A Different Perspective

Walking through these halls, you have absolutely no idea
Exactly what you will encounter after each corner you turn
You know, one split second will turn it all upside down
And in a blink of an eye, your perspective will never be the same
A different perspective

Over the last few years, many stories have been shared
Each chapter played out in unexpected, unscripted dramas
If you didn’t know any better, none of this would be true
Your experience tells you, that every second is all too real
A different perspective

Standing by the trauma bay, you watch it unfold, a story all too common
In a matter of seconds, the patient arrives, having been shot multiple times
Trauma Attendings on both sides and ED Doctors at the head
If they do the impossible, this patient might actually survive
Days later, the chaplain sits at bedside, as this miracle talks about his faith
A different perspective

Family called and requested prayer as their patriarch with covid, was to be intubated
After they talked and prayed together the chaplain held the patient’s hand through his sedation
The chaplain called family and shared the visit; with gratitude they cried “how did he look?”
That prayer was the last he ever heard and “amen” was the last word he ever said.
A different perspective

Making rounds on the units, to check on the staff with intentionality
On one side of the unit, the chaplain comforts a nurse through tears
After family expressed their emotions in unfortunate, belligerent ways
On the other side of the unit, a family embraces a nurse with gratitude
As they expressed their appreciation for taking care of one of their own
A different perspective

You’re paged to the MICU for a covid patient that is about to pass
Due to visitor restrictions, two family members watch from outside of the room
The chaplain stands beside them, providing a gentle touch and sacred silence
The nurse strokes his forehead and respiratory cradles his hand, as the last breath is taken
A different perspective

A driver, with full term pregnancy, arrived, after having been in a car collision
ED Team, Trauma Team, OB Team, and one chaplain; 46 people already there
This child had seconds to be delivered but mother requested prayer before entry
An understanding scalpel paused; a prayer was said and this precious one was finally free
A different perspective

When you walk around, you’ll measure this and quantify that
Take a moment to see what is happening around you
It’s always good to look at things from a different point of view
In a matter of seconds, your perspective may never be the same
A different perspective


(c) April, 2022

Gone Too Soon

Hello. How are you doing today?

Yes, I know. I don’t look familiar to you right now.  Yes, it’s been a while since I’ve written. I’ve got a multitude of reasons that have kept me from writing. If you’re not in healthcare, you just won’t understand.

It’s been a long time since July 18th and so much has happened since then. The one thing that has been consistent is Covid.  Numbers were going down but that certainly didn’t mean that Covid was gone. People still died. People still died without their families present at bedside. People still spent a lifetime in the hospital, weak enough to be scared; wondering if they would ever make it home.  Gone too soon.

That’s not all that happened. Life continued on with other challenges that kept me away from my laptop.

Since the last time we sat together, I’ve had to officiate 2 funerals for young people, far too young to be buried.  The promise of a baby girl that ended a few months too soon. Such a sweet family that had to deal with a loss familiar to millions of other parents. Losing a child before they had a chance to develop is difficult. Losing a child who you’ve wished and prayed for, the one you invested so much in, is gone. Not only that, but the emotional and financial savings accounts were depleted, along with the promises and hope of a new family. I stood in front of this family, witnessing the grief in their faces and her devastated parents.  I saw the face of this precious angel. There have been so many gone before they should have been, including this sweet little girl. Gone too soon.

After the funeral, I made a promise to myself not to do any more. The work I do at the hospital is heavy.  Sometimes, it weighs on me in ways I don’t see coming. When I officiated this sweet girl’s graveside service, that took some of my reserve. I needed time to recover. There is a reason I do weddings and not funerals.

Well, not three weeks later, I received a text message. It was September, which happens to be Suicide Prevention Month. I received a text about a young 16 year old teenager, a boy really, who died by suicide. He was the son of someone very dear to me. She asked that I do the funeral. Of course I said yes. 

As a trauma chaplain, I see too much.  I see a lot of young pain coming into the trauma center on a daily basis: young people who died from ATV or motocross collisions; young people that were killed out of revenge; and young people who thought they were invincible as they traveled in their cars.

