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Black Women and Medical Professionals

By Allison L. Williams Hill

In-Vesica  Art  Design  Energy

“Do All Things In-Vesica.”

The Youtube channel is called Cindys Villa. On May 26th, she uploaded a TikTok video of a white labor and delivery nurse discussing health pregnancy care for Black women. It was viewed almost forty thousand times and had over one thousand comments. The nurse mentioned needs that were not being met. “I’m colorblind. I don’t treat my patients any differently,” said other nurses to her. This nurse’s point is that they cannot be colorblind. Other comments from the nurse:

“Black women are more likely than any other race to be harmed in pregnancy childbirth and beyond.

“Black women are not believed about pain, symptoms…

“They delay seeking medical care because they don’t trust health care providers…

“Pre-eclampsia is the one of the leading causes of maternal mortality in the United States.”

This nurse cited James Marion Syms and so did I in the letter about my mother’s experience.

The comments on this page were frustrating.  I felt anger that women suffered because of what they looked like.  But it’s always been like this.

I am Black. My mother was Black. I witnessed an incident at Nassau University Medical Center, Nassau, New York. I wrote a letter to Ms. Laura Salenimo, Patient Care Representative expressing my displeasure. My mother was in her eighties.  Below is an edited version of the letter.

My mother came to NUMC’s Emergency on December 13, 2018. She was in Treatment Room No. 26. Several nice people saw to her care. Not all of them were decent, however. An Asian woman, thin, who I saw use a station at the Nurse’s Station directly outside of the treatment room was called [removed] by another worker after the incident.  She was in the room with, I think, a student nurse with a Middle Eastern name. She did not introduce herself as others did. She ignored my mother’s question.  She had a device in her hands, picture included.  She dropped it on my mother’s legs. My mother screamed. This employee said nothing. She did not acknowledge that it happened. She kept going as if no sound was made.

A photo of the actual equipment that the hospital worker allowed to fall on my mother’s legs.

I do not know if it was true, if it was used to support your employee’s lack of compassion for something she absolutely caused: some people think that African-Americans, due to the melanin, can endure high levels of pain. Doctors like Sims operated on African women without the benefit of anesthesia because our race made us durable – NOT!! People have internalized the nonsense from Carl Von Linneaus racial classifications that supposedly saved anthropologists time and energy.

Statue of James Marion Sims, the pig in Central Park who performed gynecological examinations on Black women without anesthesia.

I wonder if Asians think like that. Moreover, I wonder if they are even aware that they do. On the other hand, I don’t care if they do or she does. Hi Chen made a gross mistake dropping a device on my mother.  While my mother in the room on the eleventh floor, I checked her legs for bruises and thereafter after she was discharged.

“Researchers from the University of Virginia discovered this when they queried a group of 222 white medical students and residents and found that half believed in phony biological differences between black and white people, including “that blacks age more slowly than whites; their nerve endings are less sensitive than whites’; their blood coagulates more quickly than whites’; [and] their skin is thicker than whites.” Source: “Medical Racism and the Ignoring of Black Pain” written by Kali Holloway / AlterNet April 23, 2016

My mother‘s experience was so memorable that she spoke about it many times after discharge. An assistant nurse or whatever staff was cleaning her. This woman left my mother damp and exposed with the room door open.  My mother complained that she felt exposed and asked that the staff close the door. The response from the staff was, “No one can see you.” I will let that sink in for a moment.  The door was never closed.  My mother felt extremely uncomfortable, to say the least.

The images were in the body of the letter.

I commented on the page encouraging women to document their experiences and submit them to the hospital,  professional boards, and all other places where the case should be read.

A couple of women wrote that they were sewn up and felt the pain from the stitching. I should think that sewing up a woman after giving birth without anesthesia and she complaining about feeling the pain constitutes medical malpractice.

I added several comments on this page. To read the experiences, of people cut open without anesthesia, was devastating. We all must be aware of the medical profession’s practices and plan accordingly.

After reading more comments I asked Spirit if there was anything that could be done. I asked, Spirit, please help the writers of these experiences and those who had experiences and did not write. I asked God, by Grace, to please imprint the Original Blueprint on each of them.

I am glad that women are writing about this. Previously, this subject would have remained unspoken.

Allison L. Williams Hill works as an artist; designer;  planner; healer; integrative health coach, and inventor. She shares her work and services through

Metaphysical Services

Spiritual Art

 
Get a free 50-minute Health History. Go to In-Vesica/Health for details.
I included this video today because I wrote about y mother. She was on my mind a lot for the past three weeks. I get the feeling to call her on the phone and then I hear her in my heart. We both smile.
 

