Electrocutions: How many are too many?
The mortality rate
in Africa is much higher than in America.
While I've reduced some of my recklessness with age and no longer
regularly chase and jump onto moving vehicles (something of a high school
hobby), it was less than a year ago when I permanently scarred my hand by
setting it on fire. Over a matter of
twenty dollars. Still, I assumed that I
was more likely to kick to bucket in Africa to some strange disease or a run in
with gorillas (militant or otherwise).
But no, I've come to the third world to electrocute the shit out of
myself.
I believe that I've
been shocked at least nine times since I've gotten here. That's a lot and just thinking about it makes
my arm tingle. I can blame a few on
faulty wiring, but… well, most other volunteers don't seem to shock themselves
at all. Correlation is not causation,
but this common denominator (me) is worth investigating.
The majority have
been due to computers. There was a
computer in the Peace Corps office in Maroua that got me a couple of times and
I think it happened once in Yaounde's office too. Also pretty sure someone was stalking me with
a particularly deadly external harddrive that zapped me a couple of times. Oh and when they fixed my laptop it managed
to shock me via a screw on the bottom.
We probably shouldn't be counting or we are going to get higher than
nine.
Electrocution is a
very distinct form of pain. It doesn't
hurt like being hit or burned, but it sends a jolt of pure terror through the
body and blasts your system into overdrive with adrenaline. None of these computer attacks were quite
that bad, just the brief shock, jump back, and lingering dull pain causing you
to remember the incident for a couple days.
I hate the lingering bit. Not
only does it remind you of the pain, but, often, of the stupidity.
The shock I deserve
most has to be from the light-switch. It
was faulty and my light kept going out.
Being a self-proclaimed handyman, I set out to fix it myself. I really need to stop doing that in a country
where hospital distances are measured in hours not miles, but it is a hard
habit to kick. Anyway, I managed to zap
myself pretty good with a screwdriver when putting it back together. Normal electricians cut the breaker before
working. I realized my mistake, went to
go cut it and get rubber gloves (sent by my father who understands his stupid
son), but before doing either had a stroke of insight on repairing the problem
and promptly shocked the shit out of myself again. In the end, I did fix that fucking light switch.
The shock that
terrified me the most also came from shitty wiring. In this event I had someone less qualified
than me but a actual paid professional (and from my perspective more
expendable) put my fridge back together.
In rearranging the room back to it's glorious prior luster, I pushed my
Peace Corps issued large metal container beside it. I managed to send a current through the whole
damn thing and the next time I touched it--a final kick with my big toe--I sent
myself flying backwards and landing hard on my ass. These two items are now kept on opposite
sides of the room.
The shock that
almost killed me was also likely deserved.
Someone introduced me into what we call a l'eau chaud. It's a water heater. It's an electric coil you plug in and drop
into a bucket. It looks exactly like
what those pictures on toasters and hairdryers depict with big, red X's that
stand for DON'T DO. The one I bought
worked fine and, being an idiot, I would always test it to see if the water was
hot enough. Then I'd mix it, also with
my hand, to distribute the heat. Never a
problem, never a thought. This was thus
a question of eventuality. That came one
day at a friend's using her death-device.
Hers which had always been defective.
I dropped my hand all the way to the bottom and, yes, it is possible to
feel your heart stop. I spent the next
ten minutes sitting on the floor panting.
This was a month ago and my arm still aches just thinking about it.
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