The unit served primarily western Queens from a home atom of 102A.  The assigned Cross Street Location (CSL) for the unit to standby was at Queens Boulevard and Union Turnpike.

We were the only unit to come out of The Parkway Hospital and we entered into a cut throat territorial system from which we had to carve our piece.  During my time there I worked primarily the overnight shift starting my week on a Thursday night and ending on a Sunday night.  They were 12 hour tours, 48 hours a week, and 36 of those hours were usually spent with my partner known as Freakzilla… and I could have asked for no better.  We were The Lone Wolves In The Wild Wild West.

With an average nightly call volume of 10+ calls, there were a lot of things we did.  There were a lot of things we saw.  There were a lot of people we touched… and who touched us with their stories.  Due to things beyond our control, both political and budgetary in nature, in May 2005 Freakzilla and I took truck 5900 on it’s last ride as 51D.  While the unit may not be in the system anymore, its spirit of having the knowledge, the ability, and the desire to get it done lives on…

Photo Credit: A Helpless Addict by Tong!? on Flickr

Cassie

The squat two story red brick building was deceiving from the street.  While it’s length ran half the block, it actually went an additional two floors below street level.  The metal grid covers on the windows behind the wrought iron fences surrounding the building weren’t there to keep people out.  It was to keep people in.

“What do we have?” I asked my partner.

Freakzilla reached over and pressed a button that momentarily bathed his face in the green light of the data terminal screen before he swung it over so my eyes could read the blazing letters.  Emotionally Disturbed Person.  Segment 7.  Violent.  Wait for police. With no sign of a sector car on the street, Freakzilla hopped out to grab the bags.  This wasn’t anything new.  This was just how we rolled.  I got out of the truck and walked to the side of the ambulance where he was pulling the bags out.  I grabbed the stairchair and shut the doors.

We walked up the gradient staircase to the front door of the facility.  ONLY AUTHORIZED PERMITTED.  IDENTIFICATION REQUIRED.  CURFEW 10:00PM SHARP was emblazoned on the door.  He swung it open and we walked through the vestibule to the second metal door with it’s glass on top giving a view of the actual lobby.  Through the glass of this door we could see the front desk and the man sitting casually atop it.  He was dressed in the blue blazer uniform typical of these types of facilities and mindlessly thumbing through a supermarket rag magazine.

Freakzilla knocked on the glass.  The man on the desk did not look up.  Freakzilla knocked on the glass again.  The man on the desk still did not look up.  Freakzilla looked at me, and I swung the chair against the door like a baseball bat with the loud thwacking sound of the metal on metal reverberating through the vestibule.  The man jumped up suddenly at the sound and hurried to the door.  He fumbled with the keys on the ring before finding the right one to insert into the lock, turn it, and let us in.

“You called 911?” asked Freakzilla as we casually walked through the door.

“Uh yeah,” the man replied as he quickly inspected the door to see if there was any reportable damage.  The bottom of the door had multiple dents, dings, scratches, and paint chipped away that he couldn’t really tell if anything was new.  “It’s downstairs in bee level,” he replied as he closed the door and relocked it.  “I’ll take you down.  Follow me.”

We descended down the dimly lit staircase to the sounds of babies crying over televisions and the mixed smells of macaroni and cheese with rice and beans… all typical of a New York City family homeless shelter.  The blue blazer lead us to a door with it’s lime green paint chipped away to reveal the metal underneath in various locations.  He made a motion with his hand towards it and then stepped back.

I stepped up to the side of the door jam while Freakzilla stepped to the other side.  There was a loud female voice and a lower male voice coming from the other side of the door, but we couldn’t hear what they were saying.  I looked at Freakzilla and he nodded.  I made a fist and pounded on it three times before calling out, “EMS.”

The arguing from the other side immediately stopped and we could hear the three shuffles to reach the door.  The doorknob clicked and swung open.  The person who had opened it was a female about 5 and a half feet tall wearing a worn gray and purple jogging suit.  Brownish hair came out from the top of her head cascading into hues of blonde ending into semi-curls that hid behind it a face that was over coated with make-up to hide the wear and tear.  Recessed into her eye sockets were brown pupils surrounded by bloodshot white.

image“Thank God!  Officers I need your help!” she cried, “I had $800 stolen from me by the bitch in that room over there!” She pointed a finger across the hall before continuing, “She took it and I need it back!  I want…”

Freakzilla held up a hand to stop her and said, “Ma’am we’re not the police.  We’re EMS.”

