I walked onto the unit and was greeted with perplexed stares. “What are 
you doing here,” said the charge nurse, frozen in place, still holding 
her pager six inches from the countertop where she was reaching. 
Everyone who wasn’t already giving me a funny look turned and joined the
 crowd.
“Uh,” I said. I hadn’t had any coffee yet. “I work here?”
“You aren’t scheduled today,” said the charge nurse. “The book says you’re on vacation.”
I considered this for way, way longer than I should have. I was leaving 
the next morning at the crack of dawn, headed out to the Olympic 
Peninsula for a weekend of camping with my husband, one of my closest 
friends (whose wife, my other closest friend, was stuck in town for the 
weekend with houseguests), and my friends’ ridiculously adorable kid, 
the 2.5yo. I hadn’t packed yet, had done minimal food prep, and hadn’t 
slept worth shit for a week because I was worried about Tiberius.
“So… should I go home?”
“No no no no! Don’t go anywhere! Can you stay? You’ll get your pt back. Don’t go anywhere.”
Just then my unit manager arrived. “What’s all the shouting about,” he 
said, then spotted me and pulled a double take. “I thought you were 
camping!”
“That’s tomorrow,” I said. “If I stay until three, can I go home?”
So I ended up working a measly eight hours today, which was a blessed 
relief, because Tiberius was gearing up for a Hail Mary surgery first 
thing tomorrow morning and needed every delicate fine-tuning touch I 
could give him. The pulms and CT surgeons agreed: the repeated chest 
tube occlusions and stump perforations were taking far too much of a 
toll on his limited resources, and the still-sort-of-open thoracotomy 
was starting to dehisce. The ARDS is beginning to retreat, but he’s 
still hanging on the edge, and his cardiac output is consistently in the
 trash because of the insane pressure differential in the various parts 
of his chest. 
My job today was to give him every inch of gained ground I could fight 
for. I titrated down his pressors with extreme care, just low enough to 
give wiggle room in case they had to crank ‘em up in surgery, not low 
enough to challenge him. I talked plans with the pulm, and got orders 
for albumin (to pull water in from the tissues) and Lasix (to shed the 
water, reducing the heart’s afterload, the amount of back-pressure it’s 
pushing against as it tries to perfuse the tissues). I timed them with 
exquisite care and pulled this stunt three times in a row without 
rocking his vital signs, before finally chickening out of Round 4 
because his heart rate went up ten points. 
And I started working really hard on his bowels.
Tiberius was backed up as all hell. I think I mentioned before that his 
distended colon was causing pressure issues with his heart and his 
venous return; I took it on myself to get that shit out of there, and 
championed the cause of poop until I’m pretty sure Dr Sunny worried 
about my sanity. I dosed him with bowel meds; I administered enemas; I 
finally, in a fit of desperation, gloved up to the wrists and performed 
digital disimpaction and stimulation of his rectum.
This is, if anything, less fun than it sounds. You basically glove up, 
slather your fingers with lube, and work them up the pt’s back end until
 you encounter stool. Scoop what you can, work anything loose that you 
can, and stretch out the rectal muscle to stimulate the body’s “rectum 
full, evict tenants” impulses. Tiberius couldn’t be turned on his side 
for this, so I had to hoist up the boys, so to speak, and jam my hand 
back in there from the front side.
As I got to work, I felt floppy skin lap over my wrist, local anatomy 
returning to its accustomed position. Well, it’s not the first time 
someone’s balls have posed me an inconvenient barrier to their ass. This
 job can be undignified. I just didn’t look—this procedure is all about 
proprioception and sense of touch.
I got a handful on my first fishing trip. A little dig stim, and his 
rectum refilled; I pulled out pebbles and chunks and lumps shaped like 
knucklebones and tiny flecks of shit-granite the size of rice krispy 
cereal. My shoulders cramped up and my wrist was on fire by the time I 
took a break; at my side, the bucket I’d allotted for captured items 
contained a good double fistful of rock-hard desiccated shit.
An hour later I went digging again. This time I got pebbles with a little slushy liquid. Things were breaking free.
An hour after that I got nothing with the finger sweep, but during the 
dig stim portion he started having a tremendous bowel movement. I’m 
talking liters of liquid shit. It flowed and poured and could not be 
contained, and with each surge of excrement, his blood pressure rose and
 his heart rate fell.
