School Nurse Saw My Insulin Pump And Called Protection Services-heuh

I walked into the school nurse’s office because my blood sugar was high and I needed my insulin pump checked.

I thought I would be given a juice carton, told to sit quietly, and possibly sent home with a note for my dad.

Instead, the nurse went pale.

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She looked at the settings on my insulin pump, lowered her voice, and called child protection services before I had even understood what she had seen.

By the end of that school day, I would learn that the woman who tucked me in at night had been slowly pushing my body towards a coma on purpose.

One tiny screen had exposed a nightmare I never knew I was living.

Until then, the nurse’s office had never seemed like a place where lives split in two.

It was just the small room near the main corridor where people went after PE accidents, nosebleeds, headaches and panic over forgotten inhalers.

It smelt of alcohol wipes, rubber gloves and the faint sweetness of old mint chewing gum.

There was always a stack of school notes on the side, a plastic chair that looked easier to clean than to sit on, and a clock that ticked too loudly when you were trying not to cry.

That morning had been grey and wet.

Rain clung to the corridor windows, and the cuffs of everyone’s jumpers were damp from pushing through the school gate.

I remember that because, by second period, every ordinary detail seemed too sharp.

The fluorescent lights looked white enough to hurt.

My tongue felt dry against the roof of my mouth.

My chest had a hollow feeling, as if something had been scooped out of me.

Even lifting my pencil took effort.

I checked my blood sugar under the desk, trying to keep the movement small so nobody would stare.

The number on the screen was already high.

Then it kept climbing.

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