Sunday, July 12, 2015

ADOLF HITLER, FRANKENSTEIN, PACKER , THE FACTS OF LIFE

Roving correspondents Judi and Peter  Burleigh experience stressful  third  degree as  they  Carry On  Up / Down Canals
Burleigh  bateau, Butterfly.
This morning Judi and I arrived in Epinal, France, a small city on the edge of the Vosges Mountains. Over the past few days we have struggled to bring our boat through dozens of canal locks which cascade in ‘flights’ down the slopes of the Vosges. This is the region in which Hitler launched his Ardennes Offensive. This offensive, in hiatus since 1944, has now been renewed by the VNF, the French authority which manages the canals. 

Their so-called automatic flights of locks are now subject to the vagaries of electronics and the subsequent  telephonic shrugging of their employees when you call to register a plea for assistance. The locks are no longer operated in person by the devious, unmotivated and spiteful French lock keepers who could be bribed by a Euro or two to do their jobs. But this is a diatribe for another time.
 
Deck and rope hand Judi

At the Port in Epinal, where canaliers can stay overnight at a wharf, the Croix Rouge Francaise had set up their ‘Caravan of Summer’. This was not a mobile home as we know it in Australia, but a caravan in the sense of a line of camels. Not that there were in fact camels, I’m simply trying to explain. Inside seven or eight scarlet-topped tents were displays of the Red Cross at work.

SANS MAMMARIES

We were approached by a nice young man with red stripes around the bottoms of his trousers. He took our names and excitedly consulted his colleagues who were impressed by our exotic travel credentials. Being the only people wandering around the exhibition area, we were firmly invited into a tent where several truncated bodies lay on the ground.

A Red Cross nurse instructed us to each select one of these life-size torsos and kneel beside it. My plastic torso was that of a man, as were all the others. In the interests of equality, liberty and fraternity I think I should have been given a torso with breasts. Accidents can happen to anyone regardless of sex.

On closer inspection the legless torsos could be identified as plastic models, not discarded corpses from the previous night’s murders in Epinal. After a while I concluded there would have been lots of blood and entrails if the scenario had been real. I saw Judi speaking softly to her plastic ‘patient’ but didn’t hear any reply. 

First we were given a keyring printed with a series of Emergency Phone Numbers should we witness or be involved in an accident. In truth, if I was confronted by several dismembered human bodies I’d be too busy throwing up to make a phone call.

BARBIE,SANDRA BULLOCK

The ‘face’ of my ‘man’ was moulded soft plastic. The eyes did not and could not open. No wonder he was seriously injured if he’d been wandering the streets with his eyes closed! The nurse said our first move was to make sure our victim was breathing.

We did this by poking him with our fingers and asking him questions like “did you get the number of that low-flying aircraft?”, “did the hovercraft ignore the red light?” or some such. Yes, we reported, he was breathing, although this was not true.

Yes, he’s breathing, she insisted as she pointed at his soft breath caressing her cheek. “Check what’s in his mouth”, she went on. I forced open his lipless, toothless, tongueless mouth and spotted a kind of  mutated  epiglottis  transplanted from a Barbie doll.  

By now two new learners had joined us ; a spotty little girl with braces, and a young Sandra Bullock look-alike wearing an Hawaii baseball cap. We nodded to each other over the strewn plastic carnage.

The nurse demonstrated how to place the heel of one hand on the man’s sternum and press hard and rhythmically. When done correctly you could hear a mechanical clicking inside the chest which may have been symbolic of breaking the rib cage. We did this for several exhausting minutes under her supervision.

PACKER  WHACKER

From a small bag lying beside the body we then removed a training version of a ‘Packer Whacker’, or defibrillator. From a secret compartment we peeled off and placed two sticky electrodes on the chest and plugged them into the Whacker, which now spoke to us in French through a built-in loudspeaker. The gist of its instruction was not to touch the body while you were Whacking high voltage through it.

Pressing the yellow ‘Whack’ button generated an appropriate frying sound but the plastic torso remained inert – no Hollywood-style arching of the spine or urgent beeping from a heart monitor and no classic Dr Frankenstein moment: “Eaarrgh, Igor! It’s alive!”

Nevertheless, the nurse deemed the revival of the torso a success, but no colour had shown in its cheeks nor had its eyelids, if there had been eyelids, flickered. This was a dead torso, as John Cleese might have said. These were all late torsos, irredeemably extinct of life. Judi and I shared a glance with the little girls, who covered their mouths to stifle their giggles. 

Exhausted from our extended chest-pressing and wondering if we’d offend by standing up and running away, our course came to an abrupt end. The nurse congratulated us, and mentioned that more than forty people a year are saved in Scandinavian countries by the very same techniques in which we were now experts. In France only seven or eight people are saved because the public is scared of hurting the victim, getting electrocuted or missing their dejeuner, hence the ‘Red Cross Caravan of Summer’ touring the country on an educational mission.

PLASTIC DEGREE

In the Reception Tent we  were  congratulated and formally presented with our Degree in Appeler-Masser, and Defibriller, that is ‘Phoning for Help, Heart Massage and Defibrillation.”In part, my frameable document reads:

‘Je soussigne, Professeur Jean-Jaques ELEDJAM, President de la Croix-Rouge Francaise atteste que BURLEIGH Pierre a suivi success une session de formation de Appeler-Masser, and Defibriller.Jean-Jaques’ signature appears below, a bit faded, as if his Biro was running out. Surprisingly, Prof Jean-Jaques himself was not present at the bestowing and I wondered what he could possibly have found to be a higher priority.

Judi and I intend adding our new Degrees to our CV’s. French degrees are respected in several countries and ex-colonies, and we were pleased that the two girls received their degrees as well. Perhaps  they will be called on to revive a plastic torso one day.