When I was maybe five a doctor friend
of my parents, Arthur Shapiro, gave me a stethoscope he was finished with. I was
thrilled – not about putting the plugs in my ears and listening, but by having a
real object, a fetish from the grownup world. Next to that my toy doctor's kit
with its little bottle of pink sugar pills paled by comparison.
Drawing by Suzanne Dunaway |
For checkups my
brother and I would get driven all the way from Flushing across the 59th Street
Bridge to the pediatrics department in the white towers of New York Hospital. All
I remember about Dr. Fraad* is he once reassured my mother about my baby toenail
that she thought was growing in funny. Sixty years later I showed her the same
toenail and she was still unconvinced.
Most of the time I kind of liked
being sick. Sickness turned on my mother’s Fair Illness Code. You got to eat
apple sauce with pills crushed up inside, if you had a fever of 100° you got to
stay home from school, and after the fever was gone you had a right to one
extra day at home. Once during a high fever I hallucinated climbing a huge
mountain without ever getting to the top, like Sisyphus with his stone, and I remember
I considered it great fun – delirium as a natural psychedelic.
But once when I had an earache I
remember my mother weeping helplessly at my bedside. I must have been howling
in pain myself, but the sight of her in tears was so astonishing that it’s all
that’s stuck in my memory. The torment of another earache stuck in memory as an
engulfing red ball that expanded bigger and bigger. The doctor came to the
house, I can still see him looming over my bed, but the pain only stopped when
my eardrum burst the next day. I found it wonderful to have no hearing from my
right ear, and kept rubbing the outside to test it.
Medicine didn’t have much of a
presence in my young universe, but expatriation did. Many of our family friends
had fled the Nazis, and as Jews by origin if not religion my parents always kept
their mental bags half-packed for a quick exit. Which is why my father once
suggested that I should become a doctor, advice I scorned for decades. His reasoning
was that – in the worst case scenario – I could instantly set up shop as a
physician anywhere in the world. He didn’t, needless to say, know Italian
bureaucracy!
*added October 12, 2018: An email from a reader set me to googling Dr. Fraad. I learned from his New York Times obituary that he was indeed distinguished enough to be worth the trip across the bridge – Benjamin Spock cited him as an influence – and that he was an active left-winger, possibly a Communist, instrumental in sparking the famous 1969-71 health workers’ collective at Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx. You can hear him speak here, very near the beginning.
*added October 12, 2018: An email from a reader set me to googling Dr. Fraad. I learned from his New York Times obituary that he was indeed distinguished enough to be worth the trip across the bridge – Benjamin Spock cited him as an influence – and that he was an active left-winger, possibly a Communist, instrumental in sparking the famous 1969-71 health workers’ collective at Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx. You can hear him speak here, very near the beginning.
*****
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