Dream Journal
Entry
November 22, 1998
I’m in the desert.
I’m trapped here,
by two buff cops. They told me I was not allowed
to leave this place. I’m on top of a mountain mesmerized by a clean, cool, blue, soothing
body of water. It was so inviting. But the two cowboys were now standing in the water with shot guns.
I climbed
down from the mountain and asked, “Am I allowed in the water?”
With dark sunglasses and no facial
expression, the uniformed men answered, “It wouldn’t be a good idea to swim
in the water.”
All the same, I sensed no danger and took my clothes off. Others started gathering around.
Standing naked, I told them that the water was good, and there was nothing
to be scared of. It’s
ok to stand in the water.
I stepped
into the water.
It was good.
Depending on the dream, you might not have
any idea at all what you just envisioned in your mind and felt in your soul,
until the day comes when you know it was more than just a dream.
“Oh my God, there’s
something in the water! They’ve done something to the water! I can’t believe
this shit!”
“Calm down, calm down, there’s
nothing wrong with the
water. It just looks bad from the surf turning
up the sand.”
As if that thought hadn’t
crossed my mind after spending every free minute I had on the beach for the past eight years.
“No, I’m telling you there’s
something wrong with the water Celia!”
“No, no, I’m sure it’s nothing. You’ll
see.”
What grabbed at my heart that day, I’ll never know.
Maybe it was a frightened voice from the future trying
to warn me? Why not? It wasn’t
as far-fetched as it sounded.
When I was a child, maybe eleven or twelve years old, I came really close to drowning.
It was a near death experience that stuck with me
through out my life. It pretty much shaped me and molded
me into the person
I am today. But most
importantly the experience taught me that time is irrelevant.
(1974 Delaware , OH) - “Come
on, I’ll race you!” There
was a sign sticking
up out of the flooded waters,
where we would normally sit, when we visited the beach. “The first one to the sign
wins!”
Being the second oldest
of the group and very athletic, I was the first
to reach the sign. Knowing
that the sign was no taller
than I, when I reached
it, I wearily stepped down. I hadn’t realized that the water had washed away the sand that surrounded the sign, and I found
myself way over my head in the murky water that had now filled
my lungs and taken my breath
away.
It’s true what they say, you’re third time down is the last time. And on my second trip up, I could see my mother
sitting on the beach watching. There was no panic in her facial
expression at all. But I knew I was in big trouble. After
my third time down,
my life flashed before my eyes, and a calm come over me just as
fast. I was no longer afraid.
I saw Jesus standing before
me. His arms were outstretched and inviting. There was an angel on each
side of him; they were kneeling as if in prayer, as they
gazed at Him, with adoring eyes.
Then boom, the vision and all the comfort was gone!
The panic did not return
though; just a lot of commotion. My older cousin had pulled me from the water. I wasn’t unconscious and very much aware of what just happened.
When I think back
to that day in Ohio , and how fast my life passed before me, it
was like living every
moment that ever happened to me, at once.
It wasn't linear, like living one day after the other. But like rolled in a ball, and melted
together as one experience. The encounter
instilled the belief
that the person
I am today is a consequence of the person
I was, as well as the person I will be; one
with my future and my past. Like the water. No beginning; no end.
And on the third day of May,
in 2010, as I stood
on the white crystal
beach in Pensacola , Florida , I was
stunned at the dead
sea life that was already
washing up from the Deepwater Horizon explosion that took place on April 20th. It was cloudy on that Sunday afternoon. And a blanket of sadness seemed to cling like the grey
clouds in the air. Five days later I would find myself cutting my hair and donating it for
hair booms. The last time I
would ever swim in the Gulf of Mexico would be Memorial
Day Weekend, at the annual Gay & Lesbian Pride celebration on the beach.
And by June 4th, not even a week later, Sam Champion would be reporting
for ABC’s Good Morning America, when the tar balls began washing
up out of the Gulf. There will be no mistaking
the oiled sand balls. It would be twenty
days later when the heavy black crude would engulf my
soul, right along with the entire white
crystal coastline and every
living creature in its way. Have you ever heard a dolphin
cry?
The Emotional Mortality of an Oil Disaster
June 23, 2010 is when the heavy oil hit Pensacola Beach . I did everything I could to avoid the island. The sadness was more than what my heart could bear.
