Day 28
28 November 2021
Spirit of the Universe, please set aside everything I
think I know about myself, about my story, about my need for validation, and
especially about you, Universe, so that I may have an open mind and a new
experience with myself, with my story, with my need for validation, and with
you, Universe. Please help me to see the truth. Amen.
Today is the 11th anniversary of my dad’s
passing. It was about a half-hour ago that the hospice called my mother to
inform her that he was gone. The ringer on my phone wasn’t working so she had
to call twice. On the second time she said something hurtful that has stuck
with me. She said “you’re never here for me.”
I don’t want to sit too long in this place. My mother is
better these days, not as angry any more. However, my parents’ disappointment in
me has always been palpable to me. I think it’s been a driving force in my
life. I want to show them that I can be successful without having to do what
they want me to do because I can’t do what they wanted me to do.
My parents helped me a lot financially over the years but it
always came at the price of having to listen to how disappointed they were in
me. I felt like I was always begging them to see what a mess I was, to please
have some understanding for me and to let me get better so I could succeed on
my terms.
I remember when I got the job in the independent living
section of the retirement community where I worked. It was such a relief to not
have to kill myself in the long-term care center anymore. Part of what got me the
job was my EMT license. I was never able to work as an EMT because I would have
had to take a $4 per hour pay as an entry level EMT over what I was making as a
C.N.A., but the license still helped me.
I liked the job in the independent living section much
better. I had a lot more autonomy and there was far less heavy lifting. I was
proud when I told my father that I’d finally found a job that I thought I could
stick with. His response was “well, we’ll have to see about that.” He and my
mother were hell-bent on having me get my nursing license so I could make more
money. There went my feeling of pride in one fell swoop.
When I did get the nursing license some six years later, I
made between $2 and $6 more per hour than I had made working as a resident
assistant, and I was killing myself working 60-hour weeks. My sciatica got
better because the first case I had involved working with a one-year-old infant
whose case resolved.
The next major case I had would be the main client I worked
with for the rest of my career in nursing. It might have been okay if the
patient had stayed with the agency that I was working with, but there was a
serious disagreement between the agency and the patient’s mother, so he was
transferred to a different agency.
I signed on with the new agency but kept my foot in the
water, so to speak, at the agency I was already with. I had good (though
expensive) health insurance through them. I did not know about the Medicaid
buy-in if it existed, and I don’t know if it existed in 2016. There can be dry
spells working for homecare agencies, so I figured it was smart to be signed on
with more than one.
Working as much as I did fucked my health to hell. One of my
patients developed a severe respiratory infection which he passed on to me. I
had to call off from my other assignments so I wouldn’t pass it on to those
patients, but my coordinator told me that I could keep working with the patient
from whom I’d picked up the illness because I couldn't re-infect him and laid
on the guilt by saying “the family really needs you.”
My diabetes was getting worse and I wasn’t on insulin yet. I
was really, really sick. There is no way under the sun that I should have been
working. During the night, I sat by this patient’s bedside. I would play games
on my tablet or write on my laptop. Sometimes I dozed off, but it was a light
sleep and I would always snap to if something were amiss.
I didn’t snap to on this occasion. I recall looking at the
time when I started feeling so drowsy that I knew I was going to go under. I
was in a state of complete unconsciousness for the next 20 minutes. When I woke
up, the patient’s father was sitting at the end of the patient’s bed glaring at
me. I collected my things, apologized profusely, and left. I knew what was
coming.
I think that I had a T.I.A. (transient ischemic attack)
brought on by all the stress that my body was undergoing. I was well and truly
unconscious. I was, unsurprisingly, fired from the first agency. I wanted to
rail at my coordinator for putting me in that position, but I remained stoic
during the process, responding only with “yep” and “nope” and finally saying “okay,
bye,” and leaving.
It wasn’t so bad at first because the second agency kept me
on with the patient I’d been working with before. Unfortunately, his case
worsened to the point where he needed more care than a regular LPN could
provide. He had a rare x-linked genetic disease and was going to start needing
infusions. I am unsure if he is still alive. He had lived longer than most kids
diagnosed with this condition.
I tried to go back to work in a long-term care center when
the homecare agency was unable to find me another suitable client. It didn’t
work out. The diabetes had taken a lot out of me physically by then and I felt
like I was going to pass out. I also felt confused, probably as a result of my
blood sugar taking a dive.
There is a high rate of burnout in long-term care and this
is because they work their staff to death.
I made a promise to my father that I haven’t been able to
keep when I was sitting beside his body in his room at the hospice. I promised
that I would finish my Bachelor’s degree in English. My father was a college
professor and was always disappointed that I only had an associate's degree.
Unfortunately, I am too busy to take on even one more thing.
One always hears these stories about people getting a lucky
break after years of hard work. I honestly don’t think I’m ever going to be
able to join that crowd.
Dear Cie,
ReplyDeleteThank you for a beautiful and moving post. It's hard to imagine something more awful than one's mind slipping away. But it sounds as though you at least had time to say goodbye to your father, and that he knew you were there.
Bless you.
He did know who we were up to the end, although he had vascular dementia and was confused about a lot of other things. I've always been glad of that.
DeleteI am sorry to hear about your dad and how hard the journey has been. My Dad's passing was similar in that it was one painful thing after another. I understand how hard that situation is, and the gratitude for the hospice that helped him and the family navigate the final time. Sending peace.
ReplyDeleteThank you Shari. It really was one thing after another for him.
DeleteHospice care provides such a great service. I'll pray for you and for your dad.
ReplyDeleteIndeed it does. It was a real relief for my mother, who was my dad's primary caretaker. Thank you.
Delete