Don't scroll down and cheat!
I was studying about men in nursing for my project and I became very excited and inspired YET again (!) To learn of a poet who became a nurse during the Civil War.
Prior to the war, he wrote collections of poetry that was considered 'obscene', 'offensive', and 'inappropriate' in nature due the sexual imagery of his words. He as a person was considered to be free-spirited. He worked as a journalist, a typesetter, a government worker.
His brother became injured on the battlefield and he left his home to come to Virginia to tend to his wounds. He arrived and he stayed to other soldiers also injured or dying. He was not trained to be a nurse but he assumed the role.....as many others did. (Shameless nurse-y history plug to follow) Like Susie King Taylor, a black woman who was taught to read (which was against the law) and came to the Civil War to nurse the wounded, only permitted to nurse the black soldier and not permitted to carry on as a nurse....but who in turn became a great educator!) BUT I digress.
He believed that attending to a patient's psyche was as important if not more important than medical intervention. I believe in nursing interventions and treatments but I am a firm believer that the soul of a sick or wounded person must be addressed and attended. Otherwise medical interventions will be minimally effective if not worthless. I believe in treating the patient as a whole...... a body/mind connection. And that may make me granola crunchy.....but I taste good with milk.
Despite lack of training, he had another contribution to his patients. The usual diet of a soldier of the Civil War was hardtack (cornmeal and grease formed into a biscuit). He felt that without proper diet the patients would be delayed or compromised in their healing. He brought fruit to the soldiers to supplement their diets. Wound healing is better promoted with higher protein diet but yet the fruit added to an inadequate diet was instrumental as many soldiers suffered with scurvy. Scurvy occurs with a Vitamin C deficiency. I do not know whether he brought the fruit to lift the spirits or to supplement the diet, but either way, it was an intervention that promoted health and well-being in a horrific, less than optimal environment.
Did I mention he was a poet? Do you know who it might be, this poet-nurse?
Let me give you a hint.....
This is one of his poems....
It is called 'The Wound Dresser'
1 An old man bending I come among new faces, 2 O maidens and young men I love and that love me, But in silence, in dreams' projections, Bearing the bandages, water and sponge, I onward go, I stop, 3 On, on I go, (open doors of time! open hospital doors!) From the stump of the arm, the amputated hand, I dress a wound in the side, deep, deep, I dress the perforated shoulder, the foot with the bullet-wound, I am faithful, I do not give out, 4 Thus in silence in dreams' projections, |
Do you know.....do you have any idea????
My featured Man - Nurse - Poet today is..........
Walt Whitman
Makes me very proud to be a nurse. Makes me glad to be a writer. Makes me know it is cool to write things 'not worth reading' as he might say. Makes me glad to know that someone shared my passion for nursing, writing, and tending to a person as a whole. Makes me glad to almost be a nurse.


Comments: 9
Thanks hun.
\smooches La B
I'm glad you're finding so much inspiration - this was always the hardest part of the school year for me. I could see the end was near and Spring was calling to me... And, sitting in class or doing homework just didn't seem like it was as important. But, having something inspiring you along the way must help out a great deal!