Entire pods of dolphins
were crying out. You could see and hear them from the shoreline. Never before had I felt so useless,
and for the first time, I understood why someone would want to take their own
life. A charter boat captain
named Allan Cruise
shot himself on his
boat that week. I like to believe
that God forgave him for that one, because I knew God had to be crying too, and Heaven was
about to fall from the sky.
Tropical Storm Alex
lingered in the Gulf and was not only expected to become a hurricane, but it also threatened to delay capping
the leaking well head for at least fourteen days. There was nothing anyone
could do to improve
the situation. We were all helpless. All we could
do was watch our world disappear.
Two days after the heavy oil hit, hundreds of people
gathered on Pensacola Beach and protested offshore
drilling, by joining hands along the shoreline. The very first “Hands Across
the Sand” protest was earlier in the year,
in February, before the oil
disaster. It was started
in the State of Florida , due to the threat of drilling just off shore of the sunshine state.
But thanks to the
Deepwater Horizon incident,
Hands Across the Sand went viral on June 26, through
out the world. And for the first time, since June 4,
I wiped away the tears
from my cheeks and went to the beach to make a stand
in the sand.
I was so scared that I would break
down again and start crying.
I actually had to talk myself strong and dissociate before I arrived that morning. I didn’t know what to expect, which helped my mind focus
on other things,
other than the sadness
that consumed my heart. It was my first protest,
and I was clueless as to whether the beach would be open or not. After all, it had only been two days ago since
I had viewed thick oil splattered through out my TV set. Where did it go? At the time
I didn’t know. Nor did I care to stick around and find out.
The odor was ungodly that day. The smell of crude hung heavy in the air. While we were protesting, my friend Ginger
bent down to pick up a shell and was splashed
by a wave. There was oil
dispersant stuck to her key chain and small chunks
were found in the pockets of her shorts.
As I spied
children playing in the toxic water, I couldn't help but wonder what were these
parents thinking? There was a lady with two darling little girls playing
in the water just in front of us. I was close enough that I could
stick my foot out and kick her in the butt.
But she wasn’t the only one eye-balling her children from the safety of the shore.
There’s eight hundred
people standing behind
you joining hands, there’s
an oil skimmer no further
out than the end of the pier, and two bulldozers are on the beach as well.
It was more than evident
that the oil was there, but
apparently it wasn’t going to stop the people from enjoying their vacations. Suddenly, I found
myself more worried
about my anger, than the anguish
in my heart.
Unlike the dream in 1998,
when I told people the water
was safe and invited them to join me, I found myself
creating short little YouTube
videos that demonstrated just the opposite. I had always followed
my visions to the letter,
but I just couldn’t in good conscience do it this time. BP poisoned the water with deadly Corexit, as well as the toxic oil. And children
were literally playing in the stuff.
YouTube was
my way of handling the frustration and releasing the deep sadness I felt in my
heart. And that is how WoMenHead101
came to be. Wo-Men Head was actually a code name given to me by an ex-girlfriend, in the mid ‘90s.
When I relocated from Central Ohio to the Bible
belt, I began using the name when selling prayer sticks.
So as the salt life became
the crude life, Wo-Men Head went from artist to accidental activist. The original logo changed
from an angel, hawk and owl, to a black shadow
image of Celia and I standing on the beach,
with me holding two fingers up as a gesture of peace.
Other changes included
withdrawing from friends
and family, especially those from up North. I used to jab fun at them up
there, because of the beautiful warm and sunny weather we seemed
to enjoy endlessly
here in Florida . And you know I was the
envy of them all, after sending everyone
photos, shells and sand
from the beach, especially in the winter time. I use to call
friends and family once a week and rub it in.
I was quite the jolly soul back then. But now, I lived in a waste land. And their questions made salt water fall from
my eyes.
Three of my closest friends
left Pensacola after the oil
spill. And making friends
down this way had not been easy.
Losing three in one year wasn’t too funny
either. It wouldn’t
be until a year later that I would realize that I had lost that part of me that loved to clown around.
Will the Wolf Survive?
Beach businesses were hurting; there
was no denying it. The island looked less alive on Independence Day than on a warm Sunday in January. Yet it was still evident
that people were visiting the beaches and swimming in the water
just by looking
at the wooden walk-outs
that joined the beach with the smaller parking lots to the East of the main (Casino) beach. There were tar
ball stained footprints everywhere! Including those
of a child.
