Palace of Care – The Pickup Truck

Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash

We had to remind ourselves every day when driving down the hospice driveway to be careful when entering the car park. The pickup truck was always parked in the first parking space. A long vehicle anyway but the driver would always have it parked so the back part of the truck would be sticking out into the main thoroughfare. Everyone else who wanted to park in the hospice car park would have to make sure that they didn’t hit the back of the pickup truck. It had gotten to the point that local authorities were considering installing a specific traffic light to warn other drivers of the potential danger. No matter what time of the day or night it was the pickup truck was always there, for months on end. It was an almost constant presence that we could tell time by the shadows cast by the sun shining on it – a Japanese assembly-line manufactured sundial weighing over a tonne. Local mosses tried to grow on it with limited success. If you looked up the hospice campus on Google Maps the truck would appear on the provided image. It was always there, for months.

The truck belonged to the father of one of our younger patients. A shy young man who was very private and did not want anyone but his father to help him with showering. A devoted father who doted on his ailing son. He had attended every specialist appointment with his son. He wanted to be involved in every treatment discussion and decision. He tried to do his best to keep his son alive, and it worked to some extent. He was ever vigilant on behalf of his boy, as at the start of the son’s illness it had taken a while for him to be diagnosed. The son’s plight was reflective of the health disparities that affect some members of our population. The reality of institutional racism throughout our health system meant that the son’s story about abdominal pain and weight loss was discounted for six months. By the time his terminal cancer diagnosis was finally made, the cancer had spread to many parts of his body, causing a lot of pain.

The father and son had both been scared of hospice when they were first referred. Their oncologist had to persuade them to give us a go. Our staff assessed his pain control which was poor and asked him to consider admission into our inpatient unit for pain control. It took many conversations and for the pain to become unbearable before they were admitted. Everything needed to be discussed with the father, he couldn’t trust the healthcare system because of the way they had treated his son in the past. Given New Zealand’s track record, I couldn’t blame him for his lack of trust. On the first admission, we were able to bring the pain under control quickly, and days later he went home.

Over the next months, our patient would be re-admitted several times. His father would be there with him most days, and hence the pickup truck became part of our car park again. Our patient’s health slowly deteriorated over many weeks. The father and son who had been so wary in regards to coming into hospice were now too scared to leave. They felt safer in our place than in their place. In the last weeks of his stay, there were several times when we thought our patient was about to die, that he was parked too close to the edge of the clifftop and was falling over. Somehow he would reverse his way back to the edge again. Less than a week later it looked like this was it, half of the chassis was over the cliff edge. Some incredible inner strength would pull him back again. The doctors stopped trying to prognosticate, we kept getting it wrong. Anyone else would have died weeks or months ago.

It came as a shock to all of us when we didn’t have to take a wider berth when navigating our car park. The pickup truck which had been there for almost half a year was gone. The father did not need to stay in the hospice any more. His son had been taken away in another long vehicle by another exit for his final journey. After many months together with them, most of us didn’t get the chance to say goodbye, to the son or the father. That’s the way it goes sometimes, we don’t always get a chance to partake in the closure that we need. Goodbye. We wish you safe travels, both of you.

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