As I've noted several times, if you are a HP or indeed in
any acute healthcare profession, it's likely you will develop an unusual sense
of humour, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/03/rose-cottage-humour.html.
Unfortunately not everybody will understand your sense of humour if they have
not shared your unique experience of such service. This can easily lead to
misunderstandings and offence. You have to be careful whom you share some of
your hospital jokes with. Case in point: I was on a patients' forum a while
ago, one which I won't identify, when somebody was telling the story of their endoscopy
appointment. Endoscopy is a medical technique in which a doctor examines the
inside of a patient's body using a small electronic camera. It is an
alternative to diagnostic surgery. It is far less invasive and can usually be
done in outpatients. It has only been carried out for a couple of decades because
the technology has only recently been invented. The most common kind of
procedure is to insert the camera, called an endoscope, into a body cavity such
as the mouth, anus, vagina, urethra etc. One of the forum members was talking
openly about his anal examination and I wrote as a reply: "I once dated a
woman from endoscopy. She was surprisingly vanilla in bed!" This went down
like a lead balloon. Nobody openly criticized me for it, I received no PM's
from the moderator; but the usual replies and reactions were absent indicating
the social media equivalent of a stony silence. I deleted my comment and things
went back to normal. The joke I had made was one distinctly embedded in
hospital culture. Jokes are funnier when you don't have to explain them, but
maybe I should have just left it on the thread and posted an apology-stroke-explanation
below it. It compares the practices of endoscopy to extreme sexual activity; bondage,
S&M etc. The term "vanilla" was used by one of the characters in
the book Fifty Shades of Grey by EL
James, a bestseller about violent sex. It means normal sex without the
violence... As the late great Frankie Howerd used to say, please yourselves! I
really should have known better, but I can be a bit insensitive at times when
reading other people on forums. Hope readers can avoid my mistake.
Thursday, 9 July 2026
Monday, 6 July 2026
One for the Fesshole
The Fesshole is a social media phenomenon which acts as an
outlet for people to reveal dark secrets and wrongdoings they have committed;
funny not criminal. It is short for "confession hole" and probably
refers to the anonymous opening in a church confessional between where the priest
sits and his parishioner. A friend made me aware of it and some of its content
is hilariously embarrassing; therefore the least I could do is contribute to it
myself, and I have the perfect ingredient. Sometime back in the '90's I was
having a drunken night in with some brother HP's and a few hangers on. It
started in the social club after the 2-10 had finished and ended up in Arthur
Sanctuary House, the main staff accommodation block. One of the revellers was
called Oswald, not his real name. He was not a porter and was not even on the
civilian staff. How he became attached to JRH society was always a bit of a
mystery. He ended up marrying a nurse, but that was years later. Anyway, a nurse's
dress made its appearance... somehow and Oswald put it on. This was for a joke
of course, except he kept it on all night. (He eventually turned out to be
bisexual, leaning heavily on the homo side; and that was not a surprise to
anybody who knew him in those days.) We eventually left ASH and took a raucous
stroll through the hospital grounds. This was relegated to the nearby streets
after security threw us out. I can't quite recall what happened after that
except that at about 3 AM I found
myself wandering home carrying Oswald's stolen nurse's dress.
In those days I lived with my parents shortly after
splitting up with my daughter's mother and when I got home everybody was asleep
at that hour. I can't remember my thought processes, or what passed for them
after about five pints of cider and a dozen vodka shots, but I decided to put
the dress in the laundry basket. I think I just wanted to see what happened if I
did. It took about two days and then my mother called me into the lounge where
she was reclined in her armchair as usual. "Ben, could you come here for a
moment please?" She always addressed me like a head porter summoning me to
the office. "Ben, I found something strange while doing the washing; it
looks like a nurse's uniform. Do you know how it got there?" I shook my
head and replied: "No idea, mum." I was desperately suppressing the
urge to laugh, and she knew it. My mother was disabled by a condition that was
never identified, but it resembled multiple sclerosis and worsened steadily
during her lifetime. As a result she suffered a lot of frustration by not being
able to do much physical activity. By the time she died in 2006 she could
barely walk a dozen steps. I think this was the main reason she was extremely
paranoid, controlling and nosy. She wanted to know every single thing that went
on in the house and in our lives. She continuously criticized everybody else
over everything we did. She once challenged me because she thought I had been
running a tap in the bathroom too hard. She worked this out by listening from
the bottom of the stairs. Her ears were like a bat's. The problem was she
always had absolute conviction in her own conclusions and believed she was incapable
of making a mistake. Once she had decided on something she never changed her
mind. As a result a lot of her judgements were wrong. I found this very bothersome.