There were even signs posted,
by the Escambia County
Health Department, in the parking
lots that put people on Notice
that the beach had been impacted by the Deepwater Horizon incident. In short,
the signs said avoid wading,
swimming, or entering the water and to avoid contact with oil and oily material, especially children
and pregnant women.
But apparently no one
cared.
Then just sixteen days after heavy oil washed up on
Pensacola Beach, on Friday morning, July 9th, I about fell over watching WEAR
Channel 3.
“The Blue Angels
Beach Air Show begins in about
an hour, and the Blues will be taking over the skies
this afternoon around two, and Jared Willets and Meteorologist,
Christian Garman are out there
on Pensacola Beach soaking up the
sun and enjoying
a beautiful day,” squawked the newscaster
in the studio.
The cameras pan to Jared
and Christian standing
on the beach, “I'll tell ya, it is a
beautiful day but it is a bit - now I’m not a
weather man, but it’s hot!”
Yeah, It’s hot, yeah, and not hard to soak up the sun right now. The huge upside
is there’s not a cloud
in the sky . . .” declared the meteorologist.
“High show,” brags
Jared Willets like an excited
little boy. “Yeah, yeah, it’s gonna be the high show unless there’s
a dramatic change. And there’s not going to be. But it’s very high.
Ninety degrees now in Pensacola . That’s
the new number
just in. The good news is at Pensacola Beach
is not quite as hot, but, but,
very warm.”
“That’s true, and even better
news is the over,” as Willets
stumbled through the words, “the water will be open for swimming on two occasions .. .”
“Yeah,” added Garman,
as he wagged his tail like puppy that just pleased his master.
I couldn’t believe
the local news station was advocating
for people to come to the beach
and go swimming. Willits was wearing a white shirt,
and Garman was wearing an off white shirt, and the sand in the background was darker than either one of
them.
The following day was the Official Annual
Blue Angels Air Show. Apparently BP kicked
in some advertising money for the
area, and what we thought
would be a perfect weekend
for the locals to enjoy the show for once, was just as scary as the oil spill itself. People came from everywhere! It was the biggest turn out
we had ever seen! Celia and I decided to bypass the slow
crawl traffic and drive to Navarre to get onto the island.
The only BP workers
seen that day were hidden
on the Santa Rosa County
side of the beach, far from tourist eyes.
It had been rumored twice
that week that BP workers were told to only look busy. And as we drove
past a large crew,
I concluded it had to be true. One person actually
was kicking sand up in the air. So we pulled
off the road and began video
taping. As we shot our video, one worker kept walking in circles,
while another simply stood there the entire
time doing absolutely nothing, and another was scratching his ass and then bent over
and began staring at the sand. These three people
stood within fifty feet of each other and were observed
for a good two minutes or more.
Celia broke out in a rash, after about twenty
minutes on the beach that day, and we left the island immediately. When we arrived home,
she showered and the rash disappeared. We were left with the most logical
assumption that in had to be something
in the air, or something toxic she had touched on the beach.
I was a cigarette smoker at the time, and seemed to be totally unaffected by the environment. But I’ve never
been allergic to poison ivy either. We’re all different, and people seemed to react a
little differently to the chemicals that became part of the atmosphere along the coast.
Some would die from chemical exposure, before a year would even pass.
Hear No Evil,
See No Evil, Speak No Evil
Wikipedia actually has a
page dedicated to, “Denial.” The simple definition of denial
is the disbelief in the existence or
reality of a thing
(like oil). Kind of reminds
me of that Shaggy song, where he got caught butt naked, banging
the girl next door, on the bathroom
floor. But he continues to stick to his
story, by constantly repeating, “It wasn’t me,” to his girlfriend,
who caught him red handed.
A second type of denial is minimization, where one might admit a fact, but deny the seriousness. The third is a kind of denial
where the subject
admits both the fact and seriousness of a given
situation, but denies
the responsibility, called projection. Thus, denial is a negative
characteristic.
