“Though the Witch knew the Deep Magic, there is a magic deeper still which she did not know. Her knowledge goes back only to the dawn of time. But if she could have looked a little further back… she would have known that when a willing victim who had committed no treachery was killed in a traitor’s stead, the Table would crack and Death itself would start working backward.” - Aslan, C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
Showing posts with label trauma burden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trauma burden. Show all posts

Respiratory Distress Isn’t a Reason to Deny Documentation

 📁 SWANK Dispatch: I Was Too Sick to Stand — But Had to Chase My Own Police Report

🗓️ 20 October 2021

Filed Under: police neglect, asthma crisis, medical discrimination, record access obstruction, procedural cruelty, Grand Turk misconduct, emergency documentation, health crisis retaliation, institutional indifference, safeguarding aftermath


“I couldn’t breathe.
I was discharged early from hospital.
And still I had to walk back and forth across town
to beg for a report about the night that nearly killed me.”

— A Mother With a Life-Threatening Illness and a Folder Full of Excuses


In this letter exchange between Polly Chromatic and Acting Assistant Superintendent Drexel Porter, we witness the physical and procedural toll placed on a mother recovering from a near-fatal asthma attack—who simply asked for a copy of the police report related to the asthma attack emergency at her home on 14 October 2021. Why was a police report made for an asthma attack?


🧾 I. What She Documented

  • She was still very ill, struggling to breathe

  • She had already visited the police station twice, only to be given the wrong email address

  • She attempted to email Inspector Porter using what was provided, but it bounced

  • She found the correct email herself

  • She arranged a third visit to the station, even though she could barely function physically


🫁 II. What This Letter Exposes

  • Bureaucratic carelessness in a time of medical crisis

  • No proactive assistance from officers at the Grand Turk station

  • A systemic culture of misdirection and blame-shifting, where the onus of correction falls on the ill and traumatised

  • A complete lack of trauma-informed care from officers involved in a safeguarding-related incident


🧯 III. SWANK Commentary

This isn’t just about a report.

It’s about a woman who survived a respiratory collapse, only to be expected to perform the administrative follow-up that others should have managed.

She didn’t just have to save her own life.
She had to chase the paperwork that explained why it was nearly taken.



Documented Obsessions