I
Still Hate Doctors and Now They Hate Me
by
Burton S. Blumert
Life
is a series of humiliations.
Maybe
it’s neurotic, but I have much stronger recollections of humiliations
suffered large and small, real or imagined than I
do of events that were celebratory.
For
example, my only surviving memory from ages 0-5 was of a horrid
moment at a Horn & Hardart Automat in New York City.
For
those born after the war between Italy and Ethiopia, who know nothing
of those American icons, let me provide some history: For much of
the 20th century, the Automat was America’s largest restaurant
chain, feeding 800,000 people a day.
Every
Automat was cavernous and ornately bedecked with mirrors and marble
but there were no waiters.
The
tunafish sandwiches and wedges of apple pie were housed in chrome-and-glass
coin-operated little boxes. Each item was priced and the glass door
sprung open when the proper number of coins was inserted. The last
of the Automats, these magnificent "giant vending machines,"
closed in 1991. There is a 35-foot section from the original Automat
on display at the Smithsonian Institute.
It
was magic land for a 5 year-old, and I was so proud when my mother
entrusted me with 2 nickels to purchase my own slice of cherry pie.
Unfortunately, the box was too high and I asked a man for help.
I gave him my two nickels, he inserted them and peered down at me
for a third as the price was fifteen cents.
It
was a crisis too horrible to recall even now. The man was ugly and
loud. He said that I was a dreadful little boy. What was my upbringing?
He was a childhood dragon come to life. I was too frightened to
cry and could only look helplessly to my mother back at our table.
It
took days of mother-comforting to help me survive that humiliation.
Fast-forward
a decade to my next major humiliation: I was 15, making my annual
appearance at Aqueduct Racetrack with my father and his racetrack
buddies.
It
was the final race and we were betting on a long-shot filly named
Bright Goldie. The odds on her were 45-1, and I decided to watch
the race standing at the rail right on the finish line. The race
ended in a virtual dead-heat. The stewards flashed "Photo"
on the Tote Board but there was no doubt in my mind. Bright Goldie
had won the race by an inch or two and I dashed upstairs to give
my father and his friends the wondrous news.
I
was Lazarus returning from the dead to tell all: "Our horse
won, our horse won."
It
took about ten minutes for the official results. Just as I said,
Bright Goldie won, and she rewarded her backers by paying $97 for
each $2 bet.
The
15 minutes of excitement proved too much for this lad. (I was clutching
a $5 win ticket in my hand). Later, my father told me that I passed
out cold when the official results actually flashed on the Tote
Board.
I
revived in just a few seconds, but the episode haunts me still,
and provides solid evidence that I’m more at home with bad news
than I am with good.
No
list of humiliations can be complete without at least one instance
of a lover’s heart being shattered by a non-responding object. I
was a college freshman, and she was a freckled-faced, brainy type
with natural orange colored hair. I could barely breathe when I
looked at her. She was kind to me in her fashion, but I had the
feeling she was never quite certain what my name was.
Yes,
I was the one seen carrying her books around campus. I was an appendage,
a sort of pet rock seeking any slight attention.
Finally,
one day, fortune smiled and she invited me to brunch at her home
that Sunday. I had four days to rehearse, four days to select the
proper clothes. I memorized the list of the New York Times
bestselling books and agonized whether or not to bring along a few
poems she had inspired.
Sunday
finally came and I took deep breaths before reaching for the door
buzzer. From that point on it was all a blur. The 85 guests had
already arrived and the party was at fever pitch.
My
princess breezed by, handed me an apron, pointed to a room filled
with dirty dishes, and said: "You’re such a dear. We are desperate
for help in the kitchen."
I
never saw my Dulcinea again that day but there was one indignity
still to
come: As I started to leave, her younger brother gave me a small
tray of leftovers
and said, "Blumert,
you were great help today and I’m going to recommend you to friends."
A $5 bill was neatly folded on the food tray.
I
hated him then, and I was right: Today, he’s a prominent commie
professor at an Ivy League school.
As
the years passed the humiliations become less frequent. But last
year, I was devastated when my family phyician for 25 years summarily
dismissed me as a patient. I had been loyal and recommended him
to others when he was struggling to build his practice.
