Since my last blog post, I have been fairly busy with my
medical rotations. Currently, I have twenty-four hour shifts on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Saturdays. When I am not
in the hospital, I am trying to catch up on sleep or trying to study.
I use my standing
wheelchair when I am in the operating room or sometimes when I am seeing
patients. When I am not doing that, I am
usually sitting and observing/talking to patients or sitting at a desk and trying
to study. My leg muscles get really
tight from sitting in one position for so long.
Scrubbing in (thoroughly scrubbing/washing
the hands up to the elbows and wearing sterile gloves/apron) and keeping things
sterile while in the operating room has proven to be an interesting
challenge. When I am fully scrubbed in,
I cannot touch my wheelchair to move myself.
One of the nurses on the surgical team has to move my chair for me and
raise/lower the standing mechanism on the chair so I do not touch anything that
is not sterile.
This is a new experience for everyone. The physicians, nurses, anesthesiologists,
midwives, and other members of the medical staff have never had to figure out
how to do things while in a wheelchair.
Things may take a few seconds to figure out, but I’ve noticed that most
people don’t look at me any differently (or maybe they do look at me
differently and I have just stopped noticing).
That’s why a practice question I came across earlier caused
me to think about my progress. The
question stem described a couple whose newly born child had just passed away
and were questioning what had happened and could not believe it. The question then asked what stage they would
go through next.
The Kübler-Ross model’s five stages of grief are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.
I’ve been through pretty intense situations, so when did
I experience this? Did I go through all
of these stages?
Let’s start with the first stage: denial. I am not sure if what I went through would be
what others would consider as denial.
When I first heard about what had happened to me, I thought that I would
be out of the hospital and 100% recovered in a few weeks. My friends and family thought that as well. It was not that we refused to believe the
reality of the situation; we simply did not know exactly what to believe. I had countless people asking me if I tried
any specific surgeries or telling me about an old medicine man from their
homeland that knows how to treat everything.
No one really knew what a spinal cord injury meant. In regards to my brain injury, I would always
tell my neuropsychologist, therapists, and physicians that there was no
difference in the way my mind worked.
Once I learned about the extent of my injuries and what a
spinal cord injury actually was, the harsh reality still didn’t settle within
me or my family and friends. As a
therapist once said, everyone wants to be that
guy who defies all the odds and leaves his wheelchair behind and walks out
of the hospital. I wanted to be that
guy. My family and friends were
confident that I would be that guy. We
all hoped and prayed, all day, every day.
Every night, I went to bed praying and wishing that this
was all a dream and that I would wake up like the old Hammad. And then, every morning, I would wake up and
nothing had changed. It was hard for me
at first to get motivated to get up and get out of bed, but I did it. Sometimes I think I didn’t do it for myself; I
did it for my family and friends.
This is not
me. This is not who I was. This is not who I am. This is not who I am supposed to be. My loved ones and I tried hard to convince
ourselves of those things.
I had a friend who told me it hurt her too much to look
at me. We had become good friends
through my college years and our group of friends had plenty of good times
together. We did the funniest and
craziest things during those years. But
to see me bearing the pain and disabilities that I had was too much for my
friend to handle. So I smiled and told
her everything was okay and that I was fine.
My family and friends told me not to think of any other
option for me but success and complete healing.
That is exactly what I did.
But what happens when the infinite amount of prayers,
positive thoughts, well wishes, dreams, and goals fall short of making
something—anything—change? Where do you go from there?
I want to continue my story but this post is already
getting a bit long. I am talking about
the past because I have met many new people who have asked me questions about
my life and as I have said on here before, I do not want to forget my past.
To answer the question I asked above and to serve as a preview for my future posts, I end this post with a quote by the nineteenth century author Oscar Wilde: The
aim of life is self-development. To realize one's nature perfectly – that is
what each of us is here for.
Hammad Aslam,
ReplyDeleteAs an official OT stalker of your blog... Your blogs have such great insight... And you never fail to surprise me in your talent to express yourself in the perfect way. I know we discussed you being good with your patients on rotation in our interview.. But honestly it's no empathy it's your ability to relate to others with your words. Mashallah!
Thank you so much, Sundas!! As a fellow health professional, your comments, compliments, encouragement, and tips mean a lot to me. Thanks!
DeleteMore posts, more posts, more posts, more posts!
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