Ok raise your hand if you thought I was getting a root canal today. Everyone's hands down! Cause you're all wrong.
Yes after 6 months of tooth pain and many rejections and then an appeal that got me the pink paper which means success, I won the root canal by fighting bro! So I made that appointment. Jan 16th. I told my friend Kurt I can't ride that day, I'm getting my tooth fixed.
The day before they call me to confirm. They call me twice. They text me to confirm. I am definitely going to be there.
Then I get one more call which I knew was going to come. Because I knew somehow this was going to fuck up. They call and say ooohhhhh yeah, your insurance says ineligible.
Eyes wide.
I have been fighting for this incredibly not wanted prize for 6 months. And now you're saying the day before, oops. Kidding, you can't come in.
Somehow the computer is saying my insurance isn't working. So they have to take me off the schedule for tomorrow, they say. I wish you wouldn't, I say. You should call your insurance, they say. But save that pink paper.
Eyes wide.
I call my insurance and wait on hold for two hours. I finally get a lady who seems already mad at me. She says oh did you cancel your medi-cal? No, I say. What??
Oh the system cancelled your case.
Eyes wide emoji.
Wait I don't have any insurance? No. Oh, wait, Barry does. But no one else on here. Not you or the kids.
Okay so somehow on the Christmas break, between getting the magic pink letter and Los Angeles burning down, they cancelled my insurance by mistake.
It's Thursday right now. So call on Tuesday after 2pm, she says. You have to give them 3 days to try and fix this. Then it can be expedited to 24 hours if not fixed by then. I said can't they just expedite it now?
So now I will wait until Tuesday at 2. And I'm assuming that I'll never have coverage again because isn't that the way this year is going. Then Bess walks in from school and is saying how life doesn't seem worth living. My little tiny baby is finally talking after 4 years recovery from covid lockdown, and puberty, dementia gramma and wildfires on the tv behind her, she is saying I don't feel very good inside. For four years now. She is teary.
So I made a doctor's appointment for next week and hope they don't check my insurance currently to get her a referral for therapy, and we talked to her a bunch. To see what's going on, how we can help her. Making sure she knows the only things that matter to us is the thriving of her self, her brother and sister and her self. She's made of us. We're all made of the same stuff.
Then I send her off to school the next day on my non root canal day and hope for the best and I tell Kurt sure I'll ride now, I never get down to the water unless he's there, I'm too exhausted. So we get ready to go and I'm too tired to take the dogs I don't wanna have to wrangle anything extra, just Dewey, and Kurt and his horse and dog. Dewey has sore legs so I say let's take the road there, it's flatter and easier for Dewey, even though we hate the cars and traffic.
We're walking along the road, I didn't even get to air all my troubles yet, it was still early in the ride and right before the feed store, this pit bull comes running out across the street and attacks Kurt's dog.
Then Kurt is off his horse, wrestling with the evil dog and the evil dog's owner is yelling and trying to get the clamped on jaws of death off Kurt's dog's leg. This dog is not letting go. Kurt looks at me for help and I'm holding the two horses just staring I can't do anything. Even though Kurt has breathing issues and shouldn't be wrestling a butterfly. Suddenly there are people everywhere, a lady has jumped out of her car and is calling 911, a teenage kid comes running with a broom handle and this kid saves the day, he uses the broom handle to pry open the dog's teeth and Kurt's dog gets out. Kurt's dog is loping off down the street and the pit bull takes off after him, with the owner running after both.
Kurt is wheezing on the ground and I'm speaking for Kurt who has no breath to get him the help he needs and then there's an ambulance and fire truck and neighbors.
The firemen are so huge and powerful like redwood trees, even just standing there you feel awed and safe. They bring a garden party mood to a traumatic situation, they've seen everything and frankly after all the fires and the lack of blood at this site, they could be in line at the Peter Pan ride at Disneyland, eating a churro, that's how easy this disaster looks to them.
They strap Kurt up into the red rectangle ambulance to get oxygenated, and the horses and neighbors and I are standing there in the intersection aftermath of the fires and dog attacks, and the horses are the best company. They doze in the sun. There are emergencies, they say. But also you're standing here, your familiar hand holding us, we're together and do you feel that warm sun right here.
The neighbors and the lady who jumped out of her car and the kid who appeared with the broom handle to save the day, where did they all come from and why did they care. They cared and they came out to help.
They all eventually disappear back into the fabric of the street.
Kurt and I end up back at my barn. His dog seems ok, just some puncture wounds. How this dog has a leg at all I don't know. He's going straight to the vet. But Kurt and I are standing there saying why didn't we take the mountain not the road. Why didn't my root canal happen, we wouldn't have gone riding today.
As soon as Kurt leaves, I cry by the water bucket. Because when people are there you're wrestling with what happened and using words to understand, but when people walk away you feel instead and you cry.
Meriwether, the devil of all ponies, comes over to me and puts his butt next to my shoulders so I'll scratch him. Then he turns around and puts his face on my chest. He's a barn destroyer but also a deeply loving buddy.
Come on, man, he says. Don't cry. It's only January.
Someday you'll get that tooth fixed.