Do You Love Your Job?

No.

I’m often asked that question or some variation of it: “Do you love your job” or “I bet you really enjoy your work”.  The first few times I was asked, I, of course, said yes. But after some time, I realized that I was wrong. I don’t love my job.

Some people get chaplaincy mixed up with being a pastor or minister. Maybe they thought I did the same thing as a pastor of a church. Well, I don’t. A minister/pastor and chaplain are completely different things but that’s a post for another day. 

Chaplaincy is an entirely different calling. It’s an experience that I don’t “love” taking part in. I am a chaplain for a level 1 trauma center and what I see day in and day out would normally make you want to turn away from this job. 

Chaplaincy is a difficult role to carry on a regular basis. I see the results of car collisions. I’ve sat with guilt ridden drunk drivers who I’ve had to comfort as they found out they caused a fatality; yet don’t remember a thing about that day. There have been teenage texters in the emergency room, who had no idea the death was their responsibility. Sweet children who were not properly restrained and I’m begging to hear them cry in the trauma bay. I’ve met motorcyclists who had to have a leg amputated because the car didn’t see the motorcycle entering the intersection. I stood next to a father and husband, who lost his daughter at the scene of a car collision and his wife who later died in the ICU.  Then the next day, I consoled the driver of the other car, after the officers informed him of the fatalities he caused. With these experiences, I’ve come to the conclusion that there is no such thing as a car “accident”. There is always something that caused the collision to happen, that could have been prevented. 

I met 30 to 40 year old individuals who were having fun at the lake and after diving head first, became quadraplegic. Hunters who were anticipating their first 8 point buck for the season, only to have broken legs or ankles after the tree stand collapsed. There have been farm workers who were working with broken equipment, who were injured when the equipment fell on them; arms that were crushed when they slipped. I’ve met 80+ year old independent individuals who fell when going to get the mail that morning and that evening, were surrounded by family at the hospital as they passed away. Families and patients, who one minute were doing normal, everyday things, and in one split second, their lives were completely changed. 

It is difficult to love a job when I am sitting next to a mother and i have to tell her she can’t see her son because his body is now evidence in a murder investigation. It’s hard when I can still hear the blood curdling screams of 30+ family members who found out their loved one died after a vicious attack. I’ve sat with families who replay their lives over and over, wondering if they could have seen the signs and been able to stop their 21 year old from shooting herself in the head. I’ve asked the police to allow the father to hear how his 3 year old son is doing in surgery before they arrest him, because the three year old found his dad’s gun and accidentally shot himself.  I’ve stood next to a 93 year old man, who shot himself to try and end his pain. He removed his oxygen mask and begged me to let him die.  

I don’t love my job but it is truly a gift to watch the teams I work with do the work that they do. It is humbling to watch them maneuvering through unexpected events and making split second decisions they have no time to think about. They save lives every single day, from doing CPR at bedside to opening a chest cavity in the trauma bay. I’ve stood with the surgeons whom after surgery were able to inform families that their loved one was still alive, despite the multiple gun shot wounds. I’ve stood with those same surgeons when they had to tell the families they did all they could do but it wasn’t enough to save them. You will never be able to understand what it is like to be there, unless you have been there. I am honored to be there with them, standing side by side. I am a part of these teams. I am in the trenches with them. I am honored to be in their vulnerable moments, just as they are in mine.  

I don’t love my job. I will never be able to say that. However, I can say with full certainty, that I am humbled and honored to do the work that I do. To sit with all of those I’ve mentioned and not be touched by their grief, pain, uncertainty and life; I would be inhuman. What an honor it is to be present with a patient or a family member, in their most vulnerable state, in their weakest moments. Every day, I am placed in situations I’ve never been. I’ve seen things that I never imagined I would see in a lifetime. I’ve heard sounds that I cannot get out of my head. There have been many times that I finished my shift and called out to God, “Lord, I have no idea how I got through this time but somehow you carried me through, with the words to say and the space in which to say them. Thank you.”

I am only one chaplain. There are many others, across the country and around the world, who do this incredibly difficult work. October is Pastoral Care Month and next week, October 25-31, is Spiritual Care Week. If you know a chaplain or work with one, please thank them for the services they provide. We certainly don’t do this work for recognition but it does help to know we are respected and recognized as an integral part of an extraordinary team of clinicians, committed to the holistic care of patients and families. 

I don’t love my job but I am incredibly humbled and honored to do this work, with these people, at every opportunity provided.