
There are very poor pockets of this town. The next step is homeless. These enclaves are often called ghettos, section 8 housing, the projects, or crack house lane. All accurate names. And so there I go, before ten am, in my car. Me, the white nurse.
The man I saw today was not appreciative of my visit. For better or worse, he has expectations of the agency that I work for. These expectations are not being met. After I knock, he hollers to let me in. I open the patio door and enter his first floor apartment. He is angry and short with me. I explain that I am not his regular nurse but I can relay his concerns to her. I feel his angry and aggressive energies. I breathe deep and stay centered.
He's seated in a recliner, dressed in shorts and a tank top. He's watching TV. I have never seen a tv like his. “You have a see through TV.”, I say, rather chirpily. This is my natural and genuine tone. Flatly he remarks, “It’s a prison TV”.
It would function as such, the outer casing is clear plastic and you can see all in inside electronic trickery. No hiding shivs there. “Oooh, I seee.” I say. “That's exactly the point.” He smirks. I smile. “That’s a funny joke!” says me. Chipper monkey, thy name is Mrs. Hall.
So we get down to it. My task at this appointment is four fold. He refuses all but two. I take his vitals, listen to his lungs, his heart. Then the diabetic foot care. His feet are a goddamn mess. Toenails all thick with green and yellow fungus, nail beds splitting apart at the seems, feet all dry and flaky. A mess indeed.
I am sitting cross legged on the floor, in front of his recliner. It is the kind that moves up and down with a remote. His carpet has foodstuff ground in. I move aside a bottle of Jameson, empties of Hamm’s beer, and the cockroach spray. My tools are taken from my backpack. And for the next 30 minutes I work through this mess.
I notice that as I lean forward, my white t-shirt dips down, revealing cleavage. My shirt is quickly adjusted and I look up to see if he had noticed. He is twisted completely to his left, leaning over the arm of the chair. A mere six inches from the TV. Glued to The Price is Right. He takes no notice of my labor.
I do an excellent job. He feet respond well. When I am done I repeat my offer to complete my other tasks. He says no. But this time, he smiles. He is no longer short and angry.
In a way, I find my job selfish. On this visit I had an opportunity to give dignity to a man who has very little. This is the privilege of service.
I have got to get me one of those TVs!
ReplyDeleteWhat you do does indeed give people some badly needed dignity. I remember how well the hospice nurse took care of my Mother, such caring, almost like a child.
Ok, in regards to the comment I left on the previous post, I am now really queasy with all the nasty foot details, LOL.
I've a giver, it's what I do ;)
ReplyDeletei havent seen that movie in years, and i STILL get the chills every time i see a picture of nurse ratchet.
ReplyDeletep.s. i know im a post late, but T2 is a movie i can watch over and over again. cant get enuff..
Slyde: That is NOT a pic of nurse rachett!!! It is from my alma mater's nursing history archives.
ReplyDeleteNOT NURSE RACHETT!!!
ok-will have to do a post to clarify :)
but, no worries on being late, :)
Should nursing fall through - there is always beauty school ie. your angelic touch with people's feet.
ReplyDeleteI recall reading this the first time and realized that I needed to start following what you write. You are a saint with far more patience than I will ever have.
ReplyDeleteSteph: aw shucks!
ReplyDeleteKimberly: Hey, you didn't do that word veri thing. huh. Well, yes, I would totally work the salon! Hair and nails and weaves and everything!
Bruce: Glad I could rope you in. And I don't really think I am a saint, they perform miracles-I just did some diabetic foot care. :)
Nurses are made of awesome! Especially the one on whose blog I leave this post....
ReplyDeleteLe Savage: Thanks dude. But, really just doing the job. I don't work for home health anymore. Now I'm all fancy psychiatric nurse practitioner. All working in a office and such.
ReplyDelete:)
Oh my God! YOU are an angel... there is no way I could touch nasty fungus nails.
ReplyDeleteMrs. Hall, you are now my new heroine, doing so much more than I could do, no wonder I never became a nurse!