Addicts are a consequence of denial. It plays an important role in recovery, via the twelve-step program. And the American Heart Association blames
the delayed treatment
of heart attacks on denial. Furthermore, the first of Elisabeth
Kubler-Ross’s five stages
of grieving is denial; then anger,
bargaining, depression and finally acceptance. So you see, even victims are not immune
to the disease of denial.
I know, because I
wanted to believe the oil was gone too.
The majority of the Pensacola population became victims of denial,
when they began supporting BP’s false allegations regarding the impact the oil was having on the environment. It was like one day I woke up, and I found myself on the wrong end of
the gun. Trolls
began to attack my character and the content of the videos that I was presenting. The assaults came from faceless YouTube channels dedicated to planting seeds of doubt to
anyone watching the truth unfold.
I soon found myself, one of
two YouTubers left representing Pensacola .
Gregg Hall, a.k.a.
“pcolagregg”, became quite popular,
after video taping the Gulf water boiling
at the shoreline, back in June.
Whereas I would take a creative approach
by mixing music and
news once a week,
Gregg was out there everyday. He uploaded his video directly from his cell phone, and he wasn’t afraid to dig in the sand and expose
himself to the toxic oil, introducing
it once again into the air. I use to hate watching
his videos, because I too wanted
to buy into the denial.
Plus, it made my
stomach turn when I would see the black goo Gregg
uncovered. It was something
I couldn’t get use to seeing.
Still, the Deepwater Horizon
well was capped
on July 15th, 2010. BP was dumping
so much Corexit into the water, the media
and the public were scratching their heads asking,
“Where is the oil?"
BP responded with, “It’s safe to eat the seafood
too!” It would be a month before area fishermen began to speak out in regards to recovering oil in Pensacola Bay . On August
29, Kimberly Blair of the Pensacola New Journal reported, ““We were recovering it in a boat . . . scooping it up out of the sand and
dumping it into bags. They’re
just trying to keep it quiet. Out of
sight, out of mind,” said a commercial fisherman who asked not
to be identified, because he was working
for BP in the cleanup and feared losing
his job.” And there were photos to back
his words up.
The oil was in the bay including
along Bayfront Parkway ,
Pensacola Pass, Big Lagoon,
Old River to Perdido Bay , Santa
Rosa Sound, and near shore in the Gulf of Mexico . And at
that time, BP reported that at least 175,000
million gallons of dispersants had been used; but scientists doubted BP and doubled that number. It was rumored
that low flying
planes were still dumping
dispersant in the bay under the cover of night. In addition, beach residents were finding traces
of oil and other chemicals in their blood, including the relentless Gregg Hall.
If it wasn’t
for Gregg Hall, we would still have thick sheets of oil buried underneath the tainted sand of what’s
left of our beaches. Gregg pretty much forced BP into reversing
itself a second time in a two day period.
On September 1, Kimberly Blair was on the front page of the
News Journal once again telling readers
that BP couldn’t dig more than six inches deep into
the sand. But nobody knew who, why or what dictated the stupidity of such a law.
Not even Buck Lee, Director
of the Santa Rosa Island Authority. “We want to find out who the person is that
said no,” defended Lee.
It wasn’t until two days later when WEAR TV presented
the public with the lame excuse that digging anymore
than six inches into the sand was a violation of the National
Historic Preservation Act,
stating that only an archeologist could dig further. I found this to be hilarious considering people go to the beach
all the time to dig and play in the sand. I’m sure it would
be one of the top two answers
on Family Feud’s,
“What do people do when they go to the beach?”
Not to mention,
Celia and I both witnessed
the beach being refurbished, after we had moved here in 2002. They stuck a
boat out in the Gulf about a couple hundred
yards out with a
long hose. It sucked sand up from the sea floor and shot it up
onto the beach. The beach was refurbished before Hurricane Ivan (2004) and again afterwards. The sand on Pensacola Beach
gets whipped up every time a good storm comes
through the Gulf. Never in
the entire time I have lived here has anybody said, “You can’t dig more than six inches
on the sand.”
On September 5, I decided to challenge the insanity of such
a notion. So Celia and I took our camera
and we dug a hole six
inches deep or more to put up an umbrella
in the sand. You could hear the wind in the air when we panned
the beach and showed how other people
were breaking the law by digging in the
sand to secure
their umbrellas too. One couple appeared to be sneaking off the beach with a bucket and shovel. “How dare
they!” I joked.
