Life and Death
They say you always remember your first.
I hope I will.
A sacred narrative. Well, a narrative is an account of an
event or story in the life of the one who is sharing it. Add sacred to the
title and to me it means holy. A holy moment where the world that we live in
intersects with one that is “other” than ours.
The first thing I remember was being paged by our
administrative assistant and the text said - “Peds Ed needs a chaplain now.” I
called the office, asked what the situation was and was told by Janet, “The
Children's ED needs a pediatric chaplain, can you please go.” It was about my
second month into my CPE residency program on the Pediatric Units. It was also
about 4:00 pm, an hour later than when my mentor who is the staff pediatric
chaplain leaves for the day. As I walked down the hallway my heart was racing
as I considered the possibilities of
what I might find when I arrived.
I remember coming around the corner into the unit - the
busy-ness, the white-ness, the commotion, and the noise. I remember the
distraught looking couple sitting across the narrow hall from the trauma room
which had the curtain drawn but had the slider door open – the sounds of hard
work being done on the other side of that red curtain. The police with their
clipboards standing by the weeping female and the blank faced male who had his
hand on her shoulder.
My eyes see all this – my brain tries to process all this. I
think my pupils were probably a little larger than usual. I stand against the
counter directly across from the open glass slider door. I remember a social
worker informing me of the circumstances surrounding the patient and why the
police are here. “It's suspicious how she was found – a blanket in her mouth.”
Now we are in the room. We = everybody. It is cramped. Loud.
Monitors, shouting, chest compressions all drowned out by the sobs and screams
of a mother. There are lots of people around the bed and I can't see. I can't
see the center of all the attention. I see the parents, the doctors, the
nurses, the bright overhead light. I want to see but then again, I don't. Can I
handle it? Can I handle this? My hand touches the shoulder of the father.
I remember seeing her for the first time. It was her foot.
In between the bodies cramped and huddled around her bed. Her foot. Her
precious – five toed – 5 year old foot. Can I handle this? What in the world do
I have to offer these parents? My thoughts are interrupted by the doctor
looking from across the bed at the parents - “I'm sorry, there is nothing more
we can do. I'm sorry.”
I remember the mom collapsing into the father's arms. Slowly
the crowd clears and I see for the first time the body of the 5 year old girl
lying lifeless on the brightly lit bed. She is wrapped in a blanket and we arrange
chairs so that her mother and father can hold her one last time. Time blurs,
words are said, and I find myself alone in the room with the father and his
daughter and it is silent. What do I say? Should I say anything? Silence. What
would I want if I was in his place? I take in the room. The remnants of all the
efforts of the medical team litter the floor. The room looks like a train hit
it. A wrapper here, some plastic thing there, blood droplets on the sheet. I
remember her little leggings, red, wadded up as if my own daughter had thrown
them on the bed after changing out of them for something else. I watch the
father hold his daughter. Stroking her head, kissing her forehead, checking to
make sure she is covered. I see him break into tears periodically and then
compose himself and then start the cycle over again. I wonder what he's
thinking. I feel like I am standing guard. I reassure myself, rightly or
wrongly, that if he is comfortable with the silence than I will honor it.
I remember the social worker coming in and reassuring him
that his wife is okay. He remains silent. She states that maybe I can help him
talk about his feelings. She leaves to
go back with the mom who is with a friend in the waiting room. We talk. He
looks down blankly through his tears, still holding his lifeless daughter in
his arms, stating that his dad was a chaplain in Colorado and he was on his
way. It is good to hear that but how can anything about this be good?
The medical examiner comes in (I still had a lot to learn about
claiming my space and authority) and interrupts our connection. Facts are
gathered, questions are asked, mom comes
back in and I find myself wanting to protect these parents from any one or
thing that would cause more hurt. His daughter would have to be examined he
explained to both parents. By now suspicion had gave way to protocol. The child
had been prone to seizures and had a pre-existing condition. It is routine I
would find out that every pediatric emergency is automatically a M.E. case.
I remember the parents being told that they were encouraged
not to watch the examination so I asked them if they would like me to stay with
their daughter while they waited outside. Yes, I will stay. As I reflect on
watching that exam I think back to my very first exposure to CPE. A fellow
seminarian stated about his own experience that he had “seen things he never
wanted to see.” At that time I imagined broken bones, bloody faces, and gore.
Now I think he may have meant something different. When the exam was over, I reflected to the
M.E., “You have a hard job.” He replied, “I will never get used to this and I
don't want to ever get used to this. I've been doing this for over 30 years and
if I ever lose sensitivity it is time for me to hang up the badge because I
wouldn't be human.” I thought to myself, I would want him to examine my
daughter.
The parents are allowed back in. They listen to and watch
the child life specialists make foot castings of their daughter – a memorial
they will receive before they leave the hospital. They spend the last precious
moments with their daughter before it is time for the M.E. to take the body.
Physical separation is hard to watch and walking them through the E.R. to the
private family waiting room was nothing short of gut-wrenching. The next time
they would see their daughter would be in a casket. The dad was in shock –
catatonic almost. The mom was having difficulty just controlling her breathing
– so we breathed together. A friend came, the castings dried, and I escorted
them all out to their car. These are all things I remember.
But one thing I will never forget. In the midst of one of
the most horrible things I have ever witnessed there was a blessing. A blessing
in the form of a little African American girl about the same age as the girl
who died. You see, as I was waiting so terrified and anxious out in front of
the Peds Trauma Room, she appeared. Beads in her hair and a bright smile on her
face. I barely noticed her – she was almost out of place. I suppose her parents
were in a small waiting room right next to the trauma room. I just happened to
look over and there she was – staring at me. So I winked. And she winked back.
I gave her a head shake. She gave me one right back. We played this game of
give and take for about 5 minutes I suppose. I didn't think much of it until
reflecting with my CPE group later. One of our group suggested that she might
have been an angel. Maybe. What I am convinced of is that God was speaking to
me in a language very familiar to me – the playfulness of a little child – that
He was there. It was one of those
messages that spoke directly to my heart. Life and Death – so close together.
It represents the tension of this ministry – it brings the hardest things I've
ever had to experience but there is no where else I'd rather be.
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