I have received the above photo from a brother HP who
thought I'd like it, and he was totally correct. It shows a porter's hand
opening the valve on a gas cylinder. The cylinder is F-size, about four feet
long and weighing thirty pounds or so; and it contains pure oxygen. My guess is
that it on a static installation for use in a ward, clinic or other department.
Some large hospitals have a mains supply of some medical gases. They are piped
all over the site from a large storage facility in the industrial block; the
JRH was one of them. Smaller hospitals usually have their own departmental static
supply and the cylinders have therefore to be changed regularly by we, the
porters. Changing the cylinders is not difficult and we can learn it in a few
minutes; but, like all portering skills, it takes longer to perfect. The
regulator has a washer on it called a bodox seal and you have to be careful it
doesn't stick to the cylinder valve. Once there it will be taken away with the
empty cylinder. Many have been lost that way and a regulator without a bodox
will just leak so much it is useless. As it is, very few seals are perfect, so
don't worry if it makes a very slight hissing sound. If you fiddle with it a
bit the hiss usually goes away. If it doesn't and the device is not in use,
shut the valve. When you open the valve you should hear the gas flow into the
regulator and even feel it vibrate. It's a very satisfying ASMR feeling
actually. We used to crack the valve briefly before attaching it to blow out
the dust and excess lubrication oil, but this was not common practice. The
regulator has on it a pressure gauge that tells you how much gas is in the
cylinder. Some of them also have a flowmeter, but not all, especially on
portables and vehicle supply because they get broken easily. I knew an old
senior who boasted he could read the pressure in a cylinder just by its weight.
It's true that compressed gas does weigh something, but I didn't believe him;
or at least I tried it and it didn't work. What's interesting about this photo
is the porter is using a very old type of gas spanner, a big cast iron one that
also has a built in lever for twisting very stiff attachment bolts. It has two
heads, for F and G-size valves. They're a bit too heavy to carry around and so
I only went and picked one up from the lodge as and when required. Thanks very
much to my HPing online contact for this little taste of cylindrical nostalgia.
Monday, 9 February 2026
Monday, 2 February 2026
Hospice Exorcist
This article is
adapted from one posted on HPANWO Voice.
Hospitals are some of the most likely places to be haunted. Parapsychologists often say this is because the huge amount of fear, pain and death within their walls generates a psychic energetic atmosphere more conducive to ghosts. I've covered this possibility many times over the years, inspired by my own twenty-three years of service as a hospital porter, see the links below. Over the years there have been many news stories that have proved my point, but this latest one really takes the biscuit. Staff at a hospice inNorwich
have been so troubled by ghostly phenomena that they have arranged to have the
building exorcised. A hospice is a hospital that provides palliative care,
treatment for those who are terminally ill; painkillers, other procedures to
ease symptoms and generate a calm and caring environment. This does not include
euthanasia in my country. The Priscilla Bacon Lodge is part of the Norfolk
Community Health and Care NHS Trust and so is a serious mainstream public
institution. Exorcism is the spiritual practice of healing a person or place
said to be possessed by a malevolent supernatural entity. It was popularized by
the famous 1973 horror movie The Exorcist.
Management at the hospice say there are concerns about "paranormal
incidents" especially regular sighting of a young girl in a red dress who
seems to be a phantom. According to leaked emails, Priscilla Bacon Lodge has
been writing to the local bishop asking for advice and help from a
"deliverance" team. The hospice's chaplain will join them in carrying
out a blessing of the building to expel whatever darkness lurks within. Source:
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/nhs-exorcist-hospice-ghosts-b1268691.html.
This will certainly not be as dramatic as the film. Hopefully no spinning heads
or projectile vomiting. I hope it works. The cause of all this paranormal
activity could be nothing to do with the building itself, but its location. It
was erected on the site of a children's hospital which was demolished and its
facilities moved to a new campus. No wonder the ghost seen there is of a child.
What really surprises me, knowing how the NHS works from the inside, is how the
management are acting openly and straightforwardly on this very unusual matter.
I'm truly surprised they would risk it. I can't imagine any of the office
wallahs who paths I crossed thinking in those terms. They would just put their
hands over their ears and sack the person who brought the matter to their
attention. Sadly, as regular readers will know, in today's healthcare world a
service provider can be discharged for so much as breathing at the wrong
volume; and the higher up the hierarchy you are, of course, the easier it is to
get rid of you. I definitely never reported any ghosts to my bosses, and would
probably not have done even if I'd seen any. The fact that the admin at the Priscilla
Bacon Lodge are risking that fate means that something serious and immediate
must be going on. The paranormal unrest must be considerable. When the media asked
further questions about what staff and patients had witnessed the trust declined
to comment. Finally, if HPWA readers are at all interested in palliative
medicine and its spooky elements then I definitely recommend "Hospice
Nurse Julie" on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@hospicenursejulie.
