In 1979, I was living in a small town in the Canadian Rockies. I was working in a cedar mill. My wife was in university in Vancouver working toward her teaching license. I would often take my mandolin over to the little house in town that Earl rented and we would play music together.
Late one evening after we had played out, Earl mentioned to me that the fuel oil tank that sat beside the house was sinking into the ground and that he needed to somehow lift it up and put some blocks under one side of it. I told him that the mill where I worked had a big jack that it used on its big loader. I figured I could borrow the jack bring it over and we could jack up the fuel oil tank and set it right.
It was agreed that was what we would do, so the next Friday I borrowed the big 20 inch chunk of steel that was the jack. Saturday afternoon, I took it over to Earl’s and we jacked up the tank, and slide a concrete block under the low side, to level it again. I put the jack back into my truck, said goodbye to Earl, and drove the jack back over to the mill.
Once through the mill yard, I backed the truck right up to the door of the storage shed. When I got out of the truck I carefully avoided the wet puddles in the ice because I was wearing my canvas running shoes. I grabbed both handles of the heavy metal jack and in one motion I hefted it out of the truck, swung it around to inside the shed door, and lowered the full weight of it onto the thick boards of the shed porch, and the big toe of my right foot.
“Damn,” I thought, “this is not a good thing.”
I lifted the jack off of my toe, sat down on the porch, and took off my shoe and my sock. The nail was already discolored but at least my foot wasn’t bleeding. I put my sock and shoe back on and drove home.
Saturday night was hell. My toe hurt like crazy, I finally gave up watching television and decided to just go to bed, but that made the pain even worse, without any distractions, there was nothing but the painful throbbing of my big toe. I must have dozed off a few times during that long, long, painful night, and eventually morning came.
“I’ve got to get myself down to the hospital, and get some relief from this throbbing toe,” I decided.
As soon as it was 8:00, I awkwardly drove down to the hospital and limped over to the admissions desk. The doctor was there and came over to take a look. When I finally got my shoe and sock off.
“Ooh,” he remarked, as he examined the purple/black nail of my big toe.
“We’ll have to make a hole in the nail to relieve the pressure. We can burn through it with a wire.” Then he instructed me to go over into a little kitchen, just down the hall.
“Burn a hole in my nail with a wire?”, I thought dubiously, as I limped over to the kitchen.
The doctor, accompanied by a nurse, had me sit down beside the small kitchen table.
“Just prop your foot up there on the table.” Then the doctor showed me a paperclip he held in his hand. “This will work just fine.”
With his surgical hands he unbent the paperclip, then turned on the stove. He held the paperclip with a pair of pliers and lowered it to the red-hot stove element. I was aware of nothing but the glowing end of the paperclip and watched with fascination as it was directed toward my blackish toenail.
I felt no additional pain as the glowing end of the paperclip burned its way through my nail and the dark blood began to spurt out from beneath my toenail.
The nurse was busy wiping and cleaning my toe, when I notice that the panorama of my vision was quickly diminishing. “I think I am going to faint,” I warned.
“No, you are fine,” replied the doctor.
“No, really, I faint a lot, and I think I am going to faint.”
At this point the nurse said something about my blood pressure dropping fast. I don’t even remember how she knew that, but my vision by this time, was had been reduced to just a small circle and I felt myself fall forward. I could feel the nurse straining to keep me in the chair and the doctor grabbed my other arm to support me.
I was only half conscious, but I heard the doctor tell the nurse that they should take me to the empty room by the check-in desk. The two of them, one on each side of me holding me up, half dragged me down the hall toward the hospital room.
I wasn’t able to help much on this journey, but as we were working our way down the hall, through my fog, I looked up into one of the rooms we were passing, and there looking back at me was one of the high school teachers, visiting their son who had a broken arm.
“Damn,” I thought, “I wonder what he is thinking; seeing me being dragged through the hospital, like a drunk on a Sunday morning”.
I was placed on a bed in the dark room, and slowly I was able to rejoin the world.
You can se my paintings at: davidmarchant2.ca