Just Another Code

A code is called...it's the woman in room 11. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Earlier, the paramedics found her--deep in the winter of her life--lying like a rag doll in a man's lap. Shocks and drugs refocused her heart's energy. She is whisked to the emergency room and then transferred intensive care.

Now, the team of nurses and doctors stream in, prepared to wage war against the various demons of fate, or to some, the will of G-d.

"Who is she," asks a physician.

But, "who" the woman is--her goodness, her humanity--concerns no one but the angels.

The coat she once placed over a homeless man, that cold February eve so many years ago, placed no reciprocal burden upon the universe. And the love she so graciously offered others is not the currency against which time can now be redeemed.

No, the physician seeks only histories and co-morbidities, accidents and nature's anomalies. Now, only the cold mechanics-of-things is honored. Only algorithms and the precision of commands.

In the waiting sits a man. He closes his eyes and slips into his favorite chair. He drifts off to the sounds of a woman preparing a meal. The aroma of memories revives her smile and the deep-blue mysteries within her eyes. Fifty years of embraces and shared secrets. Fifty years discovering the essence of life, the possibility of tethered hearts.

An overhead page barks out bleeding his memory.

We see and touch the woman, but she is not there. She is off dressing dolls and chasing first snowflakes. Off molding perfect sand feet on the beach with her lover. Off kissing the scented foreheads of sleeping babies.

Drugs are pushed, lines are placed, and the room bulges with personnel eager for the "drama" of their calling. Compressions convulse the woman's body and fluids stream into translucent veins. But she is no more alive than the silver locket that drapes her pallid neck.

Family members discuss miracles. They invoke the name of a compassionate G-d and speak of prayer and grand designs. The room echoes with enough distilled optimism to change the course of a river.

But, at 25 minutes, the physician calls the code. Hands are stilled and suddenly there is silence. We quickly glance and nod at each other. So many years and still unable to capture the last vapors of life as they float from the room.

The nurse enters the waiting room and goes to the man. He searches her face for possibilities finding only despair.

He cries out to some divine power to rewind a life. The family embraces the man with love made complete by the man and the woman.

We clean and restore modesty to the woman's body. When the family steps in we close the heavy glass door but the rise and fall of sobbing seeps into the interior of the unit.

Soon, the floor will gleam, the sheets will be changed, and fresh tubing will be coiled around suction canisters.

And the woman will be dancing in a man's dream.

Specializes in Obstetrics, M/S, Family medicine.

Your words are incredibly poetic, and in a matter of seconds, I am transformed to a place I have yet to visit.

Your words set a scene that is remarkably vivid. You have a gift. Your writing is superb.

That really is a beaytiful article. Thank you so much for sharing with us.

wow... wonderful story. It reminds me of when my grandmother died.. except it was at her home. They let her go home to die because they could do no more for her. She died of cancer so this was a very touching story. :cry:

Specializes in peds critical care, peds GI, peds ED.

Beautifully and thoughtfully written.

I felt you were searching for the divinity in death- where is G-d at the end of a life filled with memories and meaning. You and I both know that death comes to every living being, whether early and unexpected or timely and a blessed relief to pain and suffering. We try and prolong it's ultimate claim over each of us, but it comes- if not today, then tomorrow or a decade.

We grieve because we see humanity beyond the procedures and interventions. Even if we are drama-junkies in the moment, we drill down to the person on the gurney and see beyond the ravages of life. We see mothers, sons, friends, mates and even enemies. This is what makes us compassionate caregivers.

I can theorize on the presence of evil in the world and why bad things happen to good people. I can question G-d all day long and ask, "why?" It is good we ask those questions that have no answers, assuaging the pain we feel when death wins. I ask all the time. I still have no answers. But I still have faith.

May you find the divine in the mundane today, my friend.

Godspeed :saint:

Specializes in ORTHOPAEDICS-CERTIFIED SINCE 89.

She wrapped the homeless man in her coat so many years ago. Today God wrapped her in HIS arms forever. Thank you. We will reach 50 years in just 7 more.

Specializes in ER/EHR Trainer.

BEAUTIFUL, your words are stirring and thoughtful.

Thankyou

Maisy

Specializes in Alzheimer's, Geriatrics, Chem. Dep..
A code is called...it's the woman in room 11...

I wish I had seen this earlier hon, what marvelous word pictures and what beautiful sad feelings you evoked

xo

Specializes in Critical Care.

fluid yet powerful. your poetic and emotionally charged prose is in stark contast with the almost mechanical code that u described. thanks. reminded me about how i used to be wen i first assisted in a code..

That you could see a human being..not just a lump of cells...that you knew that the patient....was more in life.....makes you one very special person..

bravo interleukin! i love it! i love it! i love it!! thanks a bunch!

This is beautifully written. However, I find it somewhat disturbing that this article, which can provoke such feeling, cannot spell out the word "God".

Feelings and emotions transcend "Political Correctness." At first, upon seeing "G-d" I thought of the curse g-damn. Took some of the "magic" out of the article for me.

Specializes in Mixed Level-1 ICU.

Dear Vanderfk,

Thank you for pointing that out. I may be lots of things, but politically correct I am not.

I was simply on auto-pilot. Must be the same reason I forgot the word "room" when I typed, "In the waiting sits a man."

Needless to say, there'll be no excuse for that faux pas again

Take care,

Mark