Saturday, October 23, 2010

Matthew 26:6-13

And it came to pass that a doctor was on duty at the charity clinic sitting in the office talking with her colleagues when they were interrupted by a nurse

“Doctor, there is a patient here to see you.”
“Oh?”
“Yes, she is in the front right now.”

So the resident left the room and came back several minutes later bearing a fruit basket and a bag of cupcakes.

“Look, the patient I delivered a week ago remembered my birthday and came by with these. Aren’t they beautiful? I feel bad because these are so nice and she shouldn’t have spent money on me like this.”
“Aww, how sweet,” another one of her fellow physicians commented.
“Yeah, and she also had brought me cake and cookies when I delivered her in the hospital. She really shouldn’t have.”
“That’s a nice gesture indeed,” their attending remarked, “Those fruit baskets are really expensive. She probably shouldn’t have even bothered.”

This last physician said this because he knew that this patient had a couple of other children to support and received monthly public aid checks--the same checks that paid for her expensive new cell phone, cigarettes, and the oral contraceptives that enabled her to carouse around with whomever, whenever. Such purchases often left the patient unable to pay her cell phone bill, which prevented the physicians from being able to contact her and follow up during her prenatal care. This was troublesome because her baby had a condition that needed consistent monitoring to ensure that it did not get worse. Of course, all of this was made possible by taxing other economically-burdened citizens who were struggling to make ends meet on a daily basis.

One of the nurses came in to the room.

“Wasn’t she sweet? She even brought cupcakes for the nursing staff. You know, it’s people like this that really uplift our spirits because so many of the people in this clinic just aren’t very grateful.”

And all of them could agree on this. Gratitude was a scarce commodity in the charity clinic. One would think that those without any health insurance would be extremely grateful for the services they received at no cost, but the reality of this situation was that many of them were non-compliant, refused to make lifestyle changes, and would simply come back with a sense of entitlement that would make even the most sympathetic health care provider shudder.

Despite this sobering reality, this was still a day to celebrate and be thankful. The doctor asked one of her colleagues if she wanted to split a cupcake and the other happily obliged.

2 comments:

Min said...

the realities of medicine suck. it reminds me that Jesus is the only one who is without sin and that is why we need grace.

Jerry said...

was this an actual experience? if so, that's some strong similarity...