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Adding ties to Estevan

Steadily but very slowly, I'm becoming more Saskatchewanese. There are a number of steps to take and things to do when moving from one place to another, or from one province to another.


Steadily but very slowly, I'm becoming more Saskatchewanese.
There are a number of steps to take and things to do when moving from one place to another, or from one province to another. I haven't moved my residence across any international borders yet, but I know there a few more housekeeping issues that need to be handled when making that leap.
I didn't need any papers showing that I could work in Saskatchewan. One of the first things I did as part of my transition to this province was to acquire a new driver's licence.
My latest acquisition was a library card. I've been to the library on a number of occasions to cover something or snap a photo. I've been to the leisure centre, Lignite Miners Centre and Spectra Place-all of which share a building with the library-many times, but had never gotten around to picking up a library card. I guess I finally ran out of books in the house and needed a cheap outlet.
I still haven't made an attempt at getting a local health card. You'd think one would be more important than the other, but I'm a reasonably healthy person. My job doesn't leave me particularly susceptible to injury. I'm not going to fire a nail into my hand, something my brother did this summer.
Maybe I'll get a health card before Christmas, but probably not. I admit it. I am a procrastinator. I have a perfectly good Ontario health card that's as old as I am. I'm comfortable with it. It may not get me prime service here, but it sounds like there are a lot of people having trouble getting medical attention in Estevan.
While I was in and out of the library many times over my first nine months here, I have only driven past the hospital a handful of times. It's out of sight and out of my mind. There's such a problem with people here getting in to see a doctor and filling the emergency room that it's probably best I don't hold the lines up any more than they already are by applying for a health card.
Estevan doesn't need another person clogging up the medical works any further. I am also in the same boat as a lot of other people here without a personal doctor. That's not a big change for me. The last time I got in with a new doctor back home, he left after a couple of months and I never met him. I couldn't have pointed him out on the street. I've been without a doctor since.
My sister is studying holistic nutrition, so I'll just use her as my doctor and e-mail any questions I might have. She can be, as my uncle might say, my witch doctor, and she doesn't require a health card.

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