Humans of the Redwoods - Michael Curl

Michael of Mendocino Encourages More Nursing Programs to Create Extensive and Affordable Healthcare

After being diagnosed with carpal tunnel at 19, Ukiah local Michael Curl has had some experience with the nuances of workplace accessibility and obtaining specialty care in a rural community. Lack of reliable public transport cut him off socially as a kid and has failed him during carpal tunnel flare-ups. He hopes for a more accessible future with reliable care and transportation for the community’s special needs.

Humans of the Redwoods: Michael Curl

Remote Living 

Michael Curl grew up around Mendocino’s isolated Round Valley and Potter Valley areas. Despite his rural roots, he has traveled the world teaching for AmeriCorps, giving him a broad view of different ways of life. Growing up was a different story. With transportation being a significant issue, he was cut off from the social lives of his peers during his most developmental years. “The main thing that set me apart from other folks was just my long commute coming into town, and I was always pretty out of it compared to everybody else. I never knew any of the gossip or anything else. I think that had a pretty big effect on how I grew up.”

Living 40 minutes outside of Ukiah without a car and unreliable phone and internet coverage made it harder for him to stay involved. “I was basically just stuck out there. All my friends' social lives would occur at night time. But then as soon as school ended, I was just out there with the cows. Which, you know, I like them. But we didn't commune. We weren't super simpatico. So I was mostly just alone with my thoughts a lot of the time.”

“When I'm having a flare-up, I'm just going to have to wait until someone can get home because I can't even be on my phone.”

Accessible Transportation 

Michael’s experience navigating transportation is not unique in the Redwood Region. While it can be a significant barrier to a fulfilling social life, it can also be a serious issue for people with disabilities. Michael has been living with severe carpal tunnel syndrome, a condition where the median nerve is compressed in the wrist causing numbness, tingling, and weakness in the hand, for 17 years. While assistive technology helps Michael use his phone and computer, a flare-up can make it nearly impossible to navigate tasks that able-bodies take for granted, like opening doors within a house.

“If you can't use your hands and there's a problem, it's like, ‘oh, why don't you go drive to some place where you can get help?’. During a flare-up I requested an Uber and it said I had to wait an hour, and then it said there are none available. I tried to call a taxi. I was just trying to go from my mom's house to my house, which is a 12 minute drive, and they were going to charge me $90. So I'm just like, okay, I'm going to wait here all day until someone can get home because I can't even be on my phone.”