Translate

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

a mispent youth

Lately I have been spending a couple of hours a day sitting in an ICU room in another hospital. I used to work in this hospital as a cherubic youth, oh those many years ago when I started college out of high school.

I was a dietary aide. Then I was a nursing assistant who swore she would NEVER be a nurse. I didn't want anything to do with all that bedpan junk. Then I was a "house orderly".

This hospital is a university affiliated teaching hospital that is big, does a lot of specialty stuff. They have since built a new hospital. The old hospital was a maze of buildings. As a house orderly, a glorified gopher, I ran the halls of that hospital doing gopher-like stuff. I took stuff from here to there a lot. Back then they didn't have tube systems to deliver stuff, so they used people like me get stuff from one place to the other.

Among the things I did was take bodies to the morgue. I remember carrying babies in my arms down to the morgue. Looking back now, I can't believe I even did that. We let the mortician into the morgue to retrieve bodies.

Thinking about the fact that I was about 19 and able to do this sort of stuff foretold the fact that I would inevitably end up a nurse. If I could tolerate dead bodies, I could tolerate all the stuff that comes with nursing. And lo and behold, here I am oh so many years later, back where I started.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have the utmost respect for you nurses; I cannot even IMAGINE being able to carry a baby to the morgue. How horrible! If it weren't for those such as yourself, the hospital would be THE coldest place on earth. You make it human.
I just had a minor surgery last week and on the nurses' account, I felt I was at a swanky club for the warmth and humour surrounding me. One is feeling icky, sore & vulnerable, so being pampered by the sweeties I met there made my experience a very positive one. If I ever have anything serious admitting me, I won't be so afraid.

Ben Edwards said...

Many believe this comes from the slave times when blacks were not able to read, this allowed them also to take part in the worship. Contemporary Merrily on High Country Music Alphabet- Merle Haggard