Constantly Searching

Over the past 7 days (of which I worked 5 12 hour shifts) I have come home crying after 3 of them and flat out sobbing after one of them. My body aches, my heart is heavy, my soul is bruised, and my brain is probably firing on just a couple synapses right now – and I don’t think those synapses are next to each other. At one point this morning while I was trying to finish my end of shift paperwork I just leaned back in my chair and stared blindly at the computer screen because I just couldn’t focus on the task at hand. I’m so happy to have this one night off that I could just go tap dancing naked down the interstate.


I’ve been rendered speechless so many times this past week that I can’t count them. And those of you who know me well know that this is NOT a common occurrence. But right now I do have plenty to say:
People, life is short. Shorter than you know. Shorter than you can even imagine. Every day we have, every minute of that day, is such a precious gift. Cherish that gift. Use it. Make the most of it. Make the world better. Help somebody. LOVE SOMEONE.

Can we do a little more loving and a lot less hating? Think we can manage that before we just piss our lives away? Can we practice a little more tolerance? Maybe start listening to each other? Can we realize that sometimes there’s not a wrong side and a right side, there are just two different sides and probably a very reachable meeting place in the middle?

I don’t know. Maybe we can’t. Maybe everyone is so busy trying to be right, trying to win that they can’t even remember what they were fighting over to begin with.

Here’s what I do know. I know that I have a night off. I know that I have a brand new Jimmy Buffett CD that I’m going to listen to this evening while I make myself some sort of frosty, fruity, tropical-y alcoholic beverage while I sit on my back deck and stare at the trees, the sky, the birds…and maybe a deer if I’m lucky. I know that I’m not going to turn on the TV. I know that I’m not going to check any damn COVID-19 stats. And I know that I’m going to do everything I can to massage my soul back into shape so I can be ready to go back to work tomorrow night and give it all that I can.

For now I’m going to search for answers in the lyrics of a Buffett album and a bag of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos.

But You Only Work Three Days

One hears those words a lot from people who don’t understand just what it’s like to “only work three days.” This three day weekend I just pulled felt like it lasted a month. It is amazing what humanity can throw at you in three 12-hour shifts. And I think any healthcare worker can attest to the fact that a 12-hour shift is rarely only 12 hours. At the very least the shifts are 12.5 hours and usually stretch to almost 13.

As I’ve gotten older I’ve realized that these shifts get longer, and my brain gets mushier. Fifteen years ago I could work six 12-hour shifts in a row and never bat an eye. Sure, I’d be tired and cranky, but at least I could function and pass as human. These days by the time I begin my third shift I’m lucky if I can even spell my name correctly and not drool on myself while applying my make up. If I were mistaken for a club wielding troglodyte who resembled Captain Caveman I would not be surprised.

I went into this weekend with a positive outlook and high hopes. The weather had improved, and often with a significant change in the weather you’ll get at least one day that’s pretty slow as people adjust to the change. In fact, when I arrived at work it looked pretty promising. The ER wasn’t too crowded, the floors were staffed well, and that sense of impending doom that usually accompanies flu season was absent. Then, just as I was sitting down with a cup of coffee to glance at my work email, all hell broke loose. That was at 7:15. Hell didn’t leave our vicinity until about 3 a.m. Three level one traumas hit us before 9:30. That would tax an ER even when fully staffed, which we weren’t. But when you have great people, which we do, you somehow just make it through the madness.

After Friday night I was pretty proud of myself for just rolling out of bed to pee on Saturday afternoon. The last thing I wanted to do was put on scrubs and go back for another pummeling. Saturday night proved to be a good shift, however. It was such a good shift that at one point the ER doc actually told me he was bored. (!) Yes, that almost got him killed, but we kind of like him, so we let it slide.

Despite the great shift I had, when I got home I still fell into bed exhausted and slept almost immediately. Unfortunately, I slept until only 1:30, at which point I was wide awake and pissed off since I had to be back to work in just five hours. I think the fact that I’m almost 50 has a lot to do with my shortened sleep time. You know – hormones shifting, menopause sneaking up on you, blah, blah, blah.

Do you know what else this aging thing affects? The internal thermostat. Yep. I was sitting in my office, not doing anything strenuous, when my SCALP started to sweat. My scalp. I checked the thermostat in the office. It was set at a comfortable 70 degrees. A hot flash. Thanks Mother Nature. I like it when sweat trickles down my head. Feels good. You know what else feels good? Walking down the hall to the elevator and having to stop to ask myself the very real question of: Hmm. Is that butt hole sweat or anal leakage? I shrugged and thought, “Well, we’ll just go with the butt hole sweat for now.”

That special feeling is rivaled only by getting on the elevator – alone – and thinking: Holy hell, what is that smell? I did a pit check. It smelled as if someone had rubbed a dirty gym sock under my arms. Thankfully some deodorant had long, long ago been stashed in the office, so I was able to use it. It now looks like someone dipped the roller ball in napalm, but that’s neither here nor there.

And that’s how I finished “only three days”: red-faced, sweaty, looking like I have lice because the scalp sweat itches, excreting pit juice that could replace napalm, and swampy-assed. I am consoled by the fact that I will not be expected to “people” today and feel totally justified in biting anyone who says the phrase “only three days.”

P. S. It was only butt hole sweat.