Palace of Care – Gasp

Photo by Agnieszka Stankiewicz on Unsplash

I received the news by email that a brave young lady had died overnight. Before opening the email I knew what it meant. Opening the missive confirmed the bad news. I still gasped a jagged breath in when I read the words. Even after 16 years of full-time palliative care some cases affect me more than others. A good reminder that I am still human. I still feel sad about some cases. I can’t feel too sad though or I wouldn’t be able to carry on. I need to be strong enough to handle the next cases that will come my way. I can’t fall apart after each loss. I allow myself to grieve a bit for each death. I obtain closure. Things would have been much worse if I hadn’t been involved. I have made a difference. I have done enough.

The care I provide can never be perfect. If it was a perfect world my patient would not be dead, they would be alive and living the rest of their lives. Her life was cut far too short, she barely had time to become an adult. I’m not sure if a good death was achieved, but I know that it was much less bad than it could’ve been. There will be tears, even I feel myself blinking some back. Bloody hayfever. Could you go and cut those onions somewhere else please?

I informed my team of the death through our online chat group. I also let them know that I feel sad, that the most experienced member of the team feels sad about this case. That it is okay to feel sad. We’re humans, we know something about loss, it’s okay to feel our emotions. It’s okay to do some extra self-care when we need it.

The other day she wore a vintage Spice Girls t-shirt. I had asked her, “tell me what you want, what you really really want?” We had laughed together and talked about her toys. Her vintage Care Bear, her pillow pal, her Squishmallow. There were no Beanie Babies, yet.

Goodbye brave young lady, safe travels.

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