See here for more information: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/01/ghost-of-hp.html.
And: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2021/12/hospital-pm-scares.html.
Hospitals are some of the most likely places to be haunted. Parapsychologists often say this is because the huge amount of fear, pain and death within their walls generates a psychic energetic atmosphere more conducive to ghosts. I've covered this possibility many times over the years, inspired by my own twenty-three years of service as a hospital porter, see the links below. Over the years there have been many news stories that have proved my point, but this latest one really takes the biscuit. Staff at a hospice in
See here for more information: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/01/ghost-of-hp.html.
And: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2021/12/hospital-pm-scares.html.
Friday, 30 January 2026
Twopence a Bag
Last week on The Gas Spanner I had a special feature to mark
my fourteenth "sackiversary", fourteen years since I was thrown out
of the Hospital Portering Service. In the show I brought up the strange
experience of a song running over and over in my head as I walked up to the
hospital on my final day as a serving OxRad porter. The song on a continuous loop in
my mental playlist was Feed The Birds,
from the musical Mary Poppins. This
is a famous 1964 Disney film that skilfully and stylishly mixes live action
with animation. It has been adapted into books, stage shows and radio plays
etc. It tells the story of two London schoolchildren, Jane and Michael, who
have parents who are emotionally neglectful. One day a new nanny comes to look
after them and it turns out she is a benign supernatural being with magical
powers, played by Julie Andrews. One day Mary Poppins sings the children a
lullaby about an old lady who sells birdseed outside St
Paul 's Cathedral and the following day, when the
children's father takes the children to open an account at the Bank of England,
they see her. Here is the song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHrRxQVUFN4.
Their father, Mr Banks, is scornful about her and insists that the children
take the twopence they were going to buy the birdfeed with and instead deposit
it in their new bank accounts. The bankers join him in trying to persuade them
and they sing this song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxyB29bDbBA.
The children are therefore faced with a choice, to spend their money on
something spiritual or on something materialistic. The children decide to stand
by the inspiration they received from Mary Poppins. That is essentially an act
of faith. I felt that same self-assurance. I describe my experience in detail
in the Spanner show and its accompanying article, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/01/thirteen-years-on.html
and: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2026/01/the-gas-spanner-programme-145_18.html.
Literally a few hours later, as I was walking to work the
following morning. I saw something lying on the ground, just on the pavement in
front of me. I picked it up; it was a two pence piece, see the illustration
above; I show both faces of the coin. This felt connected and symbolic. I occasionally
find money abandoned like this. People regularly drop coins accidentally and
either fail to notice or can't be bothered to pick them up. These are almost
always coppers or five P's; anything more valuable and people will generally
make the effort to retrieve the lost coinage. A skeptic will, of course, say
what happened was just a coincidence; and, to be fair, I can't completely prove
them wrong, but if you look below at the details in my studies on synchronicity
you'll understand how, in my view, coincidence theory falls short. The number
of times I find coins lying on the ground is maybe once a year or less. There's
about a one-third chance that they are two P's. How likely is it that I should
find two pence lying on the ground just after presenting a radio show about the
"twopence a bag" song and its significance to my life? I'll hear mumblings
from the skeppers about "P-values" and "Bayesian inference",
but nothing really makes sense to me except this was some kind of good omen, a
portent, a subtle nudge from the powers of reality. I've had quite a few of
them related to my sacking. This is not spoon-feeding me; the power wants me to
be independent and exercise my free will, but it is saying: "Don't worry.
I am here. I am watching out for you." Dr Joe Dispenza put it very well in
the film What the Bleep Do We Know?
when he explained how he communicates with this power; call it praying to God
if you like: "https://youtu.be/_G5JilcIaLI?si=Fh7YpDUyHAFpwD_G&t=5311".
I hope my fellow HP's, and indeed anybody else who reads this, finds hope from
what happened to me. I knew I would have to share this with you.
See here for more
information: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2023/07/jackies-synchro.html.