I think this was why I decided to plant the nurse's dress in the laundry. I
knew she would find out and her brain would immediately start spinning like a
flywheel to come up with some kind of explanatory model for how this situation
had come about. I wanted some payback and gained a lot of catharsis from it. (This
was for many other reasons to do with my terrible relationship with her.) She
stared at me suspiciously while I struggled to keep a straight face. She
frowned. "Are you sure, Ben?" "A hundred percent, mum." I
responded. There was a long pause in which she glared at me balefully.
"Alright, you can go now." Immediately afterwards I heard her on the
phone talking to Isabel, her unofficial stepmother. I couldn't hear all the words,
but I could guess the gist of the conversation: "A, B or C has happened.
It's all Ben's fault and he is lying about it!" The phone-call lasted
about an hour. I deliberately avoided moving closer to hear the words because
it would have caused me a lot of emotional pain; see here for background: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2023/10/am-i-gate-child.html.
After that my father came home for work and it was his turn on the stretching rack.
There were no raised voices. Arguments between my parents were always calmly one-sided.
My mother accused and attacked, and my father just bowed his head took the
shit. At one point I heard him say: "I really know nothing about this,
Marga!" She didn't believe him. They themselves had a very rocky marriage
involving all kinds of ménage à plusieurs
that I won't describe in detail because it involves more painful childhood
memories. If you're curious, this is a where I have covered some of it
previously: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2019/10/peter-croft-and-ben-emlyn-jones.html.
That was not the end of it. For about three weeks afterwards my mother drove
herself into a frenzy trying to solve The Mystery of the Appearing Nurse's
Dress. At one point I overheard her talking to her friends that she suspected
my father of having an affair with one of the domiciliary nurses who cared for
her. I was tempted at that point to come clean, but my bitterness stopped me.
For most of my life I had resented my parents enormously; my mother for her
malice and my father for his weakness. So I left the outrage to play itself out.
Did I enjoy it? Yes, I had to giggle continuously under the blankets on my bed
so nobody could hear me. Do I feel guilty? Maybe slightly, but not to any great
degree. This all happened about thirty years ago. Eventually the storm blew
over and our family returned to normal. I retrieved the dress from the washing
machine and returned it to Uniform Issue. There you have it! I've confessed!
Not that it makes any difference. My mother and Isabel are dead and my father
never reads the HPWA. Still, I hope you who do so enjoyed this little acknowledgment
of misdemeanour.
See here for more information: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2020/02/humiliation-reply-to-stefan-molyneux.html.
See here for more information: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2020/02/humiliation-reply-to-stefan-molyneux.html.
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
The Weirdest HP Job of All
Almost a week has now passed since the opening of Disclosure Day and so anybody who is
really hardcore about its themes will almost certainly have seen it. See here
for my review without spoilers: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2026/06/disclosure-day-day.html
and with spoilers: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2026/06/disclosure-day-film-review.html.
Therefore I can talk about its content more openly now, but this article is also a
spoiler just in case you don't want it; so feel free to stop reading till after
you've watched the film. The final scene is, of course, full of amazing imagery
and tension. It's hard to analyze everything that happens in those climactic
few minutes, but I was surprised to find it includes a hospital portering
element. What happens while the unscheduled historic TV broadcast is underway
is that a wheelchair arrives in the studio. I can't remember if it is Hugo
himself who pushes it or somebody else; whoever they are, they are the most
unusual HP ever! You see, the wheelchair is covered by what looks like a small oblong
builders' tent. This is unzipped and under that there is a strange dome shaped metal
contraption and when that is moved aside you see it is protecting a tall grey
alien. I'm not an expert on ET medicine, but I got the impression that the
creature is old and in bad health, in fact it might be from the Roswell
incident which would make it at least eighty years old. In the previous scene
outside the TV centre while the viewer's attention is focused on the bad guys
and good guys fighting over the electrical supply, you see a mysterious white
lorry pull up round the back. It turns out that it is ferrying the alien in its
wheelchair. The alien gets to its feet with the help of a built-in hoist and in
the last couple of minutes of the film, it interacts with the people in the
studio. It is incredible that Steven Spielberg's latest summer blockbuster pays
homage to we proud and dignified HP's and even suggests we could play a role in
the most incredible revelation the world has ever seen. If it ever happens for
real, could I please wheel in the alien?
See here for background: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2020/02/ufo-disclosure-portal.html.
See here for background: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2020/02/ufo-disclosure-portal.html.
Saturday, 13 June 2026
Why Do People Hate Me?
