- Joined
- Feb 21, 2012
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- Pre-Medical
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I started voluntary work last week. I did not realise I would be working with people with brain damage. I was scared at first, but did not show it on the outside. I smiled and shook every one's hand.
A few are blind, one misses a limb and a few realise they have braindamage but try to live a happy life. I have so much respect for them and I have even more respect for the nurse taking care of them.
Is it normal to be sort of scared after seeing that? I keep thinking, they were once normal before their accident......
I am only doing this to impress the medical board, but also to enlighten my spirit and get a feel of meaning something for people. I get them drinks, make a little bit of small talk here and there and bring them to their rooms on their wheelchairs (yesterday I helped in the kitchen and cleaned a bit). It's hard because some of them have severe braindamage. It is really an eye opener.
My dad told me I should quit the voluntary work if I really felt out of place. He said as a doctor you'll just be in patients rooms, diagnose and such and not work with handicapped/brain damaged people, that work would be for the nurses/other employers. He didn't mean it like that, he meant it in the sense that if I became a doctor I wouldn't be working 24/7 with braindamaged people (after surgery).
Thing is. I would feel so guilty if I left because it would feel like
abandoning them......
A few are blind, one misses a limb and a few realise they have braindamage but try to live a happy life. I have so much respect for them and I have even more respect for the nurse taking care of them.
Is it normal to be sort of scared after seeing that? I keep thinking, they were once normal before their accident......
I am only doing this to impress the medical board, but also to enlighten my spirit and get a feel of meaning something for people. I get them drinks, make a little bit of small talk here and there and bring them to their rooms on their wheelchairs (yesterday I helped in the kitchen and cleaned a bit). It's hard because some of them have severe braindamage. It is really an eye opener.
My dad told me I should quit the voluntary work if I really felt out of place. He said as a doctor you'll just be in patients rooms, diagnose and such and not work with handicapped/brain damaged people, that work would be for the nurses/other employers. He didn't mean it like that, he meant it in the sense that if I became a doctor I wouldn't be working 24/7 with braindamaged people (after surgery).
Thing is. I would feel so guilty if I left because it would feel like
abandoning them......