But on September 20, when a
good friend came to visit, it
wasn’t so funny anymore. Carol
had relocated to the Tampa
area, right before the Deepwater Horizon blew. She asked about the
beach, so we took her out and decided to dig for oil this time.
We didn’t have to dig deep, and we didn’t
even have to dig on the
shoreline. We were up by the dunes.
It wasn’t thick oil, like Gregg showed on the western side of the island. It was more like
an oil residue. It smelled
awful. We buried
it back right away. But now
the sand was mixed, and my throat
became sore. And it
stayed that way for few days or so afterwards.
From that moment on, all I could
think about was the
children. There was no doubt in my mind that the beach was not a safe place
for children to be playing.
I never thought
I’d say this, but it really
sucked that the beach looked
so beautiful; even the
water appeared to be clean and so inviting. But it was all just a
facade. Even if you couldn’t
see oil, it didn’t mean that there wasn’t any Corexit or some other highly
toxic dispersant in the sand. It
was all mixed together. Yet, all of those
tourists were encouraged to come
down and play in the Gulf of Mexico .
The Dilemma of Lisa Nelson
Lisa Nelson was a
massage therapist, who lived and worked in Orange Beach , Alabama (approximately thirty miles from downtown Pensacola ). During
a November 7 (2010) YouTube interview, with Jerry Cope, Lisa said she was out on
the beach on the 22nd
of September to see the Harvest Moon. When she returned home that night,
she said she had a major
attack on her throat and head. She said it felt like knives were sticking in her throat
and her throat
closed up. It was obvious during the interview that she had trouble breathing. Her voice was raspy, and her face and neck were swollen three
times the normal size.
She had bruising all over
her chest, along her
diaphragm, and on her sides.
The doctors were clueless when it came to treating
Lisa’s symptoms. Lisa was convinced that BP was spraying Corexit along the coast that evening, while people were out on the beach, admiring the moon. She went to the doctor
five times, before the November 7 interview. Lisa stated that they had her
on enough Prednisone to kill a horse;
she had two shots; and had
been on four different kinds
of antibiotics. Although
nothing seemed to help Lisa heal, her doctor
insisted that the southerly
wind off of the Gulf had nothing
to do with Lisa’s symptoms.
The doctor believed it was a type of pneumonia, because three other individuals he had seen the morning after the full moon,
had symptoms just as Lisa had. “It’s a
bug going around she told Lisa.”
From that point on, Lisa was pushed
from one doctor to
another. Steroids seemed
to be the only answer
the doctors had for
her. But they only provided
temporary relief, if any at all. Lisa passed away on March 7, 2011. Lisa’s death shared headlines with several dolphins washing
up dead along the Mississippi and Alabama coast.
The Pope, The Queen & The Economy
On July 30, Kenneth
Feinberg told a crowd of Gulf Coast residents
on Orange Beach
that he was going to simplify
the claims process, by eliminating the extra paperwork (that BP continually used as an excuse not to appropriate funds). Feinberg also promised
that claims would be paid within three weeks. On September 16, not only had BP continued to ignore
the oil buried on the beach, but Feinberg fell short on his
promises as well. Only twenty-two percent of claims had
been paid, as reported by the Pensacola News Journal.
As I watched
the Queen of England rubbing
elbows with the Pope on the evening news that very same night,
the ABC anchor never
once mentioned how British Petroleum
(BP) contributed to the lack of employment our nation was facing, as she tackled the topic of the National
Economy. I was livid!
How is it we allow
a British company to contribute to the destruction of the economy of this nation, when it was that very same empire
that prompted America to free herself
from the tyranny
of the royals, known as the Revolutionary War?
By all rights,
British Petroleum shouldn’t
even be in business anymore. The entire coast
line between Louisiana and Northwest Florida should
have been evacuated in 2010. There
are thousands of Lori Nelson’s out there.
Every dime of profit BP makes belongs
to the people of the Gulf Coast and no one else. Not the CEO, not the Chairman, the Board
of Trustees, or any other BP
executive. Needless to say, it was never their oil to begin with. It wasn’t
the shores of England
that were splattered dead and black, like a war zone.