 

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ancestors family natural cycles personal growth sex and gender

Biology Matters

by Allison L. Williams Hill

In-Vesica  Art  Design  Energy

“Do All Things In-Vesica.”

May 11, 2023

The words “Biology Matters” came during meditation. They were simple and straightforward. It does matter.  The graphic changes at the letter “O” to include the symbol for “woman” and the symbol for “man.” The symbols are connected to Greek mythology, and used in astronomy; astrology, and alchemy. The female symbol was associated with the goddess Venus or Aphrodite, and the planet. Aphrodite is usually holding a mirror in the many depictions in ceramics and stone.  The symbol represents beauty as does the goddess.

 

The Egyptian ankh is very similar but it has the entire feminine energy within its symbol. Other ankh interpretations include the male phallus where the vaginal canal is shown. The Mu Neter word “ankh” means “eternal life” in English.

The male symbol, a circle with an ascending arrow, and associated with the planet Mars, a god who carried a shield and a spear.  This symbol represents iron in alchemy, the material used to create the tools for agriculture, a task men organized and for protection.

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Both symbols are powerful. The dilution of women for any purpose is to ignore their importance in nature.  I used these symbols because these are what they represent to me. Anyone can disagree.  The schism that is occurring now is the work of people who consider themselves powerful; all that they have done – war with Germany; crushing economies; creating the New World Order to enable them to easily govern the planet with their unelected input, and now the Great Reset to direct our lives as they see fit – required the disintegration of morals and the fall from grace of women. It is going to end, though.

The laggards have been at this for centuries. Klaus “Hitler-Wannabe” Schwab has always been on the dole maintained with promises of achieving this.

Never, in the history of humankind, did it take one hundred percent of humanity’s participation for humanity to keep their sovereignty and their free will.  It will not now.

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To deny our origins from the wombs from which all of us emerge is reprehensible.

Women gave birth to all the world that is overtly declaring mothers, and seed-bearing fathers, as names we are to excise from our memories. The “It’s going to happen” maybe, but empower “It will stop.” These people think they are the answer.

How different is this from when white people called people of color “Niggers,” “WOPs,” “Chinks, “Spicks,” and other kinds of names to diminish their humanity to enable them to enslave people who had free will?  How different is it that Schwab and his pathetic associate, Yuval Harari, a laggard who sadly stated that artificial intelligence would have accelerated his revelation that he was homosexual, state that most humans are bottom feeders and worthless, to justify controlling this planet?

Choose to change this. Choose to believe you can change this. That is, in part, why I exist, with the assistance of my husband: in this life, I am a woman, I am powerful, and I know it. Beauty may not be seen as powerful, but think of the energy it takes to create it.

Biology does matter. Failed men think it is acceptable to claim to be women and to display caricatures of femininity. The various attempts to enact womanhood they think is what being a woman is, tend to be exaggerated and have little to do with the actual existence of women.

Failed athletes claim identities as women for an easy win. That is like an easy lay. Educational institutions that were unsuccessful in sports, were the first to dismiss the physical differences between the sexes. They did not care.   Why attend such an institution? If winning matters, what consideration would you receive as an individual?

These decision-makers came from women.

Allison L. Williams Hill works as an artist; designer; planner; healer; integrative health coach, and inventor.  She shares her work and services through

Metaphysical Services

Spiritual Art

 

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ancestors

All of My Last Names

by Allison L. Williams Hill  In-Vesica  Art  Design  Energy

“Do All Things In-Vesica.”

Originally posted June 13, 2015

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I have contemplated using all of my last names. I realized, however, that I don’t know them all. I know my mother’s maiden name and that is where it ends so far.   I don’t know her mother’s maiden name.

I was thinking it would be honorable to include all of the names of all of the women who proceeded me. Rather than my father, they were the people who bore the future beings leading to me.

I was given the name Allison Lynette Williams by my mother. Her last name was Johnson. I intend to find her mother’s last name and possibly her mother before her. Then I married. Each woman could have that option: to include the name of her husband’s family after the last names of all of the women who preceded her. This is not for signing documents but more for having name links and the story that ends with the name of the bearer.

I discussed investigating and assembling my mother’s family tree. It acknowledges all of those who came before me. I know her father, my grandfather. But no one knows my grandfather’s parents.

I feel a need to know this. It pays homage to all of the families before me.

Men, and possibly women, may ask, “Is all of this necessary?” My answer is absolutely not. Why, however, limit it to only immediate family? It would be interesting and a different feeling to include all of the women who lead to my existence.

Allison L. Williams Hill is an artist; designer; planner; healer; integrative health coach, and inventor.  She shares her work and services through

“Do All Things In-Vesica.”

Get a free 50-minute Health History.  Go to In-Vesica/Health for details.

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