“EMS?  Well how are you going to get my $800 back?” she asked, seemingly legitimately perplexed.  “The other officers were of no help and I need that money!”

“So the police have already been here?” I asked, as the door across the hall clicked and opened slightly.

“Yes!  They said they can’t do anything because I have no proof, but you have to understand, this is a mistake!  I don’t belong here!” she cried, releasing her grasp on the door and allowing it to swing open.  Behind her was a typical one room shelter apartment.  There were bunk beds behind the door.  On the bottom bunk was a man, and on the top bunk were two boys, possibly ages 11 and 7.  All three of them were peering from different positions behind the wood and wool warily at the scene unfolding.

“What do you mean you don’t belong here?” asked Freakzilla, trying to ascertain the root of the problem.

“I don’t belong here!  My husband lost his job a year ago!  We lost our house!” she explained beginning to wave her hands around and turning her head from side to side to talk to both of us, “I am not one of these people!  Do you understand me?  I am not one of them!  I lived on Staten Island for crying out loud!  I am not one of them!” She turned specifically towards me and said, “I am one of you!”

One word popped into my mind.  Delusional.  It was a common thing to get called to these shelters for people who were having emotional breakdowns over their dire situation.

Freakzilla didn’t skip a beat, even though he had just been insulted by this patient, “Well we should take you to explain the situation to the doctors and maybe they can help you get to be where you need to be.”

“Really?” she asked, her eyes suddenly becoming wider and seemingly brighter.

“Really,” I lied.

“Can we all go?” she asked, motioning towards her family.

“I don’t think…” I began before she cut me off.

“I don’t want to leave them behind though!” she said, beginning to get riled up again.

“What’s your name dear?” I asked calmly, interjecting something benign into her once again rising adrenalin.

“It’s Cassie,” she said hesitantly, “Cassie Smith.”

“Listen Cassie, I think its probably better that you go first and get things set-up,” explained Freakzilla, “This way they can rest here while you’re making the arrangements you need to.  The quicker we get over there, the quicker you can get taken care of.”

She looked at us both through the stringy hair.  We could see that her brick wall, like the life she had been living, was crumbling.  “Oh, okay.” she succumbed after a few more seconds of contemplation.  With a quick glance backwards she walked into the hallway and brought the door closed on her family…


This was in 2004.  I often wonder about what happened to her and her family.  Did she get the help she needed?  Were they able to get back on their feet?  Did they make it?  That’s one of the downsides of this business.  We touch people for 30-40 minutes when they are at their most vulnerable and then we’re out of their lives… and they’re out of ours.

Considering everything going on in the world, I wonder how many families is this happening to right now and whether or not someone is there to help them.

As much as things change, things stay the same.

51D1 The stories on this blog are in compliance with HIPPA regulation.  Identifying details have been changed to protect the patient’s identity.  If you think I am talking about you, I assure you that I am not.

In March 2000 I opened The Parkway Hospital EMS Unit 51 David (51D).  The unit was dispatched by the Fire Department Of New York Bureau Of Emergency Medical Service to emergencies and incidents that were called in through the New York City 911 system or from either the FDNY Fire Suppression Communications Center and the New York City Police Department.  The unit served primarily western Queens from a home atom of 102A.  The assigned Cross Street Location (CSL) for the unit to standby was at Queens Boulevard and Union Turnpike.

We were the only unit to come out of The Parkway Hospital and we entered into a cut throat territorial system from which we had to carve our piece.  During my time there I worked primarily the overnight shift starting my week on a Thursday night and ending on a Sunday night.  They were 12 hour tours, 48 hours a week, and 36 of those hours were usually spent with my partner known as Freakzilla… and I could have asked for no better.  We were The Lone Wolves In The Wild Wild West.

With an average nightly call volume of 10+ calls, there were a lot of things we did.  There were a lot of things we saw.  There were a lot of people we touched… and who touched us with their stories.  Due to things beyond our control, both political and budgetary in nature, in May 2005 Freakzilla and I took truck 5900 on it’s last ride as 51D.  While the unit may not be in the system anymore, its spirit of having the knowledge, the ability, and the desire to get it done lives on…

posted by NYC Watchdog at Friday - 03.13.09 @ 12:29 AM
categories:   I'm A Cowboy  The True Adventures Of 51David

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