tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post8772673199944480682..comments2023-07-04T08:12:29.752-05:00Comments on Medical Matins: Anatomy: Reverence for the Bodymmatinshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09904567527345152766noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-90266911596845226812012-05-11T15:32:38.615-05:002012-05-11T15:32:38.615-05:00Tammy, this image will stay with me--this nurse, i...Tammy, this image will stay with me--this nurse, in a way, took this patient with her to the beach, making his concerns her own. Yet, like you said, a very simple action. Really, her example is Christ-like in selflessness and in simplicity. (On an aside: I am so glad you came into the Church!) <br /><br />Thank you so much for commenting, I really gain a lot from it. Have a great weekend.mmatinshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09904567527345152766noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-91759767676035499242012-05-11T15:27:59.030-05:002012-05-11T15:27:59.030-05:00Thank you for your comment, stpetric! I am amazed ...Thank you for your comment, stpetric! I am amazed by your story and the truth it reveals--only a few people, present seemingly by chance, can be placed at an important time to dispense the treasuries of the Church...wow.<br /><br />I read a similar story in a little book I sorted at TAC's library once, as part of a huge donation. It was a pocket guide to the Catholic physician published in the early 1900s. It had norms for extraordinary and conditional baptisms and decision trees (get this) for administering the Eucharist, etc. The particular story I'm remembering was told by a doctor who thought on a whim that he should check on a certain Catholic woman about to deliver, even though he wasn't required to. He came in to find her just delivered of a baby in severe distress and his eyes shot to a bottle of sterile water nearby--instantly he knew that he had been placed there so that this newborn could be baptized. <br /><br />I am so edified by everyone's experiences. God reward you!mmatinshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09904567527345152766noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-24204848099502691332012-05-10T09:53:18.256-05:002012-05-10T09:53:18.256-05:00When I was 21 (1986) I worked as an in a Peds ICU ...When I was 21 (1986) I worked as an in a Peds ICU and was not yet Catholic. I was single, most interested in living in the word and dating cute guys. A coworker was another very young woman, a life-long Catholic who had a wonderful generous peace about her. <br /><br />We had a young teen patient who was completely paralyzed, so he could not DO anything but he was conscious and could feel. She had gone on vacation and brought back for him a bag of seashells....she put each one in his hand and wrapped his hand around the shells...each had a different shape and texture to experience.<br /><br />I was so struck at the kindness of this simple act...that she would think so deeply about this young man while all her contemporaries (me included) were pretty saturated in thinking only of ourselves. That moment was powerful for me...it took me about 3 more years to get on the road to Rome and almost 3 years to convert. I never told her how her act of kindness affected me. <br /><br />Another story about her was that she fell in love with a nice young Doctor who was not (from what I know) raised with any strong faith. As she planned thier wedding, she learned that he had moonlighted at abortion clinics right after graduating from medical school. I only ever heard her speak of it once...it was simply not a moment of great drama in their lives...she just said "you wont be doing that any more" and that was that. God can do His work in the most gentle and loving of ways sometimes.Tammyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10475830965102885213noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-55287298193510532122012-05-10T08:36:51.572-05:002012-05-10T08:36:51.572-05:00It's funny how small details can make an impre...It's funny how small details can make an impression. Years ago (like the late 1980s) a nurse who knew I was a practicing catholic suggested we say a prayer for a patient who had just died. The patient had been admitted through the ED, gone straight to surgery, and died in the ICU without ever regaining consciousness -- so the nurse <i>never knew her in life</i>, yet out of charity realized that no Christian should die without the prayers of the Church. At that moment, the nurse and I <i>were</i> the Church for that lady. The nurse's example has stayed with me all these years.stpetrichttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11961792423937962991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-16955017128245331802012-05-09T10:48:22.005-05:002012-05-09T10:48:22.005-05:00Before I read Tammy's comment, just as I finis...Before I read Tammy's comment, just as I finished reading your post, I was thinking the same thing: how good it would be to actually have some position of influence or authority over the lab. It makes it much easier to set a tone for others. Now you do indeed have that opportunity, if even just in a small way. I totally agree that sometimes it takes only a small act or word to have an enormous impact. You cannot truly imagine what a difference even your smallest acts can have on another soul. Thank you for your reverence. I do so hope you decide to participate in the program. Thank you, Tammy, for all you do in your work also.seashoreknitshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07313444169419481891noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-43176899482182124432012-05-09T08:39:09.106-05:002012-05-09T08:39:09.106-05:00Tammy, thank you so much for commenting. I am so g...Tammy, thank you so much for commenting. I am so grateful for what you do in perinatal loss and really edified by the changes you instituted. <br /><br />You may have just tipped the scale toward my participation in this program. I had equally strong pro's and con's until I read your comment and realized how important this might be. God reward you! I had a spiritual director who once illustrated to me that God influences us through little things (like your comment, or like my reverence); she called it "the chain of 'yes'," which began with Mary, has its basis in Christ, and has continued in every act of obedience and intercession since. You have contributed a link today!mmatinshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09904567527345152766noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3432720162925670776.post-30445777635201126682012-05-09T05:59:34.963-05:002012-05-09T05:59:34.963-05:00Just setting a good example yourself will go a lon...Just setting a good example yourself will go a long way ... thee are others with you who havent developed their opinions on this fully and are open to teaching on it - take advantage of this moment in time with them. <br /><br />I work with perinatal loss patients (death by natural causes) and when I took over, they were not disrespectful to the deceased babies but neither were they reverent..I was able to institute small changes so that now they all get bathed, dressed and bundled in blankets. I expected our Histology dept (where anyone <20 weeks goes) to give me trouble and make fun of me but they have been very kind and accommodating. I went down there to tend a baby after an autopsy and after I bathed, bandaged and dressed the baby, the lab lady said "It is so nice, that thing you do"...how sweet, she didnt even have a name for it.<br /><br />So go ahead and swim against the current ... you will make a difference that you will never know about this side of heaven...or someday there will be a guy on "The Journey Home" saying "there was this guy in medical school, he showed such reverence for the bodies in anatomy lab...it was my first exposure to the sacred..."Tammyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10475830965102885213noreply@blogger.com