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I have always had a fear of experts.
I think it started when my mother
decided not to breastfeed me because the experts told her not
to.
So I was bottle-fed. My mother said
it was like being in a lab. Everything had to be sterilized.
She felt more like a scientist than
a mother.
When I had kids, the experts decided
that a good birth was a painful one. (The experts had put my mother
into "twilight sleep" when she gave birth.) But they
did say it was okay to nurse our kids.
Somehow I gave birth to a child who
was a "breath holder." When he was six months old, he
suddenly keeled over, almost sending me into cardiac arrest. He
made a habit of it. He would suddenly scream, faint, and stop
breathing.
Our young, Harvard-trained pediatrician
told us not to worry. The doctor told us "breath holding"
was normal.
"One in 20 children do this,"
he said.
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| When
I had kids, the experts decided that a good birth was a painful
one. |
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So I went home and tried not to worry.
But it was disturbing to wait for him to start breathing. It didn't
do much for my own breathing.
I returned to the doctor. "I
told you not to worry," the doctor said. Then my son Daniel
let out a scream, stopped breathing, went limp and lost consciousness
in the good doctor's office. My son flopped on my lap like a beached
tuna.
"This is alarming," Dr.
Johnson admitted. "I think he should be seen at Hershey Medical
Center."
The world-renowned specialist at
Hershey said that my son's breath holding was a stage that would
soon pass if we ignored it. It took five years of ignoring for
the stage to pass.
Thank you, Doctor.
At that time, my father was dying
of cancer. The expert doctor told us he would make it through,
that the cancer hadn't spread, but one look at my father and you
knew the doctor was out to lunch.
The expert medical social worker
at the hospital told us that my father's kidney cancer was malignant.
Only she had read his chart wrong. He didn't have kidney cancer.
Thank you, sensitive social worker.
My breath holder turned six. I sent
him to school. We were abroad in a foreign country. My son started
first grade in a class where he couldn't speak or understand the
language. The expert teacher told me that my son wasn't learning
because he lacked motivation.
"Well, so would you if you couldn't
understand a word," I thought, "you dingbat." Instead
I assured her that my son was bright, motivated, but simply unable
to catch the language.
My husband went in for what the experts
called a procedure -- a hernia operation. They discharged him
that afternoon. They told him he'd be up and out in a few days.
What they didn't say was that he'd be out, literally. In the bed,
unable to move, needing care for another two days that the insurance
company experts had deemed superfluous.
Then there was the computer expert
who managed to lose all of the files on my hard drive when I sent
the computer in to have the floppy disc fixed. Thank you computer
whiz.
The doctor who says there's no connection
between your back and neck ache?
The dry cleaner who burns a hole
in your clothes?
The plumber who reroutes the pipes
so that your hot water is cold?
The meteorologist who tells you "There's
rain coming" -- so you shlep your umbrella all the long,
dry day
The dentist who says, "This
won't hurt at all."
There's only one type of expert I
will trust.
And that's because they've seen it
all -- They're specialists -- but they're able to cross categories.
They can diagnose all of the kids
on the block, remove lipstick stains from rugs, clear stopped
drains, do new math, figure out a kid's learning problem, design
costumes for the theater, program computers AND locate lost items
with an integrated radar system.
Let's face it: the only true experts
left in the world are -- MOTHERS.
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