I have learned to manage through the distress when it comes to these situations. They are hard and I feel for the families. Sadly, I’ve seen enough of them to know I can appropriately manage my emotions and strength (most of the time). I can’t say the same for other traumas. The situation that is most difficult for me to manage, is when a young person takes their own life. This happens all too often. ALL TOO OFTEN. I’ve seen children as young as 8 years old, come into the hospital after having shot themselves. There have been teens coming in with marks on their necks. Some of them overdosed on something they find at home. Rarely do they survive and even when they do, a part of their spirit died in the process. Gone too soon.

I did not see the young 16 year old. He never made it to the hospital. But I saw his younger siblings when I went to their house. I saw his family. On the day of his funeral, I stood behind the pulpit and saw his friends. I saw the faces of his teammates, classmates and the friends he grew up with.  

What makes it hard for me is I get it. I understandably how things can get so terribly dark that the only thing they think will take away the pain is to hurt themselves. Those young minds aren’t mature enough to comprehend what will happen after attempting suicide. They can’t manage the darkness and how to find some sort of light to guide them through. The pain has to be so much, with a darkness that blinds any feeling of hope, that suicide is the only possible solution.  I understand it all too well. 

I’ve seen the results of suicide, too many times. They ranged from ages 8 to 93.  It’s so hard.  For several reasons, my heart hurts for young teens. The word “young” means everything. Even though this young boy was surrounded by abundant love, he felt alone. He felt a pain that he just couldn’t take any more. His darkness blocked out the love of his family and friends. The darkness masked his pain from being seen by his friends and family. HIs youthfulness didn’t know what to do and it couldn’t be healed. This resulted in a family and community in so much pain, only time will be able to help. Gone too soon.

This year has been a difficult year. After his funeral, I crashed. A part of my spirit died, after carrying so much during this year. His death and connecting circumstances were too much to carry and recover 100%. What helped is I did get to celebrate several weddings I officiated. I also get to work with phenomenal people but things are just not the same. Sadly, the young ones still get brought to the hospital. Infants are still dying before they are born and teens are still hurting themselves. Healthcare workers are leaving.

Trauma is real. Suicide is real. Infant loss is real. Covid is real. Please don’t forget that. Please do what you can to help and support one another, including the healthcare workers. We hear so much about Covid but as you can see, the virus is not the only thing going on within these walls. There is so much more than you can ever imagine and no matter the age, many spirits have been impacted. Healthcare workers have been severely hit. Our spirits have taken a beating. Several have died. Many have been hurt. Too many have left healthcare all together. They are gone too soon as well.  Sometimes it’s all too much to sit down and write about and when you do, it still doesn’t make sense.

Covid is Real

Covid is real.

I have seen it firsthand. It is horrific. It is heartbreaking. It is isolating. It is real. It is a pandemic.

Patients are overflowing the hospitals. Families cannot be at bedside. Teams are short-staffed. Health care workers are burned out. Front line providers are suffering from compassion fatigue.

Covid is real.

Nurses, doctors, and their families have been quarantined because they had covid.

Respiratory departments were almost half-staff because an entire team was hit with the virus.

An environmental service employee cried as she shared about her near death experience with Covid with fear trembling in her voice.

Hundreds of staff members have to be tested after they came in contact with patients who didn’t know they were positive.

Departments have lost colleagues because Covid took them too soon.

Colleagues have lost family members to the darkness of this pandemic.

Covid is real.

When I stood outside a patient’s room, to support her family. They stared into the room, lost in their anger and grief. They not only grieved the death of their mother but also their loss of not being able to touch her, hold her hand, or kiss her goodbye.

Covid is real. 

When I talked to his wife on the phone after I visited her husband in the Covid ICU. She asked a question, grasping for any glimpse of hope, “How does he look?” She knew he struggled with his breathing and would require intubation if it didn’t improve. That night he was intubated and never made it home.

Covid is real. 

When I held the hand of a nurse and prayed at his bedside. He was on the covid unit, not as a nurse but as a patient. I held his hand as he struggled to breathe. Just like every other nurse, he was caring for others, who were struggling with the same pain. Just like every other nurse, he sacrificed his health to continue to serve in his role. Just like every other nurse, he returned back to work to continue his calling.

Covid is real.

When I received my positive test result on Christmas Eve after being symptomatic. I was quarantined at home, alone, for ten days and stayed home to recover for another seven.  I had a mild case and am still dealing with remnants of that impact. Given what I witnessed in the deaths and grief of many, I was blessed with a mild case of this reality. 

