The waiting area is busier than I've ever seen it. Nurses stride past purposefully in their scrubs, patients shuffle along slowly or get pushed in wheelchairs, all of them continually passing in and out of the doors to the restrooms and the elevators and the stairwell and the double doors to the wards and disappearing around the corner down the hallway that leads to the Critical Decision Unit. And of course Wound Care/Hyperbaric, whose banner celebrating staff excellence has been removed, leaving hooks in the bare wall.
"What happened to your award banner?" I ask Shelley when she opens the door. "Did some rival wound care place steal it? Maybe those bastards at St. Vincent's? They're so smug, what with their rooms with doors on them and everything. It was that Judy, I bet. I never trusted her."
"It was up for a year. It was someone else's turn." Shelley darts off and leaves me in room one with Jenny and Bridget.
As she takes my vitals, Jenny tells me in great detail the epic saga of Dave Getting Trapped in the Closet Overnight. I'm sleepy and not really focused on what she's saying. I was up too late watching Near Death, Fredrick Wiseman's documentary about end-of-life treatment in a Boston ICU. I've seen many of his films, and loved them all, but the subject matter of this one felt daunting. Plus, it's six hours long. But Wisman died earlier in the week, so I thought it was a perfect time to finally force myself to watch this thing.
I'm glad I did. It's a magnificent work of art, intense and deeply moving. It eschews the sprawl of his other films to focus on a handful of doctors and nurses as they try to get their patients to understand that they are actively dying. Scenes with the family members are especially heartbreaking as they struggle to accept the fact that every decision they make at this juncture will either extend their loved ones' suffering or allow them to die in relative peace, i.e. stoned out of their minds on morphine. It left a profound impression on me, and I can't stop thinking about it as Jenny starts up the saw with a roar. How wrapped up I get in my own minor suffering, frustrated at life's countless little annoyances. This is all so inconsequential in the face of the challenges that... God I hate the sound of that fucking saw.
Jenny pulls off the cast without the aid of the crackers. "Where's this blood from?" she cries. "It's not from the wound."
"Oh my god, did you cut me with the saw?"
"What? No, of course not, but where..."
"I'm kidding. It's from the scab on my knee. I bumped it and it bled like crazy and dripped into the cast. I couldn't believe how much blood there was. It's weird, it looks fine now."
"Oh thank goodness. You're such a brat. I should really teach you a lesson."
"I really get a lot of abuse around here," I say.
"At least you don't have KC hitting you," Karen calls from somewhere.
"Not much privacy around here," I yell.
"Oh my gosh, look at this," Jenny says as she peels off the undercast. There is only a small splotch of colorless drainage that hasn't even seeped through. "This looks wonderful, Seann. Really, really good." She squirts Lydocaine onto a patch of gauze and sticks it to my foot. I ask her if she's watched Near Death and she says no. It should be required watching for anyone in the health care profession; or anyone period, really. When I describe it she makes a face. "No thanks," she says.
Dr. Thompson comes in and I say, "Debride me! Debride me now!" She just gives me a look then does indeed start the debriding, chatting with Bridget about this show they've been watching called Pluribus. She sure watches a lot of TV. She asks if I've seen it and I say no but I've heard it's good. She ruins the ending for me then leaves as Bridget gathers the materials for the undercast.
"You probably know how to do this better than I do at this point," she says. I tell her I should go to nursing school. "And you could come work here!" she says. I imagine another life where, as a young man, I did in fact become a nurse. What would it be like to have a job where I actually help people, rather than the series of dead-end customer service jobs that have made up most of my working life?
She spends a long time getting the water just right, like a chemist, pouring some out and adding more. When the doctor comes in and reaches into the bucket she once again expresses her approval. I'm feeling sleepy again but I snap to attention when I hear her say, "I really could use a vacation. I mean, one where I don't get sick. This last time I ended up working from home anyways. I should add those hours up and make them add them give them back to me. They were emailing me in the middle of the night. I couldn't believe it."
"Were lives in the balance?" I ask. She chuckles and says no.
I ask if she's seen Near Death. "Now why would I put myself through that?" she asks.
She finishes the cast and says, "I'm very pleased with that." It is the hugest, bulkiest one yet. "No one will mess with you now."
"Yeah because if they do they'll be subjected to me hobbling slowly away," I say.
"No, you sweep that thing under their leg to throw them off balance, then kick them where it counts," she says, standing up. "Like this. Here, get behind me," she says to Bridget.
"Oh no I don't think so," Bridget says, sounding worried.
"Come on. Make it like you're coming up behind me." Bridget obeys, and the doctor does a slow-motion sweep of her leg, stopping before she actually knocks her off her feet, then grabs her arm and makes as if to yank her to the ground. "I think when I'm done with this job I'll become a martial arts instructor. I think I would enjoy that. A bunch of us took classes for years and this one time I was in the garage when someone grabbed me from behind. I just thought it was one of the other doctors messing with me and I told him I wasn't in the mood. Then another guy came up and I saw they were serious. Luckily they saw it on camera and a couple of big burly guards came right away. I didn't even get a chance to use any of my training!"
"She was lucky she was in the doctor's lot," mutters Bridget when she leaves. "If she was in the regular lot, no one would've been watching." She asks where my shoe is and I hold it up for her to see. "These things don't hold up too well. I'll get you another one."
Before I leave, I ask Karen for the latest Dolly pictures. She says there hasn't been anything exciting since the doggie birthday party.
Downstairs, I pass two orderlies pushing a woman with tubes sprouting everywhere from her ancient body. She looks scared and bewildered. She reminds me of the patients in the movie, none of them able to live without the machines they're attached to. As I wait for the bus. I think of the film, of the soothing rhythms of the doctors' voices as they discuss extubation, tracheostomies, ventilators, brain activity. "Some of this stuff is heavy flail for relatively small or no gain," one doctor says. Later, he is even more blunt, saying, "It's a tragedy, but that's the way it goes."
The bus is crammed with a group of young students with impaired vision, some of them chattering happily, some blankly ahead of them. "That's the kind of dress I want to wear when I get married," a girl with Down Syndrome says. When they reach their stop their leader yells for them to get off the bus and they all stand up at once, laughing and crashing into one another, sticks clacking as they shove their way toward what they believe to be the way out.