I
have that buzzing, vaguely hectic feel, and my feet are further away from head
than they have any right to be.
I
stick the thermometer in my ear.
Normal.
I
check the time.
Half
way through the shift.
It’s
probably just a case of acute wishful thinking.
I’ll
tough it out.
We’re
called to a collapse in an old people’s day centre. Rae drives; I sit low down
behind my shades, feeling the world rush through me.
‘Are
you all right?’ she says.
‘I
think I’m coming down with something.’
‘You’ve
only just got back from holiday.’
‘I
came back too quick.’
‘That’s
it, then. You’ve got the holiday bends.’
‘Yeuch.’
We
pull up outside the church hall. There’s a member of staff in a mauve pinny,
waiting.
‘Lola
had a funny turn during lunch. She’s just through here.’
She
leads us through reception into a bright, vaulted space reverberating with the
sound of cutlery on plates and a murmurous hum of conversation that seems to
close around us as we walk over to Lola’s table.
Another
member of staff is standing behind her chair with both hands on Lola’s
shoulders.
‘You
couldn’t take over?’ she says. ‘Only I’m stopping her from sliding under.’
I
step in, whilst Rae squats down and checks Lola over.
Although
she is a sickly grey colour, she’s breathing and just about conscious.
‘We
need to lie her down,’ she says. ‘But it’ll be easier if I whizz the trolley in
quick and we can scoot her straight over from the chair. Are you okay here for
the moment?’
I
nod. She hurries out.
Whilst
I hang on to Lola, I look around the table. There are five other old ladies,
all still busily tucking in to the food on their plates – buttered bread,
salad, hard-boiled egg and strips of smoked salmon.
‘Afternoon,’
I say. ‘Mm. You’re making me hungry.’
One
of them looks up, shreds of salmon dangling over her chin. It puts me in mind
of a Komodo dragon, disturbed at the kill. She takes down the last of the
salmon in three snickering snaps of her jaw, then turns her head slightly left
and right as if she were smelling rather than seeing me.
‘Get
yourself a plate,’ she says eventually. Then leans back in to the egg.
The
old lady immediately next to Lola nudges me with her fork arm.
‘She’s
never normally all that chatty,’ she says, with a nod of her head that almost
puts her wig over her eyes. ‘Hardly says a word. So I can’t say we noticed any
difference.’
‘So
she’s normally pretty quiet?’ I say. ‘Do you know anything else about Lola? Her
past medical history?’
‘Her what?’ says the old lady. ‘We have lunch
three times a week. That’s it. What do you think? I’m her doctor?’
‘No.
Quite right.’
They
carry on eating. Lola groans in my arms and I look back to the door.
‘Okay,
Lola. Trolley’s on its way.’
One
of the carers comes over.
‘Can
I get you anything?’ she says. 'Tea?'
‘Do
you have any details about Lola? Any personal information sheets we could
take?’
‘Oh,
right. I’ll see.’
‘Great.
Thanks.’
She
goes back into the kitchen.
Rae
struggles back in with the trolley.
I’m
amazed there’s not more of a reaction. But despite the loud electric buzz of our
trolley, the two figures in green hauling the unconscious old lady out of her
chair, the carers collecting bags and belongings, the squawk of our radios and
our terse comments to each other, my general impression is that everyone is too
busy eating to care. That, or it happens so often they’re used to it.
Either
way, we wheel Lola out through the double doors.
There
is a sudden loud crash from the hall; I glance back, and I’m not sure, but I
think what I see is two Komodo dragons either end of a strip of Lola’s salmon,
tugging and fighting and scattering plates.
9 comments:
Weird. Are you ok? That's not a nice way to be feeling with half the shift still left to go :/
Damn, that's grim.
On the other hand, maybe it's the only sensible way? What else could they do, save go hungry and get in your way?
l'm fine, thx Bobbi (just incredibly brave & stoical) *sniff*. Prob too many cold + flu products - they can send you a bit trippy... ;/
Absolutely, MD. I don't blame them at all. I'd be the same. Hell, I am the same!
Having read way too much James Herriot as a lass, I diagnosed you with Monday Morning disease, common to workhorses =D
Speaking of getting in the way, no mention of one clueless student clogging up the job even further. I wouldn't have been so kind... ;-) Hope you're feeling better today? Good reading BTW. SV's gone on my favourites I'll-just-see-whats-new-on-here-and-then-get-back-to-writing bar. Another work avoidance tab - excellent!
On your last blog I stated that people of Lola's generation are usually good patients,stiff upper lip,always helpful.
I wish to withdraw that statement.Miserable buggers,Lola interrupting their lunch...
Thx MD - I agree. Classic case of Exacerbation of Man Flu & Monday Morning Disease. But I was v v brave about it and you'd hardly have known anything was wrong.
Greasemonkey - It was great to have you along - in fact, it made the day much more bearable, esp. given my delicate state.
Jacks - I know. But I suppose it takes all sorts. Sweet old dears, flesh eating dragons...
Thx for the comments!
Lol sounds like lunch time at the care home I work in... can just picture it!! :)
I'm not such a graceful eater myself. Let he who is without sin cast the first roll (or something like that). :/
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