Surely I'm not the only one who experiences this? You know
somebody and they truly despise you. Maybe it's for a reason; you've done
something bad to them and they can't forgive you. However, very often it's a
baseless hatred with no motive at all; you've done them no harm at all, and you
might not even know them very well. For me this used to happen all the time. Probably
over half the people I interacted with responded in this way. In my case I know
what the source of that ire was, I just didn't understand it. It very often
arose after that "popping the question" moment, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2022/10/popping-question-responses.html.
Their face turns into a blank stare and they stop talking to me. Very often
they leave the conversation and try to avoid me afterwards. Sometimes they
don't actually "pop the question" to me directly, their behaviour
changes when they hear about my answer through the grapevine. "Have you
heard Ben is proud to be a hospital porter?"... "Oh my God, no! How
could he!? He has no such right!" This loathing can reach truly obsessive
levels. It happens especially online, but I don't know if that's because the
trolls hate me more than other people or just because it's easier and safer to
express feelings over cyberspace. For example, when I got discharged from the
NHS, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/01/thirteen-years-on.html,
one of my trolls created a new social media account, seeing as I had blocked
all his others and he knew I would block this one too, specially so he could
gloat about it. He said: "I hear you've lost your job, Ben. I'd just like
you to know that I'm currently having a champagne breakfast to celebrate."
I always found this vitriol incomprehensible. If I am proud to be a HP what
makes them the injured party in that situation? I've come across a YouTube
channel that is fascinating. It is packed with information that I've never
heard before; needless to say I've subscribed. It's based on the work of the
philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and one of the videos is called Why People Hate You for No Reason- The
Brutal Truth by Friedrich Nietzsche. It is the best attempt I've ever come
across to answer this conundrum.
According to Nietzsche, the negativity is their problem.
It's not about you; it's about their feelings towards themselves. You are
simply the means by which they can see elements of themselves that they
otherwise ignore and hide from. To be a proud and dignified HP has certain
implications; it means that you feel positive about yourself and your
occupation without peer approval or admiration from wider society. Many other
people deep down would like to feel the same way about themselves, but they
can't. They need external validation from their community and they understand
what a precarious position that is. Yet they can't admit it because they lack
introspective awareness; they are what are commonly known as "NPC's",
see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2022/04/ben-emlyn-jones-on-msp-second-series.html
(Programme 337). For this reason the only way they can deal with it is react
with jealousy and hostility towards the proud and dignified HP for making them
feel that way. Another problem is that most people are what Robert Anton Wilson
called "neophobes", afraid of change, taking comfort and feeling
secure in normality and stability. A proud and dignified HP inevitably rocks
the boat. The sad thing is, all people who have advanced human beings as a
species have had to endure the hardship of being resented for forcing their
companions out of that comfort zone. Whether it was the caveman who found a new
and better way of carving stone; or the inventor who thought alternating
current would work better than direct current, see: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2019/07/the-current-war-film-review.html.
Just think what we could achieve if we valued mavericks instead of denouncing
them! Also proud and dignified HP's are, virtually by definition,
self-confident. Those who lack self-confidence may feel envy towards those who
do because, deep down, they suffer from their fear. "They see the world
through the lens of their own wounds", as Nietzsche said. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VoqBUFJvGv0.
This, of course, does not only apply to HP's; anybody can be in this position.
I think my comment under the video says it all: "Well, that
comprehensively solves one of the biggest mysteries of my life!" This
revelation has actually been of some consolation to me. It's also reduced my
own reciprocal feelings of anger towards the ODP's and others who gave me a hard
time, especially "Jack Shaw", see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2023/05/i-lied-to-jack.html.
I've also lost a lot of the arrogance this tension generated, arrogance I never
knew I was expressing beforehand. I now feel more compassionate towards my
aggravating acquaintances.
Monday, 1 June 2026
Happy St Theo's Day 2026!
On behalf of every serving hospital porter, every former
hospital porter, and everybody else who loves, appreciates and supports us,
with all the Pride and Dignity of my Extremely Proud and Dignified Brother and
Sister Porters, I'd like to wish all my friends and readers, a very happy St
Theo's Day.
See here for The Gas Spanner St Theo 2026: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-gas-spanner-programme-163.html.
See here for The Gas Spanner St Theo 2026: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-gas-spanner-programme-163.html.
Monday, 25 May 2026
Where Does This Meme Come From?
I've found a very interesting image. It was on a Facebook
group I've joined that opposes Digital ID. As you can see, it depicts a street
protest in London against the
scheme and in the foreground are a row of NHS servicepeople; two nurses, a
doctor and a paramedic. There is one further character that is distinct because
he is a hospital porter and his back is turned to the viewer. He appears to be
pushing a trolley between the two nurses. In a strange way it, at first glance,
it looks like the porter is giving a speech to the crowd and his NHS colleagues.