In Pensacola , I began to see new faces standing
at busy intersections, with small simple
signs saying, "Anything will help." I
was seeing women too; not just men anymore. I saw an electrician in my
neighborhood one day, with a sign that said,
“I’m Trying To Expand & Grow Not Stay High Or Glow. Homeless
& Unemployed Electrician With Tools!!! Need Day Work But
Anything Helps.”
I had even seen a priest holding
a sign that said, “Help Needed - Starving Families;” the other side read, “Feed the
Poor.” I stopped and talked to him. He told me he was used to
seeing sixteen or so people
at the first of the month in need of some
sort of assistance, but now they were coming mid-month as well, and the number of people had increased to eighty-five.
You know, when you see a priest
and an electrician, with a business
card and tools standing under the hot Florida sun, surrounded by concrete, black pavement, and gleaming metal containers spewing exhaust fog everywhere looking
for help, then there’s a problem.
And there was no denying
that BP had contributed greatly to the unemployment in the area.
Escambia County (Pensacola ) ranked
the highest in unemployment
throughout the Sunshine State .
The majority of the BP clean-up crew was from out-of-state.
What made matters
even worse was an eighteen
year old Hooters Girl getting paid $20,000 with the promise
of three more payments by BP, while
business owners were calling it quits due to the lack of business
and without any compensation at all by BP. The Hooters
girl is the daughter of a
close friend of mine. She only worked at Hooters
four months prior to the oil spill. Her
friend and sister-in-law, a year or two older,
had only worked
at Hooters three months
prior to the spill and received approximately forty-five to sixty thousand dollars;
she got boob job with her money. Go figure.
Two other women
working at an Applebee's, on Nine Mile
Rd , in North Pensacola , made claims with BP and were paid too. They do not own any
property on the beach. They lived nowhere
near the beach, and their place of employment was approximately thirty
miles north of the beach. But they got paid, while
doors closed for those
who truly needed the money. And that’s your twenty-one percent
of claims paid, since
Feinberg had taken over the claims process.
Truth and Consequences
Being a minority
isn’t easy by any means.
Celia wasn’t crazy about
participating in the videos we shot of the beach.
She wanted to deny the oil was there along with everyone else. But I kept after her, as if I was trying to convince myself.
I relied on her
to keep me grounded, and my imagination in check. Plus, including Celia in the videos seemed to keep the trolls
away. A second set of eyes gave our presentation more credibility.
Still, when everybody
wants you to shut up, they tend to
sling crap at you. One day when Celia and I were crossing over to
the island, the guy at the
toll booth called me “Injun
Joe,” (Injun Joe was a character in
the Adventures of Tom Sawyer; he was an Indian who was portrayed as evil) and
he made a couple other smart
Alec remarks, before
he allowed us to cross the toll booth. And twice
I’m sure we were followed, while we were on the island.
By mid October
BP let their guard down and began to tackle
the buried oil on the beach. Considering it was a step in the
right direction, I let my guard down as well. They made quite
a show of it. There was heavy equipment everywhere. And tourist were far and few in between during the fall and winter months.
On the morning
of October 22,
on my way to work,
I felt compelled to do a video about why I felt dedicated to do the videos. I didn’t want to
be at war with my community. I wanted to tell
my story. I edited the video that evening when I got home,
and posted it the next morning
on YouTube. My video not only
explained why I continued to post videos of the beach, but it
gave props to Gregg Hall and a handful of other people
I knew of that supported the cause. The same day I posted
the video, Gregg Hall decided to call it quits. He deleted his YouTube
channel completely, as well as his facebook
page. I sometimes wondered if he would have seen my video first, maybe he would have never erased all that history
regarding the oil spill. It was such a loss.
Word was that Gregg was tired of the harassment. I found out a week or so later that he had lost his job, as well as his truck. Southern
men in this area have a hard on for their pretty white pick-up trucks. Needless
to say, Gregg hit his breaking
point. I had been threatened a couple of times
on YouTube, and I
figured with Gregg putting six times more the
video out there
than I, he probably received
at least three times the amount of threats as I did, if not more. And truth be told,
when you’re faced with negative
circumstances day after day, it works on your nerves, regardless of who you are. Gregg lived on the beach and had to
deal with oil in his front yard daily. Not to
mention the health issues he had to confront as well. On October 26, Gregg started a new YouTube
channel, called True Reporting. But he never did another
video regarding the oil on Pensacola Beach ,
after November 30th.
