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My labour started at
Once the spinal block
had worn off and I was able to get around, I excitedly made my way to the
nursery. As I reached the nursery doors, there were a number of tearful
people milling around the entrance. Not one to interfere or make a scence,
I made my way through them to collect my gorgeous daughters and wheel them
back to my ward. As I wheeled their bassinet out of the nursery, a
chilling silence fell over the people waiting outside and I sensed what I
can only describe as a feeling of "hostility". It was some 24 hours later
that I learned that they were anxiously awaiting news on a
relative's newborn, who was in the NICU. Apparently the little one was
born with only a partial brain, and had been on life support since
delivery. And so it happened that, for the next 48hours, every time I
wheeled my healthy, full term babies down to the nursery for a bath or so
that I could take a nap, I had to pass around or through this group of
people. Despite my joy at the delivery of my babies, I couldn't help but
feel an overwhelming sense of guilt?, every time I visited the nursery.
According to a
nursing sister that I chatted to, the little one was not expected to
survive and the doctors and staff had done all they could to keep him
comfortable and pain free until he passed away. She said that they were
bound to prolonging his life and that all that remained was the parents'
decision as to how long they would keep him on life support, as he wasn't
even able to breathe by himself. I believe the parents made a decision
late that night. The following day, as
I rode the lift down to the ground floor, on my way home with my girls,
the mother of the little one who had passed away stepped into the lift on
the 2nd floor. Instinctively, we embraced each other and I whispered to
her that I really had no words for her, but that my thoughts were with her
and her family. We left the lift together, both of us in tears, me on my
way home to begin a new life with my girls and she on her way home, to an
empty nursery. What happened that
day changed me in so many ways. It gave me a new reason to be grateful for
every day I have with my children, and re-instilled in me a capacity for
empathy and selflessness that I thought I had lost.
~admin~
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