After at least a 6 year absence I returned to the Emergency
Room of Grace Hospital last night around 1:30 in the morning.
Early the next day I
saw something beautiful in the hallways.
There were two elderly patients lying in beds directly in
front of me. To the right side they
wheeled in an elderly Asian man and to the left there was another elderly
patient. The Asian man had started vomiting
when he tried to eat something. Same
thing happened to the man with the British accent who was lying just a few feet
away from me.
At one point, lying all alone and in his despair he quietly
uttered to himself that he felt like he was dying.
He was going diarrhea every few minutes and he couldn’t take
much more. He asked the Dr. to give him
something for it but they didn’t give him anything. They were worried about possible side
effects. Every few minutes he would
start coughing and with every sound I could hear the massive collection of
phlegm that had built up in his lungs.
It was a sound I knew all too well from the previous 5 – 7 visits or
more I had made to the emergency room over the last 20 years or so.
Actually my first trip
to the hospital due to asthma had been when I was just a few weeks old and
after I had gone home for the first time.
It took 6 nurses and 2 Dr.’s I’m told to hold me down to put a needle in
my forehead. My dad said the guy in the
room next to me was so upset by what he had heard from me that he had wanted to
punch all of those nurses and Dr’s out.
Still, amongst all the grief of the pain and suffering in
that hallway I saw something truly amazing and beautiful. It was love.
At around 10 am that morning visiting hours opened to the
general public. I was happy to see that
all of the patients surrounding me had at least one visitor who was very happy
to see the person they were there to see.
I was really touched
by the elderly English couple who were just a few feet away from me. The love that she had for her husband was
easily apparent in her eyes and the smile she had on display every time he
looked at her face. She did everything
she could to help him, which meant untangling the mess that had become of his
IV and his hospital gown which did not cover up enough.
While she was there he said it again. “It feels like I’m dying”.
“Don’t talk like that,” she said.
As she left about an hour later they made plans to see each
other again later in the day. They held
hands and both said “I love you”.
I was deeply touched.
It was one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen in my life. True love does exist.
ps. I would like to thank all of the staff at the Grace Hospital Emergency Room.
I'm glad you were able to find something positive in a negative experience, Neil, and hope you're feeling better.
ReplyDeletethanks melanie. that was totally the point of the article. even in life's ugly moments there are moments of beauty. i saw this one and just had to share it with the rest of the world.
ReplyDeleteto everyone who reads this, if you could join me in asking the universe to give this man his health back that would be great. i really hope he pulls thru.
ReplyDelete