dotinthesky: (Default)
Dot in the Sky ([personal profile] dotinthesky) wrote2005-06-24 11:22 am
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Nee Naw Experience

I was sitting in my kitchen this morning, writing in my paper journal, when the intercom rang. I picked it up and this guy said "can you let me in?" I replied that I couldn't let anyone in unless I knew them, to which he then said that he was a carer for the man in apartment ##, and that the man was having a seizure at that very moment in our hallway!

So I let the carer in and stepped out. I asked if he needed help, if I should call someone. I could hear someone gurgling; he said no, he was fine. I looked down the staircase and there was a black man in his forties lying on the stone floor, his eyes bulging out and staring at nothing. His carer had a hand on his cheek and was kneeling beside him.

I came back into the apartment and told Kevin what was happening. A few minutes later, I heard what sounded like crying. This morbid thought crossed my mind that the guy had died and his carer was upset! I went outside my apartment again and the man wasn't in the same spot anymore; there was a sound of thrashing body, gurgling and moaning. I climbed down to see if I could help with anything; the man was having another seizure, this time further down (closer to his apartment door?) His carer was speaking to someone on his cellphone.

Five minutes later, as I was coming out of the building, an ambulance arrived. I held the door open for one of the medics (a very calm woman) to carry her bags inside. The carer came running up towards them and I had a chance to look at him. I wondered if he realized I was the guy who'd let him in earlier.

I hope my neighbour is ok...

[identity profile] commonpeople.livejournal.com 2005-06-26 02:59 pm (UTC)(link)
It's a good precaution, no matter how safe you might think is your neighbourhood.

[identity profile] desayuno-ingles.livejournal.com 2005-06-26 03:22 pm (UTC)(link)
*nods* have you heard anything about him? I suppose you'll update us when you do...

[identity profile] commonpeople.livejournal.com 2005-06-26 04:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Nothing... I'll ask something if I see the carer; I'd be too shy to ask the man himself, though I would be relieved to see him walking around.

[identity profile] desayuno-ingles.livejournal.com 2005-06-26 04:29 pm (UTC)(link)
do they call them carers in England? we say caretaker. recently, while reading a New Yorker article about a nearly dead Alaskan language, Eyak, how I love linguistic type stuff and wonder how you get into it as a hobby. Apparently, in Eyak, you can add suffixes and prefixes to a single verb to alter the word to have meanings about specific places and times. I also love dialects and regional uses of words and how they're different from other areas. how it became what it is, was it altered in meaning due to sound or was it altered in spelling due to an accent? so cool. pidgins are really interesting.

[identity profile] commonpeople.livejournal.com 2005-06-27 09:28 am (UTC)(link)
carer = caretaker (or nurse)

To be honest, I don't use the word carer as well, but I used it in this post because that's how he called himself.

[identity profile] desayuno-ingles.livejournal.com 2005-06-27 12:37 pm (UTC)(link)
oh, interesting. wonder why.