Grief and Loss
It's been a rough month on the floor. Multiple relapses, patients taking a sudden turn for the worse, and death. I try to tell myself that this is all part of the job and the career that I have chosen; that I knew there would be times like this going into it. But that is no consolation when it actually happens. It's not fair. It's just not fair.
This culminated for me on Monday when a patient I have been following for almost exactly a year passed away. He died peacefully and was surrounded by his family. In the week before his death, when it was clear he was not going to leave the hospital, he got to meet his new puppy (his Make-A-Wish was to get a white golden retriever puppy. He named him Jack Frost) and was inducted into the army which was his dream, to be like his dad. He was 10 years old, just a few weeks away from his 11th birthday. He was feisty, stubborn, argumentative, and one of the best procrastinators I have ever met. He dreamt up more ways to get out of PT than all my other patients combined, and one time even tried to call 911 on me. He was one of the most challenging patients I have ever worked with and as a result he taught me more along the way than almost anyone else I have worked with, and I know much of what I will learn from him has only just started to become apparent.
Even when it was medically clear he wasn't going to make it, I hoped and prayed he would use his stubbornness and defiance to beat the odds and walk out of the hospital. As I lay in bed on Monday night thinking about him and his family, I realized as badly as his mom and dad and I wanted to see him walk out (he was just starting to walk with crutches), that it was almost fitting that he defied us all once again and flew out of there.
I miss him. I saw him every day at 3:00 and 3:00 this week seemed empty without his spunk and energy. There is a weight on my shoulders and my heart breaks when I think about his family and what they are going through. I know there will be more happiness and joy as patients defy the odds and statistics and surprise us all. I hope those cases start coming soon. For now, I am trying to embrace and recognize the feelings of loss and sadness and trying to allow myself the space to grieve. Times like these give me a renewed appreciation for the blessing of health and time spent with loved ones. It is not fair that he didn't walk out of the hospital or that his family has to learn to live without him. I'm not sure what the lesson is in all this grief and loss...maybe there isn't one. And I guess that's ok, too. This passage was passed along by the chaplain on the floor.
The Task of the Caregiver: We tend to look at caring as an attitude of the strong towards weak of the powerful towards the powerless of the haves towards the have nots. When we honestly ask ourselves which persons in our lives mean the most to us we find it is those who instead of giving much advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a gentler and kinder hand, the friend who can be silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion, who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement, who can tolerate not knowing, nor curing, nor healing and face with us the reality of our powerlessness.
By Henri Nouwen Theologian and Author of “The Wounded Healer” and “Out of Solitude”














