It is rare for us
to have patients stay longer than a week. Usually, they stay and
leave so quickly you barely have time to remember their names. Some
will return days, weeks, months later, and be wounded that you don't
remember them. “In the time since you've left, I've worked with
hundreds of kids,” I want to tell them, but I don't. I just pretend
to remember their face, not their name. And they laugh at how
forgetful I am.
I wish I could remember all the kids I
worked with in inpatient. I still remember the ones I cared for in
residential, and I pray for them by name daily. I knew
those kids, their likes and dislikes, their quirks and thoughts. In
inpatient, you're lucky if you know whether they are on good terms
with their parents or not (usually not).
Sometimes, the kids
will write me notes or draw me pictures thanking me. Those are the
ones I remember. I put them up on my cupboards and I smile every time
I see them. It's a reminder to me that even though I may not remember
all of their names, I have made some small difference in their lives.
Those notes and pictures, they represent to me all of those who I
have worked with and cared for in just a small moment of their long
lives.
I know I am just
one person. I know that I cannot make much of a difference in
anyone's life. But I also know that I can look back in my own life,
point to one person, and say “There. He is the one who changed me.
He is the one who gave me hope. He is why I am who I am today.”
And maybe it's
vain, but I want to be that person too.
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