My Day At My Grandma

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I had just finished my closing shift at work. I came home to heat left overs in the microwave and feed my dog, Murphy, his dinner. As I sat down to begin my dinner, my dad walked in the kitchen, “Your grandmother has a perforated bowel and is in emergency surgery. Her surgery has been almost five hours and they aren’t done yet. I am leaving to see her”. I wasn’t hungry anymore. My dad packed his belongings and drove to New Jersey alone. I wasn’t able to go because I had three tests the following day. I would have never thought I would be standing next to my Grandma, only three short weeks later saying goodbye to her for the last time.
As I stood next to the hospital bed of room 432 of the Riverview Medical Center, I gently ran my finger across the back of my grandma’s hand as if I could break her by pressing too hard. I had never seen my grandma look so fragile. Her hand was cold and wet. Her body no longer could rid itself of fluids, yet they continued them flowing through the intravenous line that was stuck in the bend of her small elbow. Her skin perspired. Small beads of fluids pooled into her body’s crevices. Her dialysis machine ran constantly giving out a stable humming noise. It sang along with her other machines that monitored her every vital sign and body function. Beep. Buzz. Mumble. Beep. Buzz. Mumble. Occasionally, a nurse would come into the room to suction her mouth. This would remove build-up that formed because they had to perform a tracheostomy. She had been on a ventilator for far too long. My family sat around my grandma. We talked to her and read the newspaper to her. She was my grandma, but she wasn’t. Her toenails, which were always freshly manicured a bright pink, were bare because of her surgeries. H...

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...tensive care unit nurses entered the room one last time. Even in the worst moments, they gave support to my family. The nurses embraced us all, giving us their condolences. Their jobs are hard and taxing. Even on days where they don’t want to come to work, they provide countless hours of help and empathy to people they don’t even know. To practice such humanity would be a honor. My grandma was a maternity and delivery nurse at Riverview Medical Center for almost her entire career. She brought me there, to the intensive care unit for a purpose. Watching the nurses work each day inspired to me further my decision of studying nursing by showing me what area of nursing I want. As a result of my grandmas intensive care stay, I will be earning my bachelors in science of nursing at Gannon University to become a registered nurse. One day, I will be a Jamie to many families.

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