Jan 16th – Day 16 – Haunting Cry
Today’s written portion is brought to you by the category ”Janitor MD” where I write about things I see in my daily meanderings through the hospital. As a disclaimer – there is nothing that violates privacy regulations, HIPAA rules or otherwise releases patient or personal information within the following blog post. It is simply observations of what it can be like to work in a hospital from a different perspective. The words, opinions and everything else contained in the following text is my own and does not represent my employer or the hospital where I work.
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nablowrimo day 23 “As Death calls, we work…”
This is an ongoing series called, “Janitor MD” in which I talk about my experiences working in a hospital as a housekeeping supervisor. You can see previous entries in this series at this link.
Working in a hospital brings so much to the senses it can be overload at times. Discerning each and pushing those momentary moments into the back of the mind is the best way of dealing with all the things you see. I come home and I spend a few moments rewinding what I saw, smelled and felt in the halls of the hospital.
When you walk through the emergency department you can see every story playing out on the faces of those in the rooms. You hear the whispered mutters and the mechanical speeches of doctors and nurses as they try to and make it to the end of the day before the real rush will bust through the doors. There are moments of hilarity and smiles shared between knowing workers.
There are those times when you see a room dark and a sheet covering what was once a life. You know that the once beating heart has stilled. And you can only silently pray for whoever it was and move on to the duties that await you.
Some of the housekeepers I work with have said there are “spirits” in those rooms when death has just recently robbed the soul from body. They talk about a weight that pushes on them as they clean. Some tell you they don’t like it. I understand. When someone is alive, there is brightness about the room, a living light. When that is dimmed there is a certain confusion about where that person has gone as the body grows cold.
Some fall back on cultural explanations. Others religious. And still few refuse to dwell on that loss and push forward, ignoring whatever may have happened in that room and simply focus on cleaning the room to prepare for the next visitor.
It is that transition that signals the return of life, albeit an oddly morbid and temporary reminder. For a life to be saved, one may die. At times it can get too heady for me to wrap my mind around. I can only soldier on, cleaning rooms and knowing that life rumbles onwards on each of the floors. Babies are born into this cold world and lives are saved with hands of heroes every day in the halls of my hospital.
And sometimes, that’s what gets me through until the closing bell.
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National Blog Writing Month (nablowrimo) is underway! 22 bloggers from around the world are united in blogging once a day! You should read them and check ‘em out every day! See more details at the site here or look at the list below!
NaBloWriMo Bloggers
- groovygrrl
- I’m Not Hannah
- The Kittalog
- Indian Food Rocks!
- Cooking and Me
- The Way I Always Was
- Jugalbandi
- Culinary Colorado
- Digging In
- Thistle Dew Farm
- Mimi On The Move
- Enjoy Indian Food
- Siri’s Corner
- Conch-to-be
- Nags of a Similar Ilk
- Damn Yankee, Vermont
- Aaron Delay
- Fun Climbs Around the World
- Seriously Wonderful
- Straight From Hel
- Use Real Butter
- Here it is!!!
Moments in the Hallway
This is an ongoing series called, “Janitor MD” in which I talk about my experiences working in a hospital as a housekeeping supervisor. You can see previous entries in this series at this link.
I walk in the shadows of the greats. Doctors, Nurses, Registered Nurses and countless specialists fill the long halls. Between us not much passes. A mixed conversation with a nurse or two but nothing of substance. I prefer it that way in all honesty. Because it allows me to watch them. To see them. And to watch them perform their craft.
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Life, Death and halls of a hospital
This is an ongoing series called, “Janitor MD” in which I talk about my experiences working in a hospital as a housekeeping supervisor. You can see previous entries in this series at this link.
Life is a delicate balance. Each day we awake to a new dawn, the sun breaking across the horizon. The fresh air of the morning breathes across the plains and down from the mountains. And we, humanity in all its glory carefully wish in our hearts that today, just today…we wouldn’t screw it all up again like yesterday.
Life is a beautiful thing. Working in a hospital we are always reminded of the birth of a new baby with a special tone. At each moment that sounds my heart warms at the prospect of the continuance of this world. We come before…and they will follow us after.
In the interim between life and death there is much to be learned, experienced and done. Each of us have an average expiration date that God above only knows. For those one hundred (many times less) years it is up to us where we go.
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