Thursday 12 July 2012

I tried to hit her over the head rest


The Greek driver was following us along the road talking to us as we walked along the pavement and I could understand nothing.  We had moved to Rhodes some four years ago and set about the task of settling into a completely different culture.  Our three boys attended Greek schools and after a painful transition period were all now fluent in the language.  My husband and I had not yet mastered it in any shape or form.  Our brains seemed reluctant to take in the new vocabulary and grammar in which we were surrounded. 

So bemused I asked Daniel, my youngest son, who I had just picked up from primary school, “What is he saying?”  Daniel listened carefully while the Greek middle-aged man repeated himself through the open window of his car, then he translated, “He says Daddy’s been knocked off his scooter and has been taken to hospital.”  The shock must have shown on my face as the Greek man started talking immediately in a reassuring manner.  Again Daniel provided a translation, “He says only his middle bit has been broken!”  Not the reassurance I had hoped for.  He offered to take us directly to the hospital and Daniel and I clambered into his small car.  He was very kind and tried to calm me by smiling and nodding. 

Even when we reached the hospital he followed us in, directing us where to go after consulting a nurse.  We were shown into a tiny cluttered room filled with about eight people milling around, smoking talking.  There on a trolley lay Vessal in absolute agony and as I reached his side he asked in trembling tones, “Can you put your coat on me?”  He was freezing and beginning to shake with tremors.  Medical experience has shown that so many people die of shock after accidents and this can be prevented by two basic techniques.  One keep the patient warm and two don’t leave them alone.  Keep talking to them, reassuring them and keep them warm.  Almost instinctive things you’d think of doing yourself but no one in this hospital seemed aware of them.  I took my coat off and wrapped it around him.  Daniel fell to his knees sobbing at his father’s side.  The man who had opened his car door and knocked Vessal off his scooter, found this intolerable and tried to console Daniel by dropping to his knees beside Daniel and telling him his father would be alright.  Daniel however, was inconsolable and my heart was beating in an uncontrollable fashion.  Everything was going wrong.  I shall not go into the gruesome details except to point out my husband had a fractured back and had to lie flat on his back for eight long weeks.  The complexities of Greek hospitals and the endless queues and pieces of paper required defy belief.  May my worst enemy be spared the experience of a Greek hospital!

Vessal eventually, was home at last but under strict instructions to stay in bed prone.  He spent most of the early weeks on heavy painkillers which were hard on his stomach but did keep the pain at bay.  I’m not awfully good with sick people.  Always previously, Vessal would joke that my limit on sickness was three days.  After three days my sympathy would run out and the message conveyed implicitly was “Die or get better but don’t linger!”  Now, my patience was really to be put the test.  I was having to cover my husband’s teaching hours as well as my own, cook, clean etc for everyone.  Life became a tight routine of chores that required doing and there was little time to dwell on the situation.  It could have been much worse we told ourselves. 

Then, as life so often does, it actually became worse!  Vessal became completely deaf.  It must have been all the lying down, but both ears became blocked.  He couldn’t hear a thing unless you shouted.  A kind of paranoia set in were he was convinced we were plotting against him.  This seemed strange but was followed by an even worse phase in which he sank into a deep dark silence.  This frightened me more than all the previous states.  Life requires effort and will power.  None of us can go on without either of those.  I decided to get his ears fixed at all costs.  The isolation deafness brings had worsened things, but no doctor would treat him at home.  So I arranged an appointment with the closest ear, nose and throat specialist I could find.  We arrived by taxi at the surgery and after a short treatment Vessal could hear.  The genuine delight on his face was a picture. 

The last task was to get him home safe and sound.  We waited at the taxi stop and waited and waited.  By his stage, Vessal was almost passing out with pain, leaning against a nearby tree.  At long last a taxi came but before we could get in a Greek woman jumped in front of us and opened the taxi door and jumped in the back seat.  I told her this taxi was ours and motioned for her to get out.  She refused, even when I said in poor Greek my husband was ill. In a haughty tone she replied, that was not her problem.  My husband, meanwhile, carefully wedged himself into the taxi beside her, unable to lie down on the back seat and told me just to get in so we could get home as fast as possible.  Reluctantly, I clambered into the front seat beside the taxi driver and gave him our address.  As he moved off, the woman gave her address and told him to go to her address first.  I was really mad at this point and told her she was a bad woman.  Unfortunately, I did not change the adjective to suit the gender and ended up saying that she was a shit woman. 

This triggered utter rage in the Greek woman and she began shouting insults at me in fluent fast Greek.  I knew enough to understand what she was saying but was woefully incapable of responding effectively.  It is at such times you realise the weakness and sheer vulnerability of not speaking the language you need.  On and on she raged in aggressive tones and I lost it.  I just lost it.  Eight weeks of sickness, pain, hard work, fear and anger exploded and I tried to hit her over the seat.  I know it is unforgiveable to resort to violence.  She dodged back to the corner of the taxi door to avoid my blow and her demeanour changed from one of shouting fury to sheer fear.  The taxi had high seats and so I could not reach her easily but tried to hit her between the gap on either side of the headrest.  I swung from one side to the other trying to reach her and she like a demented puppet in the back seat tried to avoid me.  At one point cringing up in a corner hugging her mobile phone to her chest like a comforter.  I was livid and intent on smacking her and oblivious to the taxi driver and Vessal’s shouts of remonstration.  The taxi driver stopped, we were at our flat, and an injured Vessal crawled from the back.  The taxi driver put his arm across the gap between the seats to stop me reaching the woman and shouted “Ok, Ok”.  Reluctantly, I got out and the taxi drove off with a very subdued passenger in the back.  As I helped Vessal limp slowly into our apartment, he kept muttering, “I can’t believe you just did that!”  Neither could I.

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