Monday, 26 January 2026
Reprimanded for Writing Stories
Today, not long after my fourteenth "sackiversary",
I've come across a case of attempted dismissal which is possibly even crazier
and unjust than my own. A nurse has been facing discharge and deregistration,
being banned from working as a nurse in the UK
for the rest of her life, for writing stories. The actual charges includes one
in which the author, Kathleen Pugh, "advertised" her literature in
the course of her job and sold her book, a short story anthology called Aristocracy or Not, to other staff
members and patients; she was allegedly observed putting up posters for the
book at her clinic. However I suspect that this is an embellishment; it's more
likely she sold the books to willing patients after getting into a discussion
about the subject with them. I'm an author too, see: https://hpanwo-bb.blogspot.com/2016/08/roswell-rising-is-here.html,
and know that when I bring that subject up, people are often curious and ask me
more about it. I've made a few book sales that way and I don't apologize for
it. Besides, the conclusion of the disciplinary investigation was that the
subject matter of the story itself was their main cause for concern. So they're
not trying to hide it. There is a parallel with this lady's plight in the past
because of Robin Cook the American author who has written dozens of medical
thrillers involving themes of organ snatching, human experimentation,
necrophilia, neurological mind-control, pandemics, murderous and corrupt
medical organizations and many other frightening subjects. Like Kathleen Pugh's
story, Cook's novels contain explicit sex and violence and are intended for a
purely adult readership. He's an extremely influential writer, has had several
of his books turned into films and has inspired other authors like Tess Gerritsen
and Michael Creighton. Yet Dr Robin Cook is also a practicing physician. During
the height of his career, in the 1970's and 80's, there was never any question
that he was a writer on one hand and a doctor on the other and that he could
effectively do both. Nobody was concerned that his fictional settings mirrored
his own medical activities; why? Because they were just stories... Duh! Source:
https://www.oldham-chronicle.co.uk/news-features/8/news-headlines/74799/nurse-and-her-steamy-novel-a-cautionary-tale.
The world has definitely changed. As I've explained with
Robin Cook, a few short years ago it would be unthinkable to persecute a person
through their employment for simply writing fictional stories, but now it's
completely acceptable. The patients who bought Kathleen Pugh's book probably
didn't think twice about complaining about her, if indeed they did. You'd think
that Kathleen Pugh had written a real description of something she herself had
really done and forced the book onto their shelf, deaf to their protests. The
authoritarianism of the modern NHS has crept up on us so slowly that we haven't
even noticed it. We're still "free", technically; but there are so
many strings attached to our freedom and so many hoops to jump through to get
it, that a lot of people will simply give up on it. It's particularly revealing
that this nurse has been slated for an act of artistic creativity; it's almost
punishment for that very act in itself. We're not allowed to be creative. We're
only machines after all, designed to do a job for the state we live in. This is
why it is vital that we defend our rights to be creative and have free
expression in our creations. What I most object to in the media coverage of
this incident is the normalization. It's terrible that the news article
includes the words "a cautionary tale" in its title. It's almost like
it's about a man who goes swimming in a dangerous river or something and drowns.
The risk of persecution by authority for doing nothing wrong is regarded like
that, a morally neutral force of nature; and that it's perfectly reasonable to
warm people not to mess with it. Like Kathleen Pugh I was also once a health
care provider who was stripped of that calling because of activities in my
off-duty life in suspicious circumstances, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/01/thirteen-years-on.html.
I wish her luck with her writing career. And who was it who said: "The
only bad publicity is no publicity"? The source article, even though it
supports the establishment position and is pretty disparaging of her, will
spread her name across the land and hopefully get her a big pile of purchases.
Wednesday, 21 January 2026
Breaking Bad Art Gallery
The "main street", a large corridor that runs
through the public area of hospitals, is often used for purposes auxiliary to
the core medical mission of the institution. At Oxford 's
John Radcliffe, at the main street on Level 2, just inside the JRII main
entrance, there has long been a public art gallery. It is officially called The
Corridor Gallery, although it is in fact just a stretch of wall. The artworks
often have a medical theme, although not always. The artists also decorate
other parts of the unit. One recent exhibition is rather unusual; it appears to
be based on the TV series Breaking Bad.
This American serial has become one of the most popular and highly-acclaimed TV
productions in history. It's a drama that mixes familial relationship and
friendship with the conflict themes of the old Wild West. It centres on a
school chemistry teacher called Walter White who is afflicted by a fatal
disease. He dedicates the end of his life to securing his family's financial security,
but in doing so resorts to organized crime. He uses his knowledge to produce
synthetic narcotics. The paintings are not disturbing, in fact they are quite
benign and even stylish. They are a form of still life. Their tone is what
you'd need to show in a hospital. The artist, Claire Venables, is from Oxford
and she sells prints and cards etc if you're interested, see: https://clairevenables.co.uk. These
photos were taken for me by one of my "men on the inside". As always,
I have protected his identity by sanitizing these images of all metadata, like
I did previously, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2024/12/jumpers-update.html.
I had not heard of Breaking Bad until
I was introduced to it by my friend from Newbury "AnotherBlonde", see: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2021/09/the-secrets-of-newbury-2.html.
Sunday, 11 January 2026
MRI Deaths
Most modern hospitals these days have a magnetic resonance
imaging facility. MRI is an alternative to computed tomography X-ray scanning
and is better in many ways because it does not involve an ionizing radiation
dose and it provides better quality images of some tissues. It works by causing
the nuclear particles of atoms to spin and give off a radio signal that can be
picked up by a special antenna. It's more stressful for the patient though.
