Today, The Broken of Britain are asking you to take part in our awareness raising campaign about fitness to work, all details here 
My fellow benefit scrounging diarist Sue Marsh has also written a post  about her working life, and if anyone would like to do the same, please  let us know and we'll add it to our links list over the w/e.  
 Employment History (originally posted here) 
I've  applied for a job. Gulp. It's been a long time since I've worked, so  long it all feels like a lifetime ago. I was 13 when I got my first job,  a sunday morning paper round with a bag of papers so heavy I gave up on  the idea of a bike after being picked off the floor by several kind  strangers, something I did not then forsee becoming a theme in my life.  As soon as I turned 14 I graduated to after school shop work,  waitressing, babysitting and later the glamour of washing dishes in a  restaurant at the weekends. I  worked all the way through school and university - like most students of  my age group I had more than one job alongside studying nannying, bar  work, shop work, whatever I could get.
My first recognised dislocation happened when I was working as a camp counselor  in the USA, a couple of weeks after I finished my finals. It was a  serious one, in retrospect it was far more than just the shoulder  dislocation I was treated for as it also affected my spine and ribs.  Surgery to repair my shoulder came at the end of the summer and I  returned to the UK to recover a few days later.
  I claimed benefits then, reluctantly so, but knowing that I would be  without income for at least a few months it was the only option. It was  1998 so a nice lady from the DSS came out to the house, filled the form  in whilst I was there and was able to ascertain that the injuries I had  were genuine. Those benefits ran out 3 months later, by which time I'd  been told I probably needed further surgery to my shoulder, but not to  worry, I was young and so could just treat it as a year out then get on  with my career.
  I got a job waitressing in a busy restaurant but within the first few  weeks it became very obvious that I couldn't even carry a single plate  without causing my shoulder to dislocate. I stuck at it, thinking my  strength would improve but before long my shoulder was getting worse and  I reluctantly gave up the job. Giving up that work meant returning to  the jobs I'd had whilst at university. I'd worked as a hostess/cashier  in a local restaurant and hadn't wanted to return there as the owner  really enjoyed sexually harrassing me, but it was work, it paid  relatively well and the chefs would intervene, hide me in the kitchen  and make me food until I'd finished crying on the occasions the owner  went too far. One of the regular customers managed a local veterinary  practice and after witnessing many incidences of the boss's idea of  humour told me that I absolutely did not have to put up with such abuse  and arranged an interview at the veterinary practice he managed. I got  the job as a receptionist and was able to leave the restaurant. I also  worked 16 hours a week in a video shop earning just under the limit to  pay national insurance, although I did for the first time earn enough to  pay national insurance when I was working at the vets. They were jobs I  could fit in around physiotherapy and hospital appointments and were  far easier on my joints than the physically demanding restaurant jobs  had been.
The  year out turned into another and I found I was still waiting for  surgery.  By the time I reached the top of the waiting list there was  far more damage to my shoulder than there had previously been, but for  what at the time were inexplicable reasons the surgery didn't work as  expected and I found myself able to do far less than I'd been able to do  before. I just couldn't manage to keep up both jobs and physiotherapy  so eventually, some months later I had to give up the job in the vets.  By then it was more than two years since I'd finished university, once  again I was on a waitinglist for surgery and really panicking about my  future. It was impossible to find full time work that I was able to do  physically and that would be possible to fit around the random nature of  NHS appointments so I continued working 16 hours a week, not earning  enough to pay National Insurance and waiting to 'get better'.
'Getting  better' never happened, in fact things just got worse and in addition  to the physical difficulties I was experiencing I was starting to have  serious psychological issues as those around me went from sceptical  glances to outright criticism, fuelled by the doctors treating me, some  of whom had no qualms screaming at me in front of a ward full of other  patients that I was wasting their time and had nothing wrong with me a  psychologist couldn't fix. No-one ever did refer me to that mythical  'able to cure everything psychologist', but many, many insisted they  would. 
I  applied for jobs, lots of jobs, anything and everything but I already  had several years of health issues and part time work to explain away.  Once employers heard that I was on a waiting list for further corrective  surgery they were understandably uninterested. I gave up on any kind of  graduate job after going through the interview process for the NHS graduate management scheme.  I reached the final interview stages and was told by the Chief  Executive who interviewed me that I'd given the most impressive  interview she'd seen, after which I had been recommended for a place.  However, they regretted to inform me I had not been successful and she  could only urge me to reapply when 'my health was more settled'  following the next surgery as she could not see any reason I would not  be successful. I never did reapply, my confidence had been destroyed by  then. 
The  next surgery eventually came, then the next, and a few more for good  measure with a few experiemental procedures along the way and before I  knew it I was over 25 with a patchy at best employment record, still  living with my parents and too unwell to even manage 16 hours work a  week. The benefits system had moved on, slightly stern but kindly ladies  no longer came out to fill in the forms and check circumstances were as  claimed, you just had to figure it out for yourself and wait months  while the details on the form were checked. As I was over 25 I was no  longer protected by the 'young person's rule'  which exempts younger people who've been in full time education from  the need for National Insurance contributions to claim Incapacity  Benefit. I was 26 and had been working in part time roles that didn't  earn enough to pay National Insurance so I fell through the gaps in the  system onto Income Support, a distinction that would later prove vital.
I  carried on applying for jobs, although my physical and mental health  were very poor. After years of failed surgeries and outright disbelief I  reached a point where I had no idea whether I was so mentally unwell  that I was doing all this to myself and just didn't know. Diagnosis of Ehlers Danlos Syndrome  was still several years in my future and I was desperate and depressed.  I was fighting a GP who made his view that I was a lying attention  seeker abundantly clear and blocked an initial application for Disability Living Allowance.
