The paper felt heavier than it should have, a stack of 14 sheets that smelled faintly of a toner cartridge nearing its end. I was sitting on the exam table, the crinkled paper underneath me making a sound like dry leaves being stepped on by a heavy boot. Dr. Arispe wasn’t looking at me. He was looking at his computer, his fingers hovering over the keyboard with a precision that usually comforted me. But today, the silence in the room was a physical weight. It was the kind of silence I usually try to recreate in the studio using layers of white noise and dampened room tone.
Greta A.J. is my name, and I’ve spent 24 years perfecting the art of the incidental sound. I know how to make a ghost sound like it’s walking on floorboards, but I couldn’t make my own doctor say the one thing I needed him to say. He sighed, a 4-decibel exhale that signaled the end of our unspoken truce.
44%
Loss of Mobility in Left Shoulder (Confirmed)
‘Greta,’ he said, finally turning the chair. ‘I can treat your cervical spine. I can manage the 44 percent loss of mobility in your left shoulder. But I cannot get involved in the litigation. I’m a clinician, not an expert witness.’ My heart didn’t just sink; it felt like it had been dropped into a bucket of water. I had cleaned my phone screen four times while waiting for him to come in, obsessed with the smudges that wouldn’t go away, much like the smudge this car accident had left on my life. I wanted clarity. I wanted a champion. Instead, I got a boundary.
The Unspoken Friction
This is the unspoken friction of the modern medical-legal complex. We are raised on a diet of television dramas where the heroic doctor marches into the courtroom, white coat flapping like a cape, to deliver the crushing blow to the insurance company’s defense. We believe that because our doctor saw the bruises, felt the swelling, and viewed the 24 internal images of our shattered joints, they are naturally our allies in the quest for justice.
Catastrophic Workflow Disruption
Restoration of Life Quality
But the reality is far more clinical and, frankly, far more frustrating. Doctors see the legal system as a pathogen. It is a time-consuming, adversarial, and unpredictable environment that threatens their efficiency. For a doctor who sees 64 patients a week, a single deposition is a catastrophic disruption of their workflow. It’s not that they don’t believe you; it’s that they dread the administrative machinery that comes with your lawyer’s phone call.
The Sound of Compromise
I remember once, I had to create the sound of a tree falling for a period piece. We tried everything-snapping branches, heavy thuds, digital manipulation. Eventually, the best sound came from slowly twisting a frozen head of lettuce. It was that slow, agonizing crunch of fibers giving way under pressure.
That’s what it feels like when you realize your relationship with your doctor is changing because of a lawsuit. The ‘sacred’ bond starts to sound like that frozen lettuce. You start to see them as a gatekeeper of evidence, and they start to see you as a potential subpoena.
It’s a tragedy of misaligned incentives. You want your life back; they want their schedule back. I’ve spent 4 hours today just trying to understand the nuances of why a healer would recoil from the truth-telling of a courtroom. It turns out, doctors are trained in ‘medical certainty,’ while lawyers deal in ‘preponderance of the evidence.’ They speak two different languages, and you are the one stuck in the middle, trying to translate your pain into a format that a judge can understand.
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The sound of a pen cap clicking is the sound of a door closing on a conversation.
Dr. Arispe’s refusal wasn’t personal, though it felt like a slap. He explained that his malpractice insurance doesn’t cover ‘forensic testimony.’ He mentioned that the last time he went to court, he was kept waiting for 44 minutes in a hallway only to be told the case had settled, costing him half a day of billable surgery time. To him, the legal system is a black hole. To me, it was the only way I could pay for the 34 physical therapy sessions I still needed.
The Deafening Shift
Track A (Visual)
It’s like a foley track where the footsteps are slightly out of sync with the actor’s legs-everything looks right, but you know, deep in your gut, that something is fundamentally wrong.
This is where the gap widens. We think of our doctors as being on our team, but the moment a lawsuit begins, they are often advised by their own counsel to remain ‘neutral’ or ‘detached.’ They stop being your advocate and start being a record-keeper. This shift is subtle but deafening.
When you ask a doctor to bridge that gap [between medical certainty and legal preponderance], you are asking them to leave their comfort zone of the exam room and enter a world where their expertise will be picked apart by someone who spent 24 hours studying a medical textbook just to make them look like an amateur. It is an ego-bruising process. No one likes to be questioned on their life’s work, especially not by a defense attorney who is paid to find the one 4-millimeter discrepancy in a 144-page medical file.
Structural Necessity
In times like these, when the medical world feels like it’s retreating behind a wall of liability and scheduling conflicts, having a team like Siben & Siben Personal Injury Attorneys becomes less of a luxury and more of a structural necessity.
The Finesse of the Ask
In foley, if I want the sound of a heartbeat, I don’t use a heart; I use a damp sponge inside a plastic bag. Legal advocacy is the same: finding the resonance that makes a busy doctor stop and realize their patient’s future depends on more than just a prescription.
The Cynical Game
I spent 124 minutes yesterday researching the history of the expert witness. It’s a cynical game. My doctor, Dr. Arispe, hates this game. He doesn’t want to be compared to the ‘hired guns’ who spend more time in courtrooms than in clinics. I can respect that, I really can. But my respect doesn’t pay for the $234 I have to spend on prescriptions every month.
Cost of Testimony (Dr. Arispe’s Fear)
It doesn’t fix the fact that I can no longer lift the 44-pound weights required to sync the sound of a rolling boulder for the latest action movie. My career is built on my body, and my body is currently a crime scene that no one wants to investigate.
The Sound of Finality
The Hard Lesson
I thought that if I was just ‘nice’ enough, if I was the ‘perfect’ patient who never missed an appointment and always paid my $84 co-pay on time, the doctor would naturally want to help me. I was wrong. Being a good patient doesn’t make you a more convenient witness.
Stage 1: Silence
Obsessive cleaning, hoping for clarity.
Stage 2: Questioning
Asking the hard question about diagnosis support.
I should have asked, ‘Dr. Arispe, if this goes to a hearing, will you stand by your diagnosis?’ It’s an uncomfortable question, like asking a friend for a loan. But in the 4th month of a lawsuit, uncomfortable questions are the only ones worth asking.
Finding Resonance
We are all just trying to find some form of resonance. I find it in the crackle of a fire (which is actually just crinkling cellophane). Doctors find it in a clean MRI. Lawyers find it in a signed affidavit. But for the person who is actually hurting, the resonance is found in the feeling of being seen and heard.
Medical Certainty
Focus: The Exam Room
Legal Preponderance
Focus: The Affidavit
Life Restoration
Focus: Being Heard
When a doctor refuses to get involved in a lawsuit, what the patient hears is: ‘Your pain is valid until it becomes a chore for me.’ That’s a hard thing to hear. It’s a sound that stays with you, like a high-frequency ring in the ears after a loud explosion.