Oops, I Did It Again: Dottie

You'd think I'd have learned my lesson after caring for my old friend in that same room and witnessing her inevitable decline and death, but nope---this one had me from "Hello". OOPS .... Nurses Announcements Archive Article

.....I went and lost my heart to yet another hospice patient.

Her name is Dottie, and she is 85 pounds of trouble dressed in a white satin nightgown and an ancient pair of fuzzy pink slippers. She came to our nursing home in early April for a five-day hospice respite, and for reasons known only to her, liked it so much there that she decided to stay put instead of returning to her own apartment. It's OK---she is quite literally a ray of sunshine---but we're still trying to figure out how a LTC facility could possibly be more appealing than one's own home, especially at a time of life when one needs familiar surroundings the most..........or so we believe.

In addition to a strong Christian faith, fastidious ways, and a dry wit that keeps us constantly in stitches, Dottie has kidney cancer, which has spread to her lungs and God knows where else. Ever the lady, she coughs bright-red blood into a Kleenex which is folded neatly into fourths for further use; she coughs again, folds again, and finally places the well-used tissue inside a basin which has been lined with plastic bags to facilitate easy disposal of the offending materials.

She puts her hair in rollers each evening before bed. She has a picture of Jesus on her nightstand and will tell you to move aside if you happen to be standing in between them. She has a stuffed leopard, Tigger, whom she talks to as if he were a real cat.....much to the amusement of well-intentioned social workers who mistake her sense of humor for dementia. And she honestly wonders why God hasn't come to take her home yet---"I was supposed to be dead by the end of March", she will tell you matter-of-factly. We joke about Him taking so long because He's adding on another couple of rooms to her mansion in Heaven, but I suspect it's because in her dying, she is teaching us how to live.

She tells me I am her favorite nurse. I still think she says that to all of the nurses who care for her---not that she needs much care, she is still VERY independent---but her daughter confirmed it one night last week when things were looking bad for her and we thought she was nearing the end. Then the other night, her college-age granddaughter gave me a huge hug as I was going off duty and said, "Now I know why you're Grandma's favorite!" So to say that I've bonded with these people is probably the understatement of the month; and while I still do my best to remain professional and objective, her passage will be one of the toughest I've ever had to endure. The selfish side of me fervently hopes another nurse will be present at that sad hour; but in my heart of hearts I pray I'll be the one to brush her hair and to wipe her brow for the final time. As someone much wiser than I once said: some people come into our lives and quickly go; others leave their footprints on our hearts, and we are never the same.

I don't know what awaits this good woman, or her family. I don't even know if I'll see her again on this side of the grave---she's in rough shape, and I'm off-duty for several days. But when I stopped by the other night to let Dottie and the family know that I was going to be off until Saturday, she grasped my hand and held on, looked at me with eyes that were suddenly clear of their drug- and pain-induced fog, and said, "I love you. I mean that."

I knew she did. And I meant it when I said "I love you, too". I don't say that to patients, but I say it to my friends all the time. And that, dear reader, is what I love so much about nursing. In spite of all the ugliness and the brokenness we see, every now and again we get to meet one of God's angels, cleverly disguised as a human being, who becomes more to us than just another patient.

Dottie is my angel. Who is yours?

Specializes in med surg ltc psych.

I have recently found that some comments or compliments given to me from both young and old patients, are the real deal. I can tell and feel what is being said to me is the truth. I suddenly feel a bonafide blush come to my face and with a loss of words in response. Yes, those are the special few moments in which I truly feel that I am a real deal nurse to them. They are glad you are their nurse. They are glad it is YOU that is caring for them. Day after day shift, night after night shift. You may not ever hear any words uttered to you that hit home, and make you float in your Crocks for the rest of the shift. But when it happens I feel as though I have been raised up above and beyond my own life. To walk out of a room and go back to the med room with that smile on my face puzzling the other staff members is a good feeling too! An elder who has lived many a decade longer than me, so particular and cantankerous make a statement like I am nursing royalty in her eyes is unforgetable. These are the moments in my life that are kept in a special place in my heart. Sometimes I wish now that some unkind, bullying nursing instructors could see us long after we graduated. It wasn't nursing school or your clinical instruction that made me a good nurse. Being a nurse is what made me a good nurse.

Before I became an RN I worked at an assisted living facility passing out meds and helping with ADL's. I became so attached to some of my residents... the oldest war vet in the county who also happened to be on the beaches of Normandy who said to me once when I asked him about it "Oh yeah, it was a little scary, but it was also loud (chuckle)", the tough as nails Austrian immigrant who befriended the quiet as a mouse German immigrant, who walked arm in arm on their afternoon walks, the fast talking Navy vet who wanted her coffee "piping hot, I need it for my bowel movements! I'm Scandinavian you know, dear.", and the former mayor of the town I went to elementary school in who claimed he didn't need the battery in his hearing aid, he could hear just fine thank you very much.

After I graduated from nursing school and went to work in the hospital I'm sorry to say that I fell out of touch with my residents. The anxiety of being a new RN and an incidental cancer diagnosis caused me to lose track and forget why I wanted to become a nurse. It was those residents that encouraged me when I had bad day in clinicals and told me what a wonderful nurse I was going to be. It was those residents that encouraged me to put on a one woman show (singing and dancing around like a fool) during meal times to "liven the place up". And it was those residents for whom I cried when I read their obituaries in the newspaper in the months following my graduation.

In my short 3 years as a nurse I have become cynical. Threads and posts like these make me realize its not the drug seekers, not the non compliants, not the annoying rants of patients that get to me, but those residents and those like them..young and old.. who get to me, in a good way though. The patients who remind me why I got into nursiing are the same ones who keep me going during my 12 hour, no bathroom breaks shifts.

I'm not naive enough to believe that many will read this post in its entirety, but to those who do, always remember why you got into this profession. It's silly advice to those who have been doing this longer than I have but I figure I'll just say it anyway. For some reason, this post really got to me, maybe becaue its 2 AM and my 10 month old is pulling my hair and I'm tired but he's not or maybe because this post gave someone who was starting to feel like an overpaid waitress a much needed boost. Thank you.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

What a wonderful post! Thank YOU!!

Beautiful and meaningful story. I love the oldies, as I call them. They are my fave. Especially when they have a sweetness like your Dottie. I am so glad you are there for her.

Heather

Specializes in Rehabilitation/Long-term Care.

Been there, done that. She sounds like so many of my patients that I've fallen for. If I were told not to fall in love with any of my "people", I think I'd hate nursing, I'd have to go find something else to do with all the love I had in my heart.