Nurses.

If you don’t know nurses, you will, or someone you love will. In my past year of cancer-and-chemo appointments, of those dozen hospital stays, in variations of days to weeks, the nurses were my very best friends. Nurses cajoled me to eat chicken soup and drink water (even a sip, just try); they were kind to me and looked out for my daughters. They taught us the ropes of the hospital ship: the habits of doctors and surgeons, how to adjust a bed and order food, find the light switches, turn up the room’s heat, find warm blankets. They offered orange juice and sandwiches to my daughters and hotel vouchers. The nurses told me I would live.

Nurses taught me about IVs, how not to bend my arm, what downstream occlusion meant, and when I must absolutely ring immediately for a nurse. They helped me to shower when I couldn’t stand, and never laughed when I said I forgot I had no hair. But they did tell funny stories and made me laugh. When I had a terrifying reaction to a chemo drug that was absolutely necessary for me to endure, a nurse sat with me for hours.

There was that terrible ED visit when I couldn’t stop throwing up from pain, and I was too weak to talk, and the nurse stayed long after his shift ended, holding my hand while I cried. There was yet another awful stay in the ED, those three nights in the room with the beige metal walls and the heat that wouldn’t turn off, and the nurse and the MD together figured out a pain med plan that brought me back to my body, that made the cancer bearable again.

Another nurse helped me get discharged on a spring day when I pleaded to go outside and see the apple blossoms, to have sunlight and wind on my face; she arranged for my daughter to sit with me on a bench and sip hibiscus tea, and she arranged for the hotel room where I slept all afternoon and then traveled in the morning across the road again, back to the cancer center for more chemo. She did this to help me heal. The chemo nurses tend the frail and the hopeful, the recovering and the dying. I had no port, so my arms were bruised and scabbed from months of sticking, and these fine nurses turned my forearms over and over and never failed me. Who in your life never fails you? They took such care.

I could write on and on. The nurse that first visit to the ED, who knew from a scan that I had metastatic cancer before I did. He walked in my room and looked at my daughters with such compassion. We did not know, but he did. He knew the hardship that lay ahead of my dear daughters.

The nurses, unfailingly, cared me as one of their own. I have notes in my journals, names and stories of strangers who cared so tenderly for me and my daughters, but really what I have is gratitude, admiration, and such sorrow for the unnecessary murder of one of our tribe.

22 thoughts on “Nurses.

  1. I spent the night in the hospital. I had eaten lunch without any problems. The doctor who did didn’t check with me or my medical chart, decided I was unsafe to have dinner. My nurse intervened on my behalf and I finally got dinner two hours later. God bless nurses who care for and listen to their patients when the doctors are too busy and or important to care.

  2. Nurses are angels whose feet touch the ground, so indeed, a doubled sorrow: deadly agents stole from perhaps 25 more years’ worth of patients as well as from Pretti’s loved ones. Incomprehensible.

  3. Thank you Brett, I too salute the nurses Peter and I both had as we went through cancer treatments. Truly angels on earth. This is beautifully written and a tribute to a nurse lost this weekend.

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  4. Sorrow and anger for the criminal murder is what I feel. Praying for justice for all who have been injured and murdered by this administration. 🙏❤️

  5. My sister is a nurse, and they are the best. It isn’t an easy job/life, and those that choose it or are chosen by it, are angels.

  6. I’ll never forget the NICU nurse who taught me how to bathe my preemie so he stayed comfy, and gave us words of wisdom about dressing him (and not overdressing him in December) when he finally came home. And all the nurses who helped us over several bumps once we were home. They are critical professionals!

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