He was in pain. He was somewhat confused. The confusion
resulted in restlessness which exacerbated his post-operative pain. His
restlessness continued and eventually resulted in his arterial line being
ripped out. There was blood everywhere. We eventually had to place him in
restraints.
He was yelling and demanding for more pain medication. We
did our best to manage his pain, but he was a chronic drug user and it was hard
to find the right balance between just enough and too much.
He was angry. He was yelling and cursing. He was trying
to hit his nurse. She called me to the room. She needed help, she needed
assistance, she needed orders.
He had ripped out another IV and was trying to rip his
catheter out of his penis and pull the monitor leads off of his chest. He was
wild. He continued to curse and yell. He was partly confused but as I stood
there and looked in his eyes I knew that he mostly was not.
He was angry. Things continued to escalate. He was
yelling, spiting, hitting, cursing. There were six people in the room and we
were all holding him down. We placed him in 4 point restraints.
I hate cursing. I beyond hate it.
The last few years I have worked in environments in which
people talk like sailors, men and women alike. I’ve heard the f word used over
20 times a day as an adjective, a verb, and a noun. (I don’t even understand
how that makes sense.) My office is frequently made up of people saying these
things and there is really nothing I can do about it - I have to continue
working with these people. I don’t have to listen to it from a patient, though.
I don’t have to listen to him berate his nurse.
“Stop talking!” I said. I pointed a finger in his face. “You
will not talk anymore. You will not say those words and talk ugly about your
nurse!”
He started mumbling.
“Stop!” I was beyond frustrated. “You will not talk.”
The room was still. Everyone stared at me.
I felt frustrated. I felt angry. I felt bad. I had shamed
a grown man like he was a little child. I felt like a principal lording over
him.
He started mumbling again.
“Stop talking! You will not talk!” I yelled at him.
I felt horrible. He was embarrassed. But, all of a sudden
he was calm. We could now give him the meds he needed and relax him.
In time everyone started to file out of the room. They
were no longer needed.
I was so frustrated with this man. Why did he behave this
way? Why did he respond like a child? Why did he treat his nurse the way he
did?
I went back to his room later. I wanted to check on him
and his nurse.
“You need to apologize to your nurse,” I said. “You
should not treat her that way.”
“I’m not apologizing to her!” he said.
“Well you should.” I said. “You need to be better. You
need to be better than this. You need to act better than this.”
I stopped myself.
Better.
I don’t know this man. What is "better" for him? Was this
"better" for him? Did he know what "better" was? Did anyone ever model "better" for
him?
Maybe I should have modeled "better" for him instead of shaming him.
Funny how even the most horrific and frustrating events
can cause us to evaluate our own thoughts, behavior, judgments.
2 comments:
I have never been more proud of than at the conclusion you draw at the end of this (I am nearly in tears, as you have seen before in our relationship). Do not treat yourself to harshly here. You did what was necessary. Then you recognized that, for all the anger on display, what you had in front of you was a suffering being and, in the end, the compassionate (and healing) response to anger is as much kindness as you can muster. Well done, Grasshopper, well done. Dr. R.
That should read "proud of you" of course.
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