Thursday 14 March 2013

un Work able


Dedicated to the honest case manager at Great West Life who recognized my inability to work as being true AND as not of my choosing.

When I was in my 20s my mother would lift her two hands to eyelevel, point her index fingers, and draw a rectangular box in the air. Aiming at my forehead, she’d lament: “if only you were a ____” (fill in the blank with Lawyer Doctor Architect Teacher, Wife of Lawyer Doctor Architect Teacher): A label with a Capital letter.

No wonder I am claustrophobic, if in a rather atypical manner… boxed in on a conceptual level.

My mother was a Call Centre Supervisor. Her father was an exiled* Irish Catholic intellectual educated at Trinity College Dublin teaching one-room school in the Saskatchewan Depression. Although he was paid in carrots and potatoes (he worked and was therefore not on the dole) and as a result my mother couldn’t go to the sponsored summer camp with the Relief kids, the bottom line is that he worked.
*He was not a convict shipped to the colonies but just a Catholic in a hungry country below the glass ceiling of religious affiliation.

She believed in Work.

So did my father. He was a pharmacist, though with the bedside manner of a country doctor. He once helped a little old rich lady (she’d arrive at the pharmacy in her chauffeured limousine) replace the battery in her lighted tweezers. At his funeral the church was jammed with people of his various communities. He was never wealthy but worked hard, with a compassionate engagement to those around him.

When I was 14 years old I worked Saturday mornings in the same pharmacy as he did. Not because the family needed the money but rather because work is part of life. I worked through high school and university. My most unlikely jobs:  as an undocumented-worker/chambermaid in an Israeli hotel (with a gang of similarly clandestine Africans) and as a home-baker of cakes for Café X in the Visual Arts building at Concordia Univ. (I delivered them on the back of my bike or by Metro in a clean cardboard pet carrying case… people smiled at the box with its kitten and puppy drawings on the sides until the smell of cakes threw them off). My favourite jobs: Programming Coordinator at Studioxx.org Montreal (a dynamic, creative environment; a grownup version of my childhood) and Dept. Head and Professor of Web Design at Africatic Dakar (I adored teaching, though the Director was obsessed with Napoleon – never again will I trust anyone obsessed with Napoleon; in particular short men from small island nations with colonial ties to France who are obsessed with Napoleon …)

My favourite TV shows are about workaholics: people for whom work is all; committed not to say obsessed, loyal, courageous: Homeland; Saving Grace – though not the ending; Grey’s Anatomy – someone has to have fun and sex in on-call rooms while being brilliant and working 80 hour weeks; even Prime Time formulaic Flashpoint – for the humanity behind their life and death discipline; Treme - where music is work is life is music.

Born on the cusp of the end of the Baby Boom and the beginning of Gen X, I have the work ethic of the Boomers but the interests of the gen-x-ers.

I only grew into the label of “Artist” in my 30s by which point my mother had had to get over my rejection of a marriage proposal from a soon-to-be Lawyer! She never did quite find a place in her label box for artist.

In 2006 I was working in tech support for Sage software. I liked it well enough (though it wasn’t really “me”) as after years of freelancing in a third world country, Sénégal, being paid regularly was hugely rewarding! As my symptoms developed I thought it was carpal tunnel syndrome… 6 weeks off then back to work. But things got worse, especially after a car accident in early 2007. Two years before my PD diagnosis I had to stop working. I continued to believe that the next specialist would figure it out and cure it and I’d be back working.

As a toast at Abdoukhadre’s and my wedding in May 2010 KJ, my lifelong friend (in our first photo we were funny looking babies plunked on our mothers’ Jackie Kennedy-esque laps) recalled how whenever I wanted something, I worked for it. This was 3 years after I’d had to stop working.

I even had to “work” for a diagnosis: researching specialists and asking my GP to refer me to them until my perseverance finally led me to the Pacific Parkinson’s Research Centre. I can’t disregard the work involved in convincing my insurance company that my Functional Capacity was insufficient for full time work. They know who they are: she who suggested I could be a Greeter at Walmart; she who said a change of attitude would cure me!

It is supposed to be a male thing – defining oneself by what one does for work. Job Title =Self. Nonetheless, my identity has always been described, circumscribed, encompassed by what I do: for work or as primary activity; including gainful employment, artistic production, travelling, even chambermaiding and cake baking, etc. Daughter, wife, non-mother, sister, friend: labels at best of only secondary descriptive importance.

Being unable to work at any of my previous occupations (in the sense of doing something that occupies, meaningfully, one’s time) or at any job considered “Gainful Employment” by my insurance company, I am afloat. I admire enormously people with PD who work. Admire? Envy. Perhaps their meds are more effective? Even my mother recognized I was a “Trouper” (high praise in her world). So it can’t be lack of will or courage or stamina. I just can’t.

So now, unable to work, it’s me who is seeking a label for myself…