We’re waved
over to the corner of one of the busiest intersections in town. A woman puts
her phone away as we pull alongside and nods just behind her to the left. It’s
only then that I see the patient, a man in a white shirt, lying behind the low wall of a private car park.
‘I think he’s
probably just drunk, but I wanted to be sure,’ she says.
‘No worries.’
I hop over the
wall and take a look. A heavy-set man in his fifties lying almost prone, his
face pressed into his left arm, which stretches out along the bottom edge of
the wall, terminating in a sherry bottle. ‘Hello!’ I say, reaching over and
squeezing him on the shoulder. ‘It’s the ambulance. How are you doing?’
He shrugs
irritably, like he’s trying to shake off a worrisome bird.
‘It’s the
ambulance. Have you hurt yourself?’
He mumbles
something.
‘Listen. I
don’t want to bother you, but people see you lying here like this and they
think you’ve had a heart attack or something. Can you sit up for me and let me
see that you’re all right?’
He groans and
swears, but eventually makes an effort to sit up after carefully putting the
bottle onto level ground.
‘There! That’s
better. Now – are you ill in any way? Do you need our help?’
‘No. I’m grand.
I’m just having a sleep, s’all.’
‘Why don’t you
nip over the road into the church gardens, then? It’s a lovely day. You could stretch
out on the grass nice and comfy and no-one would bother you. If you lie down
here they’ll just call the ambulance again.’
‘I’m fine.
Leave me alone.’
‘Come on. I need
you to get up and walk somewhere a bit more sensible. Yeah? Can you do that?’
‘Give me a
minute.’
‘Okay. Fine.
But make sure you make a move though. You can’t stay here.’
I take his
name, thank the woman who called us, then go back to the ambulance.
Five minutes
later, I’m writing out the form when a young woman wheeling a bike comes up to
the window.
‘Did you know
there’s a man collapsed by that wall?’ she says.
‘Yeah. He’s
okay, just a bit drunk. But I’ll go back and have another look.’
She smiles and
carries on.
He’s slumped
back in the same position.
I pinch his
shoulder again.
‘Hey! Gary! Sit
up for me.’
‘Whaaat?’
‘You really can’t
sleep here, mate. We’re going to get called back.’
‘Leave me
alone.’
‘Come on. Sit
yourself up and take a walk over the road to the park. Seriously, Gary. You can’t
just lie down anywhere. People think you’re dead.’
He pushes
himself back up into a sitting position, his hair sticking out all-angles, his
face puffy and red and mottled from where the gravel of the car park pushed
into his cheek.
He reaches out
for the sherry bottle, cradles it in his lap, and stares out at all the people
hurrying along the pavement the other side of the wall.
‘Give me a minute,’ he says. ‘I just need a
minute.’
7 comments:
It says something for common decency that at least two people stopped to say something about the man "collapsed". Probably more would have if you hadn't hustled him to a better spot. That's good. It's easy to just look the other way. Easier than taking the time out to take action for someone you don't even know.
That's very true, Cass. We certainly didn't mind them calling. It's frustrating when street drinkers get so out of it they just lie down 'on the spot' - even if that's the middle of the pavement. In some ways I think it's a symptom of their predicament. They 'cease to exist' or become invisible, so outside the social norm that sleeping in the middle of the day by a wall in the middle of a thoroughfare is just something that happens. A mark of how excluded / how low they've fallen, I suppose. But you're right - a very positive thing that some people will still stop to check. :)
Perhaps you could carry a marker pen and some cardboard with you Spence.Just tape the sign "Drunk and sleeping,please don't call 999" to the forehead.
Obviously I mean the "patient",not you or Rae.
That's a good idea, Jack. There are those signs you see on abandoned cars: Police aware. Maybe we could have something like that. (With a version for us, too: On Standby / NOT skiving.
It's a far sight better than some of the things people scribble on passed out drunk people.
...or hang signs round their necks on the train saying: Do not wake till last stop
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