Senior Writer
Senior
Canada

Tahiat M

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Bio

Tahiat Mahboob is a multimedia storyteller. Her work has appeared on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Global News, CTV News, Asia Society, The Daily Star, etc. She has also taught at Columbia University and CUNY. Her career spans two decades across America, Bangladesh and Canada. Along the way she took some detours, as a fashion designer, an IT technician, a community organizer, a data analyst, and most recently — for a hot minute — a construction worker. Tahiat is currently in the Online News Association Women’s Leadership Accelerator. When she’s not producing stories, Tahiat volunteers as a frontline healthcare worker.

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As a Story Terrace writer, Tahiat M interviews customers and turns their life stories into books. Get to know our writer better by reading the autobiographical anecdote below!

Not on the List

On a sunny April day, when I should have been applying for a fellowship, I was procrastinating. Instead of finishing the paperwork due in a week, I was at a seniors home doing vaccine outreach. A mobile clinic would visit in a few days to vaccinate residents. My task was to ask if they wanted the first dose. During the hour-long training, I thought, “No matter how many scenarios we run through, something is going to come up.”

My roster listed 25 apartments. Within minutes, I checked off five. Some were vaccinated, some had appointments, and some didn’t respond to my knocks. As I approached the sixth unit, the door next to it opened. An elderly gentleman peeked out and said, “I'll wait for you.” Thanking him for his patience, I finished the task at hand.

Afterwards, when I knocked on his door, he was ready — health card, prescriptions, and a pouch brimming with pill bottles in hand.

“I've been waiting for someone to help register me,” he said with a smile. It disappeared the moment I said he wasn't on my roster.

“He should be on your list,” said the superintendent, who was working in the hallway.

I explained the rosters were divided by language; this resident was probably on another list. Nonetheless, I tried calling the co-ordinator. When I couldn’t get through, the super volunteered to get her. Asking the resident to wait again, I went down my list, knocking on other doors. Shortly, the super returned — alone.

“That's OK. I'll add him to my roster,” I said.

It took 30 minutes to register the resident — from explaining mobile clinic logistics, to ensuring he understood he needed to sit while being injected, to completing his consent form. As I filled out the paperwork, I learned that he lived alone and had struggled to secure a vaccination appointment. He told me about his relief when he saw the notice board advertising door-to-door registrations. With his limited English and multiple health issues, he struggled with forms and applications, he explained.

The whole time I was terrified. What if I accidentally “contaminated” him? His various conditions required me to stand in his doorway and holler through my multi-layered mask. But finally he was on my list as a handwritten line item. As I left, I saw the co-ordinator coming down the hall. He was on her roster.

“How was your first shift?” the co-ordinator later asked me during the debrief.

“Fulfilling,” I said, “and feeling a tad philosophical about aging, singlehood, etc.”

On the streetcar back, I had a good cry. When I got home, I looked at the fellowship application, two-thirds completed. It could wait. I crawled into bed and took a nap.

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