Mr. Red Sweater
I was recently at my ophthalmologist's to be measured for lens replacement surgery. In the busy waiting room, a flat-screen showed notables being vaccinated against Covid. As close to me as permitted, a middle-aged man in a red sweater sat waiting too, with his mask bunched below his mouth.
I asked him to please pull it up over his nose. His first comment was, "I see you're one of those people who have been brainwashed", and devolved from there. The pandemic was a hoax, he told me; I was "paranoid", "an idiot", "a sheep". I told him that yes, I may be paranoid (someone who insults you doesn't expect you to agree) and said wearing a mask isn't comfortable, but the sign on the office door notified all who enter that they must wear one, properly. He grudgingly pulled it up; I thanked him.
After a half-hour of tests and measurements with the doctor's staff, I returned to the waiting room where Mr. Red Sweater sat, this time addressing all within earshot in Italian. (The Italian-speaking doctor is popular with patients from that community.) Three women in at least their late seventies listened as he told them, "Questo vaccino vi ucciderà!" I didn't need any Italian to understand his assertion. He would not meet my eyes.
Finally, I was in front of Dr. D. He said, "First, I want to thank you for telling that guy to pull up his mask." I said, "Oh, so you heard about it?" He said, "Yes, and then he came in here and started on me."
I wish I had suggested to Dr. D. that he ask his receptionist to spot-check and, if she felt uncomfortable with speaking to a patient, to get him in there. I did say, "Eighty-five percent of the patients out there today are over age 70. Because they sit there for a good while, this man could create consequences for them."
I've been around non-compliant, even defiant, persons over the last nine months, and I've always been able to step away, cross the street, wait it out. But Mr. Red Sweater got to me, because he was using a captive audience as an opportunity to spew misinformation.
Later that day, my sister-in-law, Sylvie, called to report on her family's subdued holiday, and mentioned that our niece Josée, a respiratory therapist, holds the hands of dying Covid patients, because loved ones cannot be with them. Though a heartbreaking task, she does not want anyone to die alone. I thought of Jo, so young to bear this burden, and her humanity in the face of exhaustion.
Listening to that account, I wanted one thing: to take Mr. Red Sweater to a dying patient's bed and have him relieve Josée right through to the end. Would he still maintain this disease is a hoax?
Comments
Anger, frustration, sadness..all at once.
Reception too should have spoken to him.
Continue to take precautions - our health is in our own hands.
Happy New Year.
My experience at doctor, dentist and optician is that appointments are strictly scheduled so that there are no more than 2 patients at large in the waiting room at a time.
The situation is not good here in London, because of the virus mutation, but at least we seem to be getting ahead with vaccinations. Uptake is very good, helped by the fact that The Queen has let it be known that she's had the jab and (perhaps more importantly) Dame Joan Collins, all-round National Treasure, has put a video on Insta of herself being vaccinated!
Jane in London
My daughter is a community nurse and has lost numerous patients (all older) to Covid 19. My best friends father just passed last week from Covid in hospital. Sadly his wife and daughter had to video chat a goodbye since they also got Covid from him (going in and out of the hospital). Very very sad times we are in now and the more people that don't comply, the longer and longer we have to live like this and more and more people will die from "this hoax"!
I am waiting to get the vaccine, yes, I will be getting in once it roles out. Thankfully I am not in a high risk group, but will probably not be eligible until much later in the year. I have done and will definately keep following the rules to try and keep Covid under control.
Judy in Newcastle, Ontario
I commented about the popularity of the name "maskholes" and my beloved daughter and son-in-law having Covid over the holidays.
BTW, the dr. is an ophthalmologist, not a DDS. I mention this because as you would expect, he treats many old to very old persons, all the more reason for Mr. to be masked.