Wednesday, January 30, 2019

A Doctor's Prayer

I have been up almost all night. A woman came to us two days ago from a remote community with a severe post partum hemorrhage (bleeding after birth). We did emergency surgery to remove her uterus, but she was extremely ill as she she'd lost basically her entire blood volume and lost the ability to form blood clots. The whole hospital banded around her, with many physicians and nurses donating blood for her. While at first it was touch-and-go, the next day she really started to improve. She was alert, cuddling her baby, and joking with her nurses. We decided to remove some abdominal packing that we had left in her abdomen as she was doing so well. Unfortunately a few hours later she suddenly and unexpectedly declined and died. This poem is dedicated to her.

God, forgive me
For my pride and arrogance,
Thinking that I alone held the power of life over death
Visualizing selfishly the gratitude the patient and her family would bestow on me as I had snatched her from Death’s grip back into Life.
You, alone, hold the power over life and death.
My skills are not mine to hoard smugly in silent superiority,
But are merely an instrument to glorify You.

God, hold me
In my grief,
That I could not do enough,
As I had to sit by and helplessly watch her slip away before my eyes.
The agony of powerlessness like a tsunami engulfing me, 
silencing my inner screams of despair
My body spasming in grief 
As I watched her mother screaming and tearing at her hair in anguish,
Fists slamming into the walls
As she melted into a motionless puddle of moaning grief on the floor
While we stared on wordlessly, helplessly
The day's events and decisions on endless repeat in my mind
Torturing me with “what if”s.

God, comfort me
Trusting in You always
Though I do not understand Your ways.
Gather me up like a child in Your loving arms
And tell me that everything is going to be ok.
Kiss away my tears and make them holy,
Silent prayers to you
More honest than any words could ever be.

God, grant me courage,
That I may continue Your work of healing here on earth
And providing comfort and reassurance to others when I cannot.
Let me be Your hands and feet.
Spare me, Lord,  from becoming too hardened to the pain,
Too jaded with cynicism
Too self-protective to engage in the hard work of loving Your people.

God, restore me.
Lead me back to your green pastures
Of refreshment and renewal
That I may always be reminded of Your love and mercy
So that your love for me overflows 
Into a fountain of grace poured out on all those that I meet
That they may also know You, Your love, and Your everlasting peace. 

Amen. 

9 comments:

  1. What a wonderful tribute and a show of humility in the face of powerful forces. May you and those you serve be blessed and healed and may the rest of your time be filled with experiences that will carry you in the years and decades ahead. Thank you for sharing so that we can all be reminded of our blessings.

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  2. As I sobbed reading your tribute, I thought about how difficult it must have been for you and the family. It breaks my heart, as it did yours. Find peace in the love and comfort of others, and in remembering all the good you do.

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  3. Your poem is a like a psalm: both a lament and song to God. love mum

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  4. You have expressed your emotions beautifully. I wish I could give you a hug. I hope you have someone there who can. Read 2 Corinthians 1: 3-7 and find some solace in your role in helping the woman to have the time to hold her baby. Shaun L

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    1. Thanks so much, Shaun. I really appreciate it.

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  5. I'm so sorry Heather. Death is the worst. It's something we are so not used to practicing Ob/Gyn in North America. Hugs. Hang in there.

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