My employer had been throwing
threats my way since the first of August. I guess that’s
when they decided
I wasn’t good for
business anymore. On November
15th, I lost my job.
I was working for a real estate company,
as a rental property inspector.
I was glad when they cut me loose.
I had become tired of fighting
endless faces of ignorance and greed. I couldn’t say that I lost
my job, because of the oil spill,
but I soon found out that
WoMenHead101 was going to keep me out of the real estate profession, as long as I kept producing videos showing the oil on the
beach, and toxic
dispersants, like Corexit,
in the water. I may not
have been using my real name on YouTube, but my face apparently made its rounds
within the community.
Still, I had come this far, and someone had to speak and
represent those who couldn’t represent
themselves. And throughout the rest of the month,
I shot video and told the story that no one else wanted to.
Thousands of tar balls began washing up out of the
Gulf along Pensacola Beach . It was rumored
that there were tar
balls as big as my feet washing
in on Johnson’s Beach, approximately eleven miles away.
It cost eight dollars
to get onto Johnson’s Beach, which
is part of the Gulf Islands National
Seashore, in Perdido Key. It was littered with so many tar balls
that it made it hard not to step on one. I was not surprised to see families playing in the sand and water. Celia and I had gotten pretty
used to the stupidity by this point in the game. But I was amazed at how someone would want to pay eight dollars to play in that
brown sticky stuff that looked like dog feces, when they could have gone swimming elsewhere
for free.
Thousands of man-o-wars began to wash up later in the month of November, for the second
time since the spill. I had photos
of the creatures before the oil
spill hit, and when I went to match them with
the man-o-wars that were washing
up, they looked
sickly in comparison. And there seemed
to be an awful lot of black where
there should have been blue.
In the eight years I had lived
here, I had never seen so many jelly fish and man-o-wars wash up on the
beach like I did that fall.
The last video Celia and I put out, for 2010, was on
November 21. Like Gregg, I was ready
for a break. It was the
holiday season. The season of love, and peace on Earth and goodwill towards man and all those cozy emotions
that were missing in my life; yet very much needed.
Celia and I began arguing
half the time when we went out to
do the oil videos anyway.
“What’s that smell
like to you?” I’d
ask.
"I don't know?
Exhaust fumes from one of the boats out there I guess."
"What boat?" I asked.
"I don't know?
There's a boat way out there," Celia argued.
"I don't see a boat. What are you talking about?"
"I don't know, but I know there's a boat out
there somewhere!"
"You know, you don't have to get pissed off with
me Celia! I'm not the one who spilled
oil all over the freaking beach! If you
want to get mad at somebody, get mad at BP and tell it like it is! It smells like oil!"
"Get that camera off me now!" Celia snapped back.
After a while, you begin to question yourself. Am I being obsessive over this oil spill or
what? The only support I found was in a
handful of YouTube comments that supporters posted in response to our
videos. At the time, I truly believed
that I wasn't going to do anymore videos of the beach again. Plus, BP was going to clean the oil up. "They said so."
It wasn’t until the holidays
that I realized how depressed
I had become. I found myself
wanting to go back to Ohio . I missed
my family and friends. And I knew Celia did too. She had three grandchildren now. The third just came to us in October.
But the Northern wind reminded me of how cold it can get up there.
And I chased away the thought
with a shiver.
“How would you
feel about moving to Tennessee ?” I suggested.
“It snows up there too. Why can’t we just go back to
Ohio ?” Celia
begged, yet adding, “I don’t want move. I like my job,
and I like the people
I work with.”
And that’s exactly
how it feels when you become unsure of
yourself. It was like being
pulled into two different directions. Should I stay or should I go? Is that crude I smell
coming off the water, or is it fumes from some far away ship?
Do I have the flu? Or
is my body reacting to the oil and dispersants in my blood?
Is it safe to live here anymore? Am I crazy?
Did the toxic
air eat away at my brain cells? Maybe cigarettes saved me, and the air took
away everyone else’s
intelligence? Maybe I’m not crazy
after all - they are!
TO READ THE REST OF THE STORY PURCHASE A COPY OF THE BOOK at:
Hawseys Book Index, Pensacola – www.hawseybookindex.com
Also available on Amazon.com and other major book distributors.
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