top of page


When Becoming Unemployed Feels Like a Celebration
Trigger warning: discussion of workplace trauma, retaliation, and bureaucratic harm. Most people don’t celebrate becoming “unemployed. ”But for me, this week, it felt like a small miracle. After surviving a near workplace-violence incident, I asked for the most basic protection any worker should expect: a safe setting to do my job. Instead of accommodations, I was boxed out. I wasn’t allowed to work for the hospital where I was under contract. I wasn’t allowed to work anywher


They Thought Firing Me Would Silence Me.
It only made me louder. 🔊 From Good Intentions to Retaliation Explore the sidebar on the left. You can add media to add color to your post. You can also I went to Bon Secours with good intentions — to build access to neurological care for a community that desperately needed it. Portsmouth, Virginia, ranks among the lowest in the nation for health outcomes. The need for specialized neurological care was urgent — and I came ready to serve. But when I raised safety concerns
bottom of page