All told, I think he shit about a gallon, roughly four liters. Enough 
that I was able to turn him when it was time to clean him. Enough that 
his family, who have a high tolerance for medical grossness after 
decades of hospital stays and multiple family members who’ve suffered 
terrible diseases, blanched and gently shuffled out of the room.
It’s weird to write about that, because I so frequently write about shit
 torrents with the perverse delight of someone sharing that video from 
The Ring, but in this case the endless bowel movement has a totally 
different meaning. It means less pressure on the heart, less vomiting, 
less compression of his remaining lung, less risk of crashing and even 
death when we move him. It means the surgery can be performed with 
better access, since he can lie on his side without his guts crushing 
the breath out of him. It means Tiberius has a fighting chance.
Slowly his blood pressure continued to improve, reaching a plateau where
 it took about two-thirds the amount of pressors to keep him trucking 
along. Slowly the color came back into his cheeks. I worked up a genuine
 bouncing excitement.
Let me tell you, though, at the end of this stretch of shifts, all the 
extra moving and turning—all the tight attention to detail and 
moment-by-moment control-freaking—and, oh my god, the emotional support 
for family? I was so exhausted I slept over the end of my break and, an 
hour later, told my neighbor to watch my pts while I took a dump… then 
slept on a sheet in the bathroom floor, something I haven’t done since I
 was a night shift MICU nurse in Texas.
In Texas, which has no nursing union, breaks are “if you’re lucky” and 
“thirty minutes per twelve-hour shift” and “absolutely no leaving campus
 to pick up a burger at the all-night fast food joint, stay in the break
 room.” The unit I worked on, bizarrely, had a strict no-sleeping policy
 to boot, which meant that if you were nodding off at 0300 and you found
 someone to cover your pts so you could wolf your lunch in the thirty 
minutes you were allotted, you still had to stay awake in the tiny 
stuffy closet-sized break room the whole time. Falling asleep could mean
 a severe reprimand, or even an immediate termination. I don’t know how 
the fuck they expected patients to survive with their nurses either 
nodding off at the syringe or cranked up on stimulants nastier than 
caffeine.
I spent a lot of ten-minute dump breaks passed out on a bathroom floor. I will never live in Texas again.
When I moved to my current state, which is unionized, I came back from 
break still chewing my salad, only to be given a weird look and 
instructions from my preceptor to go back and take the rest of my break.
 Turns out, that facility usually takes a fifteen-minute morning break 
and a forty-five-minute lunch break; others keep the lunch break at 
thirty minutes, but add a fifteen-minute afternoon break. Night shifters
 often pool their breaks to get an hour, or even an hour and fifteen 
minutes if your facility rolls that way. And you can sleep. God, you can
 sleep.
So I sleep on most of my breaks, even now that I work days. I steal 
five-minute chunks with a coworker keeping an eye on my pts, cram my 
food into my mouth, then take a proper break to snore and drool on the 
break room sofa. It’s amazing.
But man, Tiberius wore me out.
Since I was only working an eight, I wrapped up early, and at afternoon 
shift change I started giving report while the evening RT went in to 
check his vent settings. A few minutes later his alarms started going 
off: oxygen desaturation, bombing blood pressure, volumes and pressures 
on the ventilator messed up. I had removed his lidocaine patch from his 
left shoulder a little while before, so I was freshly familiar with that
 part of him, and I immediately spotted the way his shoulder was 
ballooning up.
The tension pneumo was back with a vengeance. Air was pushing up through
 his flesh, inflating him with tiny bubbles that crackled where I 
pressed his skin; his chest tube wasn’t tidaling at all. (Tidaling 
refers to the rise and fall of water in the tube’s suction chamber, 
which shows that there’s a pressure change in the tube as he breathes in
 and out—that is, that the tube is still sucking air appropriately.)
The prickly pulm who’d been stripping his tubes wasn’t around today. The current pulm was not
 comfortable stripping the tube, especially considering that he didn’t 
know exactly how she’d done it before, and didn’t know that things would
 continue to work that way. I called the CT surgeon, and soon the one 
who’d done the initial pulmonectomy was at the bedside with the lanky 
PA, Pilgrim, to place another chest tube.
Just as this happened, the charge nurse asked if I could admit in the 
room next door. “Extremely no,” I said. “I’m supposed to be clocked out.
 Do you know where the chest tube cart is?”
The flex RN, a sort of all-hands troubleshooter who (at this facility) 
works like a dog all day, ended up landing that pt. I don’t even 
remember what her deal was, although I took report on her while the flex
 wrapped up her other duties, then passed off report during the chest 
tube insertion. I think she was hypotensive. 