The man looks nothing like me, he is slimmer and has a good head of hair;
however, I suspect the meme is based on me. I don't know who made it and they
have not contacted me. These days artistic talent is not necessary to make good
artwork and this was probably created by an artificial intelligence art system.
I'm glad to have provided inspiration for this picture. I do oppose Digital ID
passionately. I have done so since my daughter's school tried to take her
fingerprints, see: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2007/11/this-is-drawing-done-by-my-12-year-old.html.
Since that happened the Big Brother surveillance state has grown. At some NHS
hospitals they are now forcing staff to register their fingerprints and a
scanner like the one at the school is used to clock in and out and even log
tasks.
Monday, 11 May 2026
It's Changed!
My family has recently suffered a very upsetting experience,
my daughter's uncle has died; not my own brother, her mother's brother. He was
seventy-five years old and has been in very poor health for several years, but
he was definitely one of the closest members of my extended family. I reported
on this during the last two episodes of The Gas Spanner, see: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-gas-spanner-programme-159.html
and: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-gas-spanner-programme-160.html.
We called an ambulance for him last Friday week and he was taken to the JRH
Emergency Department. From there he went to the Emergency Assessment Unit and was
put into a side room. I didn't say anything to the family at the time, but I
knew from my experience that at that point the doctors had little hope for his recovery. He was kept comfortable for four days and then he peacefully passed
away. That's all I wish to say about him right now, but I would like to comment
on what it was like to visit the John
Radcliffe Hospital
for the first time in many years. It has totally and utterly changed, mostly
for the worst. The ED has been completely reorganized with the triage area
where the resuscitation room used to be and a new resus near the major side
doors. I don't know why this was done, but I do know that there's a cast iron
rule that anything in the NHS that's not broken always has to be fixed. The
place generally looks far more compact and crowded with less open space. The
waiting room is sealed off from the rest of the unit by heavy duty locked doors,
a system I noticed also during my recent visit to a London
hospital, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/07/uch.html.
I assumed this was just local practice in the capital, but it obviously is
nationwide.
On my second visit to my daughter's uncle on the
Saturday I walked there and entered ED directly from the outside. It has something
strange surrounding the entrance ramp that I've not seen before. It looks to me
like a high security fence, but designed not to look like one, similarly to the
"lorry ramming of peace" barriers you see in major cities that are all
done up with flower pots and artwork. I got the feeling this fence is designed
to have barbed wire on the top of it if needed, but the Oxford University
Hospitals Trust (it's changed its name from Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals Trust)
aren't going to unless it is "politically necessary". Despite that,
the new ED does have the atmosphere of a military camp. The Illustration above very
out-of-date. Inside there was a much denser security presence than there used
to be with a guard visible all the time. One of them recognized me and said
hello. He used to be a porter, but has since been promoted... if you can call
it that. On our first visit, the Friday afternoon, I went to the main hospital
entrance and was greeted by a civilian receptionist who was most unhelpful. She
was clearly doing her best, but seemed unable to locate the patient we asked
for. She made two phone calls and then wrote down a phone number on a scrap of
paper for us to call. This is absurd. The main duty of the receptionist,
whether desk porter or civilian, is to direct visitors to the part of the
hospital they are trying to find. This should be very simple; they are supposed
to have a database of all the patients' locations in front of them; and it used
to take just a few seconds to search and pinpoint the ward or department the
visitor is looking for. What on earth has gone wrong? Ironically the Trust has
spent over a million pounds revamping the entire entrance and main street area
so that it looks like some kind of designer shopping centre/hotel lobby/airport
lounge combination; yet at the same time its basic and necessary practical
aspects have fallen into total dysfunction. Do they think if they simply
shock-and-awe us enough with stained glass panels, polished beach screens and
stripy floor lino we will not notice how downright crappy the service is? My
ex-partner, my daughter's mother, is disabled and can only walk a few dozen
yards so I had to find a wheelchair for her. There were none at all in the
public pool, but luckily I then met a brother porter who recognized me and he
showed me their secret stash in Outpatients. I asked him where the lodge was
these days and he said: "There is no lodge"; that doesn't surprise
me, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2022/08/new-lodge.html.
My brother HP was dressed in the uniform issued by Mitie; it has changed the
traditional light blue shirt to white, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2021/11/the-mitie-hps.html.
To say that I was dissatisfied with my experience at the JRH is such an understatement
I can hardly describe it. I would like to put in a complaint, but where would I
begin? Maybe it's because I've come back after so long that I notice things
people who have been there all this time don't because it's crept up on them
slowly, like the classic frog in a saucepan analogy. Even if I hadn't been visiting
under such tragic circumstances I'd have been dismayed, but I was. All I can do
now is hope and pray I don't have to return there again anytime soon.
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