There's a single tone that comes over the ship's intercom that marks the beginning of a ship-wide announcement. Usually you hear it when we're taking on fuel, or when the garbage container is full or things like that.
When it sounds at eleven on a Saturday night, you immediately assume the worst. Last night, that's exactly what it was. Emergency Medical Team to the ICU. Emergency Medical Team to the ICU.
We arrived quickly (not hard to do when you're living directly above the ICU itself) and everyone fell into place around the bed as we sought to save the life of the man lying there. I won't go into much detail, as I honestly don't know him, apart from everything that happened last night. Suffice it to say that he has an infection in his brain, and after a late-night trip to the OR, things don't look good.
He's being cared for now in the ICU, his family is on the way, and we're all praying for a miracle.
It's strange, this life. There's a critically ill man just below where I'm sitting, and I'm finding it hard to really care. I know that sounds awful, so please let me explain. For some reason this all feels so different from other times. Maybe because the first time I ever saw him he was unconscious and we were breathing for him, but I don't feel the same way I normally do when someone is so sick. There's no background, no common experience apart from that one, long, frantic hour before we turned him over to the OR staff. He's not a baby that I've held in my arms; I don't even know if he has family apart from the brother we were able to get in touch with this morning.
And despite all this, he is just as important as any of them. I am called to love this stranger in the same way I loved Baby Greg or O'Brien or Anicette, but I don't know how. I stood by his bed this morning, my hand on his arm, and I prayed for him. And I still don't feel anything.
Call it compassion fatigue, call it what you want, but you can't always care enough. Or at least you don't always, even if you should. It's one of the hardest things about this life, a life where you come face to face with pains and death on a consistent basis. Sometimes you just step back, throw up whatever shield you can and go on living despite the fact that there's a man fighting for his own life not fifty steps away. And you feel guilty for doing it, but there's no other way.
This is hard, not because I know him, but because I don't.
Please pray for James and his family. I'll update as I know anything more.





It feels presumptuous even writing this, because I honestly don't know what my faith is at this moment in time, and I suspect I haven't grappled with quite the set of beliefs and feelings you are dealing with.
But having said that, it seems to me that love is action as much as emotion, and by being there and doing what you're doing, you are showing - and living - love for this man even if you aren't currently feeling it. Feelings aren't something we can control, and I think sometimes in stressful situations our minds and hearts step back a pace as a coping mechanism, to allow us to continue with what we are doing. (And you've only just come back to the ship and to nursing after a fair time away - it would be understandable if you're not yet emotionally in the swing of things.)
What you can control is how you act, and it is clear to anyone reading your posts that you are doing the things you are called to do, and doing them well.
All of which is to say that while this does make it harder for you right now, I don't think you need to feel guilty about it.
Much love,
Catherine
PS - I will certainly pray for James, to the best of my ability.
I too will pray for James and his family.
I can only imagine how draining what you do is! Hang in there and keep leaning on Jesus.