MRI's make a loud rattling noise and the patient has to wear earplugs. They
have their whole body inserted into a narrow tubular space inside the machine
which is a bit claustrophobic. MRI scanners are very expensive; each one
costing up to a million pounds. Despite their health benefits, they have their
own dangers. The magnetic field generated by the system is incredibly powerful,
four to five teslas, sometimes more.
This can cause injury if a person has a medical implant or jewellery on. It can
also damage electronics, machinery and clockwork, in a wristwatch for example.
All magnetic objects, metallic primarily, have to be kept away from the
scanner. Sadly there have been some
accidents. I have found two. Michael Colombini was aged just six when he was
taken into the MRI chamber for a scan. When the machine was activated a steel oxygen
cylinder was attracted to the coil and flew across the chamber, striking the
boy's head. Michael, of Croton-on-Hudson , New
York USA ,
was killed. The hospital accepted full responsibility, but the hospital
consists of many different disciplines, including portering. Were some more to
blame than others? Well, the transportation and installation of medical gases
is the job of the porters. It is our duty to make sure the cylinders are moved
safely and attached to their regulators correctly. In an MRI chamber no
cylinder should be left because they are made of metal. Gas comes from a mains
supply via a non-magnetic pipe. So in this instance, it may well be the HP's
fault. However, blame can rarely be assigned to one person. Who trained them?
Were they trained correctly? Is the radiographer supposed to double-check the
chamber before scanning commences etc? However; it was clearly at least partly
a porter's fault. Source: https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/hospital-horror-boy-6-killed-35605165.
In the case of the second accident, a Mr Keith McAllister
entered the chamber after his wife, Adrienne, called for help. This was during
the scan when he was not authorized to do so. The sixty-one year old was
wearing a weight training chain around his neck... God knows why! The magnetic
field dragged him into the machine by this chain causing him lethal injuries.
Source: https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/man-dragged-death-mri-scanner-35601685.
Ironically this happened just two days previously at the Nassau
Open Hospital
on Long Island , New York ;
quite close to the Westchester Medical Centre in Valhalla ,
NY , the one Michael Colombini was at. No
porter can be blamed for that. I'm not sure it's the fault of any staff member.
Mostly likely it was simply misadventure on the part of Mr McAllister. The
relatives of both he and young Michael have my deepest sympathies. Bad things
happen in hospitals, some of the worst things you can imagine. Some of that is
the truthful inevitability of healthcare, other times they are mishaps. It
seems to be standard practice to try and blame HP's as much as possible; as the
saying goes: "shit rolls downhill". We HP's are not blameless angels.
We get things wrong and we even commit evil deeds, but sometimes you simply
have to be fair and admit that the porters are innocent.
See here for background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2017/08/lift-accident-porters-not-to-blame.html.
And: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2024/12/jumpers-update.html.
See here for background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2017/08/lift-accident-porters-not-to-blame.html.
And: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2024/12/jumpers-update.html.
Thursday, 18 December 2025
Bad News
See here for
essential background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2021/11/guess-what.html.
With great regret I am compelled to bring you this unsettling update. I recently got into a conversation with somebody I know online. He is an Englishman calledTroy
who lives in Portugal ;
he is married to a native woman. Although I have never met him, I have been interacting
with him for a long time and consider him to be an honest person. He is calm,
rational, intelligent and friendly. He is a fairly well-known author, publisher
and commentator who keeps a regular and detailed blog. I commented under an
article he wrote about David Fuller, mentioning my feelings of relief that he
was employed as an electrician in the PM suite and was never a porter. My acquaintance
then informed me that he was. This was quite a shock to me; this was never
reported in the media. Troy then
explained how his mother had been a nurse at the one of the Royal Tunbridge
Wells hospitals and knew him. She described him as "extremely odd and
creepy". I have no reason to disbelieve Troy .
Source: https://troysouthgate.substack.com/p/the-beasts-of-tunbridge-wells.
This is of course sad news. I hate to think of a HP committing such horrific
crimes, but I have to remind myself; we HP's are not angels. I have tried to
publish an honest and disinterested assessment of our general moral character
and it does indeed often fall short of what I'd like. I've experienced this
personally, although never quite to the depths David Fuller plumbed; for
example see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2023/12/hps-and-psychos.html
and: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2020/12/oxford-grooming-gang.html.
I regret having to inform MEP&DB&SP's of this uncomfortable fact, but I
have a duty to. David Fuller is serving his sentence at HMP Frankland, a
Category A men's prison. Among the inmates is also Wayne Couzens, see: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2021/07/sarah-everard-update.html.
The gaol is nicknamed "monster mansion" because it houses some of Britain 's
most infamous criminals. We can only hope the less revolting among them offer
David Fuller a "traditional prison welcome".
With great regret I am compelled to bring you this unsettling update. I recently got into a conversation with somebody I know online. He is an Englishman called
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