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Social Determinants of Health

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From:
Chrystal Ocean <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Social Determinants of Health <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 15 Nov 2008 17:46:04 -0500
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Episode 22 of 24. A reading from the book Policies of Exclusion, Poverty & Health: Stories from 
the front. Compiled, with Introduction and Reports by Chrystal Ocean. Copyright 2005.

This is the last of the 21 stories.

At the beginning of the project, each of the women chose a random number to represent them. 
This was both to protect their identities and to make the stories themselves the central focus.

When it came time to put the book together, I didn’t want to refer to the women by their 
numbers. That would have been awkward and certainly impersonal. So I ordered the stories by 
the women’s numbers, from lowest to highest, and then assigned a pseudonym to each, from ‘a’ 
through ‘w’.

In other words, while the alphabetical arrangement would suggest otherwise, the stories in the 
book were randomly sorted. This was to ensure no bias crept in, in terms of story placement.

How fitting, then, that the random sortation would result in a native woman, Waneta, getting the 
last word.

"When I was 5 years old, [my mother] committed suicide in a motel room. My younger brother 
and I were present and were the ones who actually found her. We remember that night like it 
was yesterday. We found her in the bathroom. There were no adults around. We remember 
playing with her rope….

"I was about 13 when my biological sister reunited with me. She visited us off and on for about a 
year. She took her life when she was 18. She also hung herself in Victoria….

"One of the uncles that lived in the home started sexually abusing me. I didn’t know that it was 
wrong. We would go fishing and then he would get on top of me and stuff. He’d make me lay 
there. I didn’t know. All of us slept in the same room as my grandfather and his partner. Seeing 
him on her, I thought it was something that you did. My uncle was doing that to me at the 
creek, when I was nine, and I thought it was what you had to do. I’ve never told any of the family 
members. He told me not to tell anybody, of course. I had all these secrets. All these adults in 
my life were telling me, ‘Don’t tell, Don’t tell’."

The remaining episodes, 23 and 24, will include excerpts from the two project reports.

Ocean
-- 
Book: Policies of Exclusion, Poverty & Health: Stories from the front
Podcast Channel: http://bcseawalker.podbean.com/
Blog: Challenging the Commonplace - and other irreverent activities
http://challengingthecommonplace.blogspot.com/

If you live in BC, help promote the May 12 referendum on electoral reform - visit 
http://www.stv.ca/

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