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Jocelyn Millis's avatar

The trauma bond with the dirt their body will return to is real and the day my Dad had to go into the hospital with end stage stomach cancer the desperation on his face was deep.

“I won’t be coming back here, once I go to the hospital.”

I’ve never seen anyone more miserable than he was at that moment. And he was right, he never made it back again.

An old farmer doesn’t recognize he’s alive without their land.

You tell of the hurts that bind everything together on a family farm Walter.

The farm accidents that happen because children are working with large machinery are so frequent no one counts them. Missing body parts especially toes and fingers are parts of body dysmorphia caused by farm work.

I still have nightmares about not being able to disengage the power take off in time so I deliberately body slammed my sister into the snow to make her coat sleeve tear. It had a rip in her sleeve and the fabric of her coat was trapped in the power take off of the grain auger. I couldn’t climb up on the tractor to tun off the engine in time and we didn’t have a kill switch. I saved her by knocking her down.

Seconds of desperation…. I was eleven and she was six.

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susan conner's avatar

Whew! Since I once lived on a farm, I totally understand and have been there. Idaho potatoes. Before the potato harvesters were invented, we had to go and help neighbors harvest their potatoes. Wore a big old belt with hooks on it, gunny sack on front hooks, drag between the legs, bending down picking up the potatoes and tossing them into the sack, dragging it on until full - about 100bs. On to the next sack. 12 years old at time of first harvest. Awfully hard work. Hay balers. We weren't permitted around them, only after hay was baled, then we had to haul it. But we had a friend who lost his arm in one when he tried to clear up a stoppage, without turning off the baler. I hated the farm. Went off to college and never looked back. Tough life.

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