They had paired him with a second pt for the night shift nurse, which 
seemed cruel and unusual, since the other pt was having confusion and 
agitation issues and needed a sitter. The night sitter hadn’t shown up 
yet—was late, I think—and the day sitter had to leave to pick up her 
kids, so the oncoming RN sat with (and blasted with Haldol) the agitated
 pt while I dove in with the chest tube team.
I was okay with this, because if things started going south, I wanted 
someone there that knew the little nuances of his issues and could milk 
his pressors and sedatives for all they were worth. And I wasn’t done 
giving report on him yet.
Pilgrim pulled the old chest tube, and they popped in another, which released the pressure with a huge pink-spattered whoosh
 before I could hook it up to the atrium. Tiberius tolerated all of this
 remarkably well, and the duo marveled as they cleaned up that they 
couldn’t believe he’d made it through this latest setback and had 
halfway expected him to die while they were putting in the new tube. 
I thought about the bedful of shit and felt extremely smug.
Then I finished cleaning the room, because CT surgeons performing a 
bedside procedure tend to tear up your room like a teenager’s mom 
looking for skin mags, and lurched out into the hallway. The family was 
in the middle of an impromptu conference with the pulm and CT docs, 
white-faced and tightly nodding.
“We’re going to finish the thoracotomy tomorrow morning at seven,” said 
the pulmonologist. “He can’t take many more setbacks. I think he’s about
 as good now as he’s going to get, and if we don’t do this tomorrow, 
unfortunately he will decline and probably die within the next few 
days.”
His wife took a couple of deep breaths before she could speak. “What are his chances in surgery?”
“About fifty-fifty. Unfortunately, he’s had a very hard course with this
 disease and I don’t think we can give him better than that.”
Physicians use the word ‘unfortunately’ a lot. Like ‘discomfort’, it’s a
 way of recognizing that someone is suffering when you’re so accustomed 
to human suffering that it’s hard to get a good perspective on this 
particular case. Unfortunately, ma’am, your son passed last night. Is 
that a bad thing? I don’t think he suffered much. Were you expecting it?
 Was it kind of a surprise? God, I have no idea. He’s dead, 
unfortunately.
I packed up my stuff, checked on Tiberius, clocked out, checked on 
Tiberius again, and left through the waiting room, where his family was 
gathered. I don’t like hugging pts or their family, because generally 
the hospital is a gross place and I have issues with being hugged by 
people I haven’t learned to trust, but I hugged them all. They were all 
crying, and I may have shed a few tears on my way out.
I made it home with a blank face, listening to podcasts about charlatan 
magicians, and started chopping vegetables and rolling them up in foil 
to be roasted over the campfire all weekend. You’re not supposed to take
 your work home with you, because it will make you crazy, but sometimes 
you really can’t avoid it.
You’d think it’s the tragic cases, the young people unceremoniously cut 
down, or the old folks dying alone and slow because their family can’t 
translate their love into letting them go; but man, the ones that get to
 me are the ones where I put in real work. His chances are slim to none,
 but by God I’ve squeezed those chances for every drop of advantage I 
can get, and it’s been exhausting and terrifying and edge-of-my-seat the
 whole way. I haven’t even let his family see, really, how close he is 
to death at every moment, how often some small setback has made me 
scramble. They know he’s not likely to make it; no reason to torture 
them with the constant surge and retreat of miniature battles and 
victories and losses. But every moment in that room, for me, was a 
challenge: not to panic when things went wrong, not to lose focus when 
things became tedious, not to slack off and cut corners and take risks, 
not to forget to be a person and care for the family as well.
And now he’s out of my hands. I will be out in the woods, out beyond 
phone reception, for the next five days. I am going from the front lines
 to a position of complete helplessness, and it put jagged edges on all 
my chopped vegetables and set my molars grinding. For a few hours, 
standing in my kitchen, I got to experience the corner of what his 
family must be feeling—he is in such a precarious place, teetering on 
the edge, and I have to rely on others to be conscientious and critical 
and skilled for his sake.
I have to remember that, even if everything goes perfectly right and everyone performs flawlessly, he will probably still die.
I don’t know how I’m going to sleep tonight.
  
 
In the new year 2021, may you stay in a great physical condition, earn heaps of wealth, and radiate immeasurable joy in the world. Happy New Year Wishes For Brother
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