Volunteering in the ER: Best & Worst
VOLUNTEERING in the ER is sometimes the BEST, sometimes the WORST. Sometimes it gives me a lump in my throat. Experiences unexpectedly stay with me, depending…
Life-and-death, happy-sad, love-hate: I’m emotionally all over the map.
VOLUNTEERING PUTS PROBLEMS INTO PERSPECTIVE
I always flashback to Orientation when my supervisor Charlayne scolded: “If y’all can’t focus on the patients, get your poor-me selves outta my department”
THE ER IS THE UNIVERSAL EQUALIZER
Patients with chest pains, symptoms of strokes, or difficulty breathing are all treated exactly the same in the ER. It doesn’t matter if you’ve donated a gazillion dollars to the hospital, or if you’re super famous, or homeless and can’t afford to pay your bill. Life-threatening symptoms get priority. Period.
INCLUSIVENESS IS PART OF THE MAKE-UP
The Hospital is the one place where diversity is a given: staff-wise, patient-wise and family-wise. Everyone is there to help or be helped. Tolerance is the normal state. If only the world would follow suit.
IT’S NOT ALWAYS A HAPPY ENDING
When someone dies and the family hasn’t been told yet, holding back the tears is a major challenge, even for an Actress.
I’M CHALLENGED BY LUMP IN MY THROAT MOMENTS
When a mommy and child come in, memories flood. I have to step away to compose myself because I identify so closely. In some ways it’s good because I can be compassionate. In other ways, not so much, because I’m on the verge of behaving like a basket-case.
THE SIGHTS, THE SMELLS, THE SOUNDS ARE DISGUSTING
Gotta be honest, the ER can get pretty gross fast. That’s when we page “Environmental to Triage, STAT!” I don’t know how they do it (but thank God they do!)