Finally  after being sent to a psychiatrist and widely regarded as lazy and  workshy my shoulder surgeon promised that was it as far as surgical  treatment options were concerned and one of my job applications offered  me an interview. It was a part time, low waged, administrative role in  the NHS but I was overjoyed, seeing it as a stepping stone to a career. I  was offered the job after interview and started in the February of  2003. Access to Work,  the scheme which provides equipment and support to disabled people in  the workplace had a duty to assess people within 6 weeks of their start  date. My assessment was 5+ weeks after I started working, which doesn't  sound much but by then the damage had been done. I was working in a very  isolated part of the hospital, alone in an office which was in a locked  corridor. I felt far more lonely than I had done when I was out of work  with the added complications of an unsuitable chair and an old folding  table doing the job of a desk. It had metal edges and cut into my arms  as I tried to sit high enough to reach it.
When  Access to Work eventually assessed me they came up with all manner of  adjustments to make, but as is so often the case I was shoehorned into  them rather than the adjustments being customised to my needs. A  phenomenally expensive height adjustable desk and special supportive  chair were ordered, but the chair was that bit too big and my feet never  reached the floor. Despite the high price tag they didn't make chairs  or desks that went small enough and I certainly wasn't confident enough  to object. I loved being employed but was struggling physically and  emotionally which was compounded after a serious dislocation in the  office when I was alone meant I remained on the floor for an unknown  length of time before being carried out of the hospital I worked in by  paramedics taking me to another hospital. 
I  was 'medically suspended' after that until the correct office furniture  and equipment arrived which took some months. In fact it took so long  for all the equipment recommended by Access to Work to arrive that some  of it still had not turned up after I'd become too sick to work and had  lost my job by September 2003.
Although  I'd had more time off sick than I had worked my employers wanted to  keep me as they had no concerns with my work or committment to the job. A  12 month unpaid career break was negotiated so that I could return to  work at the same grade although probably not the same role once my  health had stabilised.
I  was diagnosed with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome in February of 2004 by which  time I was desperately unwell, in debt, disabled and on the verge of  mental breakdown after so many years of disbelief and accusations of  malingering. My award letter informing me I'd been awarded Disability  Living Allowance arrived the morning I was to travel to London and be  diagnosed, the award dated from prior to the loan I'd taken out to  survive whilst I had no wages or benefits and would have negated the  need for the loan had I known.
The  disbelief and disrespect I'd been shown by so many doctors continued to  cause problems for me despite being diagnosed by an internationally  recognised expert in Ehlers Danlos Syndrome. A rehabilitive programme  was suggested but never materialised once I returned to my own area. My  shoulder surgeon looked extremely uncomfortable but to his credit  apologised to my face for having missed the underlying cause of my  problems. Other doctors had left themselves no room for retreat from  their accusations towards me and continued to disbelieve me, to the  extent that I was accused of having falsified the letter sent to my GP  by Professor Grahame after he diagnosed me. It was an impossible  situation for all concerned. After I was able to change to a new GP  practice this problem was gradually left behind but all the accusations  of attention seeking still remain on my medical records.
When  my twelve month career break was over I'd still not managed to find a  way of accessing any of the rehabilitation methods recommended and had  to regretfully inform my employers that not only was I not fit to return  to work but that there was no expectation that would change in the  immediate future as I was unlikely to be able to access any treatment or  support.
That was the last time I worked.
 
 
 
3 comments:
Great post - sums up exactly what so many people have said to me about where we find ourselves at the moment with all this uncertainty and worry for alot of the population!
Apart from being reckless Gracie we may have to face up to them being just plain wicked with a master plan to destroy certain groups of people like the sick and disabled
It is very difficult at this time for this group to get it's voice heard partly because the labour party have gone deaf and all politicians have gone likewise
When was the last time a politician said on TV that how we were being treated was a disgrace and that he would do something about it ?
Well the facts are they never have and never will and in all the years i have been in the benefit system i have payed a very heavy penalty with loss of all my human rights coming in to my home as and when going through all my statements and personal stuff and even after 27 they even today still do it i have another visit from the DWP next Thursday
27 years is a long time nelson mandela will tell you that but even today I'm not free and maybe never will be free from the constant struggle with the DWP
I have a dream that in the words of Dr martin Luther king that i will be free and that all sick and disabled people will also be free to live out that lives in peace and that they have piece of mind as well and that those that cause them pain with worry and anxiety leave them alone from the daily abuse that so many sick and disabled people suffer
Yes Gracie i have a dream
Apart from being reckless Gracie we may have to face up to them being just plain wicked with a master plan to destroy certain groups of people like the sick and disabled
It is very difficult at this time for this group to get it's voice heard partly because the labour party have gone deaf and all politicians have gone likewise
When was the last time a politician said on TV that how we were being treated was a disgrace and that he would do something about it ?
Well the facts are they never have and never will and in all the years i have been in the benefit system i have payed a very heavy penalty with loss of all my human rights coming in to my home as and when going through all my statements and personal stuff and even after 27 they even today still do it i have another visit from the DWP next Thursday
27 years is a long time nelson mandela will tell you that but even today I'm not free and maybe never will be free from the constant struggle with the DWP
I have a dream that in the words of Dr martin Luther king that i will be free and that all sick and disabled people will also be free to live out that lives in peace and that they have piece of mind as well and that those that cause them pain with worry and anxiety leave them alone from the daily abuse that so many sick and disabled people suffer
Yes Gracie i have a dream
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