Lily and
Geoffrey’s garden is the same, tiny courtyard affair as all the others in this
street. You get to it via the kitchen, bathroom extension and a crooked dog-leg
of hallway. All this is on the ground floor, below street level. To get to it you
have to come down a flight of stairs so steep you need crampons and a coil of
rope.
Geoffrey and Lily
are both in their late eighties. Lily was out in the garden when her slipper
came off, she stumbled and crashed backwards through a rotten pergola of roses.
Her hip is obviously fractured.
‘Lily? Listen to
me. What we’re going to do is give you some morphine for your pain, a little
something to help with feeling sick, and then when that’s started to work we’re
going to think about how to get you up to the ambulance. Okay?’
Lily’s husband
Geoffrey is standing over her, leaning on a walking stick at a dangerous angle.
We want him there for reassurance, but in all other respects – registered blind,
as physically precarious as the ruins of
that pergola – he’s another problem to add to the mix.
‘I’ll fetch your
dressing gown’ he says. ‘Shall I? Shall I fetch your dressing gown?’
‘Please! Oh!
What can I do?’
‘I’ll go and
fetch your dressing gown. Just a minute.’
He turns round –
would have pitched head first into the dustbins if Rae hadn’t been there to
stop him – and then begins a slow and painful shuffle into the kitchen. A few moments
later he shuffles back out again.
‘Where is your dressing gown?’ he says.
Meanwhile we put a blanket roll between Lily’s
legs and tie one off against the other for stability. A second crew arrives to
help. We use a scoop stretcher and vacuum mattress and strap her up as securely
as we can. She panics and keeps grabbing out, almost bringing a shelf of
geraniums down on top of us all.
‘Lily? I know
this is a horrible thing for you, but it’s very important you try to stay as
calm as you can. We’re going to carry you upstairs in a minute, but it’s very
steep and we’re going to be turning this way and that. You’re perfectly safe
though. We’ve got you strapped up, there’s four of us, and you’re absolutely
not going to fall. Okay? You’ve got to help us, Lily. You’ve got to keep your
arms inside, and stay as calm as you can. I know it’s difficult, but just try
your best.’
We sit Geoffrey
on a chair in the kitchen out of the way. Callum, the paramedic from the other crew,
has managed to take a panel from the side of the stairs away, giving us a
little, crucial room to manoeuvre.
‘Okay? Ready,
set, lift.’
There’s an
acronym for everything in the ambulance service. The acronym associated with
manual handling is T.I.L.E: Task, Individual, Load, Environment. As soon as we
start to move Lily, that acronym starts to bend and shake under the stress of it
all until the dots between each letter fly apart and the whole, articulated
sense flies apart under the strain.
We bend and
twist and stoop and stretch. Even though there are four of us, the cramped
conditions prevent us from distributing the work load evenly, so at times just
two of us are carrying the weight, at unhealthy angles. At one point I find myself
at the head end hauling back up the steps with my legs spread apart. It’s an
ungainly, improvisational muddle, and Lily calls out and cries through it all.
But she’s safe, we make progress, and once we reach the hallway we have a
little more room and things ease up.
Outside and the
late afternoon air is wonderfully refreshing. We lift her onto the trolley, and
wheel her over to the ramp. High fives and back-slaps, slamming doors, like an exultant
removal company.
Geoffrey had said
he wanted to come with Lily to the hospital, so I go back inside to fetch him.
I find him walking up the stairs, and honestly, if you’d asked him to climb the
Blackpool Tower it couldn’t have been more of a challenge.
‘Nearly there’
he wheezes.
‘How long have
you lived here?’ I ask as I take his hand at the top.
‘Fifty years,’ he
says. ‘And I have to say, these stairs don’t get any easier.’
3 comments:
Newton's 8th law states that as you get older,hills and stairs get proportionally steeper.
... and the 9th, that your physical ability will always be inversely proportional to your willingness to do anything about it...
...actually reading that, it doesn't make sense! I meant the opposite! *shrugs* Oh well. That's why Newton's Newton and I'm not.
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