Heartbreaking Work

Jane Buell MD is an Otolaryngology resident at the University of Colorado. She enjoys writing poetry to organize her thoughts and emotions tied to tragedies witnessed at work.

Back to by healthcare workers
Rate this post

Heartbreaking Work

Watching death

Was not what I expected

Cancer did not eat her whole

It nibbled at her humanity

It bled from her nose for hours

It filled kidney basins with bile

It soaked sheets with sweat

And towels with spit

I filled the laundry machine

Hoping to drown out the sound of dread

Even after, I worried

If I spread her ashes any farther

I might not be able to put her together again

I might not see how big the tumor was

The burden she carried in her heart

If the tide washes them to the shore

Will the sand know she doesn’t belong

I hope her essence rose

From the smoke of cremation

Like she tried to rise above the pain

But from my view she suffered

Like the painstaking task

Of sorting grains of sand

Looking for your mother

In a place you can never find her

Jane Buell MD is an Otolaryngology resident at the University of Colorado. She enjoys writing poetry to organize her thoughts and emotions tied to tragedies witnessed at work.
Hometown: Fort Worth, TX.

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
Send this to a friend