I
was one of his first patients and comforted him during his malpractice
suits. My reward he dumped me (The
sordid details of that epic humiliation are available in my article,
"I
Hate Doctors.")
The
ingrate. He’ll be begging me to come back as a patient, but if you
must know,
I’ve done just fine without him. Who
needed him anyway? This is an age of medical specialty. The Internet
provides unlimited access to data in the pursuit of good health.
No waiting rooms, no surly receptionists, no crooked insurance companies.
And
then three weeks ago the gods conspired against me and I was stricken
with the flu. Every human who has walked the earth knows the agony
caused by a bug that’s trying to kill you.
Surely,
there must be immediate help out there. I started my search at Walgreens.
After
eleven purchases at the drug counter, colorful packages that promise
to defeat coughs-chills-sore throat-runny nose-fever, I realized
that all of these cold and flu medicines are essentially the same.
They
are a fraud.
They
drug you into an unpleasant stupor, but sleep is fitful and you’ll
probably make a mess of things if you are operating heavy equipment.
With the passage of time the body will overcome both the drugs and
the virus.
"I’m
not going to use any of those head cold and flu remedies ever again.
Never,"
I moaned.
"Call
a doctor!" my wife said.
"I
don’t have a doctor," I responded. "Don’t you remember?
He dumped me."
"Well,
people tell me that there are now these new ‘immediate-care’ clinics
all over the country."
After
some Yellow Pages research, I selected the medical clinic
named:
"WeReleva
Your Feva. No appointments necessary. Physicians on Site 24 hours."
Somehow
I felt a humiliating experience coming on.
I
dragged myself in, coughing and sputtering. My face was pressed
against the glass door waiting for them to turn the lock at opening
time.
The
receptionist, wearing a Florence Nightingale nurse’s uniform, said,
"You have an appointment?"
"Yes."
"How
are you going to pay?"
"Cash".
"You
mean a check, cash. Card cash, or cash-cash?"
"Cash.
Cash. Cash."
"Please
pay now. Getting money from an estate is never easy. By the way,
if I catch your flu, you’re in big trouble."
In
the next 60 seconds I was weighed, blood pressure taken, temperature
recorded, all without removing my jacket or unbuttoning a button.
I
was put in the traditional examination room, only this one had bars
on the window. The only thing to read was a crumpled magazine left
behind by the last patient: "How to Live the Good Life With
a Partial Colon, Part II."
Suddenly
a huge figure blocked the doorway. There he was: the Doctor. He
was wearing a white medical tunic studded with military medals on
his chest.
"Hello,
Doc," I wheezed. "I’ve got the flu."
"A
few questions, first. Who is your primary physician?"
Well,
it was clear he hadn’t read my article, "I Hate Doctors"
so I explained: "My primary doctor dumped me."
"He
dumped you. How come? What were the circumstances?"
"Well..."
"Have
you considered that possibly it was because of you that he quit
medicine?"
"No,
I hadn’t considered that."
"Think
back: Why did he dump you?"
"Well,
I was sick a couple of times."
"Sick
or malingering?" he snarled.
"Look,
all I’m here for is to have you listen to my chest and make sure
I’m not getting pneumonia, so give me some real cough medicine with
codeine and I’ll be out of your hair."
It
was clear the prescriptions were already written and he gave them
to me.
"Fill
those prescriptions at the pharmacy in the building. I get a cut."
In
spite of the interrogation and strange bedside manner, he was my
kind of a no-nonsense doc.
"Doc,"
I said. "You’re my kind of doc, and I’d be proud to call you
my family physician."
"Not
so fast, Blumert," he said. "I’m not taking any new patients,
and I’m not comfortable with your secessionist inclinations."
The
same old feeling of rejection returned.
"What
do I do? I need a primary physician."
He
pulled out a yellowed, coffee-stained sheet with names. Some were
crossed out with scribbled notations like insurance fraud, guilty
of criminal negligence, and plain old embezzlement.
"Well,
let’s see who’s available here. Ah, here’s Dr. Goldfinger. He will
be coming out of Detox this month. The two of you should get along
just fine."
January
11, 2002
Burt
Blumert [send him mail]
is publisher of LewRockwell.com
and president of the Center
for Libertarian Studies.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
Burton
S. Blumert Archives
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