Given what I witnessed standing with two sons, who stood outside their dad’s room, as their dad took his last breath. I was honored to watch the Respiratory Therapist and the Nurse, held their dad’s hands for comfort and propped up the tablet as his wife talked to him on the video..I was blessed with a mild case of this reality.

Covid is real.

When I returned to work and two days later, sat at a patient’s bedside, holding his hand. He had tested positive for Covid and was mourning the loss of his wife. She died of Covid less than 24 hours ago and he was not able to be there with her. 

Covid is real.

And if you think it’s a hoax, a prank, or some conspiracy theory; you are painfully wrong. You and your family may not have been impacted by the Corona virus (thus far) but you have clearly been impacted by something worse……a loss that is beyond my level of understanding. 

What I do understand is this……

Covid is real.

And may you never find out just how real it is.

Finding Gratitude in 2020

This is the Thanksgiving Meditation I prepared for the 2020 Thanksgiving Service at the hospital. Unfortunately, the service was cancelled. I didn’t want the meditation to go to waste. As I reread it this morning, I realized I needed to hear the message more than I thought. Maybe someone else needs it, too.

lifeline

“If you concentrate on finding whatever is good in every situation, you will discover that your life will suddenly be filled with gratitude, a feeling that nurtures the soul.” — Rabbi Harold Kushner

What can we say about 2020? We are standing here, just two days before Thanksgiving and the beginning of the holiday season. We are shaking our heads and wondering what can happen next, what can go wrong again? We struggle with finding hope, finding joy and finding gratitude given the year we have had. The emotions have been all over the place.

For example, have you felt any of these emotions?

SadnessGriefAngerDepressedAnxious
FearDisappointedStressedHateTired
LonelyWorriedLostConfusedHurt
NervousEmptyShockedTenseHopeless

If you have felt one, two, ten, or all of these emotions, that is completely understandable. This year has been a roller coaster of uncertainty and fear of not knowing what’s coming. With the holidays approaching, it may feel like we are on a downward spiral of emotions. The Holidays of 2020 won’t be the traditional ones that we are accustomed to. In order to protect our loved ones from illness, we may not have Thanksgiving in person this year. There are families who are divided and angry that they aren’t spending the time together. Many people have lost jobs and they don’t want to celebrate. Worst of all, many have lost loved ones that will never be seen during the holidays again. Yes, the emotions ran the gamut.

But, does it have to remain that way, the downward spiral of our spirits?  What about other emotions. Have you felt any of the following uplifting emotions?

HappyInspiredGiddyHopefulPeace
GratefulHumbledDeterminedOptimisticCourageous
JoyfulSillyLovedBlessedHonored
FreeAppreciativeAcceptedAmusedExcited

What if we look back on 2020 differently? Can we look for the times when we experienced the uplifting emotions?  Maybe someone in your family graduated from school or college. Did you get to spend more quality time with your children or parents at home? Did you learn new games or new information about your loved ones that you didn’t know?  I started a new hobby that helps me to cope. Maybe you did, too. Did any friends or family get married? Had children? New pets in the home? Or a favorite of many, did someone make you laugh so hard that your gut and cheeks started to hurt. 

As Rabbi Kushner reminds us, if we can concentrate on the good in any situation (and that includes 2020), we might begin to see things differently. During this Thanksgiving season let us change our focus. Let’s look at the year in a different light and see what good came from what we have experienced this year.

There are so many things that happened this year that were out of our control. We have to remember what we do have control of and that is our focus, our spirit, and yes, we also have control over ourselves. In the midst of broken traditions this year, let’s start a new one. Focus on something different. There is nothing or nobody that can change what you want to focus on if you don’t allow them. You can change your focus and remind yourself of the good that you experienced this year. You can change the focus and remind yourself of the uplifting emotions that you felt. You can look back and see the incredible strength and resilience that it took to make it through this challenging year.

Yes, Thanksgiving will look a little different this year.

The table may not look the same but with a resilient soul and strong faith, we can still set the table however we want to. As we plan the day, we can remember the good and how we felt and how we got through this year, stronger than ever. I have no doubt that as we remember, we will also find a renewed spirit, a sense of joy and a new found gratitude. I bet if we can do that, not only will the food nourish our body but finding gratitude will nourish your soul.

Amen.