On the nail. I’ve remembered your story about the client who limited your needle sticks with astounding results, read it in a book years ago. As a worker who has benefitted from Medicare several decades, tried to get out for decades too, I recognize societal push to prescribe instead of curiously describe. Medicare demands justification and documentable progress—it won’t pay for curiosity. Grad school taught me research methods “quantitative” vs. “qualitative.” Blind control vs. narrative. But narrative doesn’t pay. WCA always feeds my hope of seeing how to do something healing and still remain housed. Love reading your comprehensive posts and please keep shouting out.
On the nail. I’ve remembered your story about the client who limited your needle sticks with astounding results, read it in a book years ago. As a worker who has benefitted from Medicare several decades, tried to get out for decades too, I recognize societal push to prescribe instead of curiously describe. Medicare demands justification and documentable progress—it won’t pay for curiosity. Grad school taught me research methods “quantitative” vs. “qualitative.” Blind control vs. narrative. But narrative doesn’t pay. WCA always feeds my hope of seeing how to do something healing and still remain housed. Love reading your comprehensive posts and please keep shouting out.