Surgery My stomach and throat seemed to be playing ping pong with my heart as I entered the hospital’s waiting room. All week I had been playing it cool telling everyone that the surgery was not that big of a deal, and that I was enthused about all the attention I would be receiving. But today reality had hit me. I had never been through anything like this before. The waiting room was sparsely filled with families waiting for their loved ones.
I tried to look at the various magazines, but nothing helped relieve the tight feeling in my stomach. Finally after what seemed like an eternity the nurse called my name. I slowly got up, and headed through the door with my family. I was thankful that they were there. Their presence made me feel more at ease.
I was asked to change into the attractive dress without a back, and then I was handed some funny looking socks. I looked like an eighty year old lady in a fifteen year-old’s body with my new outfit. Another nurse entered the room to take my vitals, and give me an IV, the needle that she pulled out of the plastic looked huge. I had had shots before, but an IV was a completely different deal. After the IV was secured, I was afraid to move my arm, in case the IV fell out, because I was not having the nurse stick me again. With my vitals recorded, and my first shot administered to relax me, I was feeling slightly better about the procedure.
The Term Paper on The Waiting Room
... stay in the waiting room at the end of the hall if you wish.” Said the Nurse pointing to ... waiting room to check on the little girl. As he neared the open door, he saw the Doctor and a nurse ... hot chocolate. When he got close to the waiting room, he saw Daniel and Rudy insincerely embracing their ... fictitious friendship. He opened the door to the waiting room and sat down and listened to the majors ...
Just when I was convincing myself that this would not be so bad, a nurse with a sour disposition came to wheel me away. Then it hit me, my family could not follow me to this next part, I was on my own. I had hardly noticed their presence for the last half hour, but now I was suddenly aware of their pending absence. As they wheeled me down the hall away from my mom, dad and sister, I had the urge to jump out of the Gurney, and race back to them. I heard the flip of the doors behind the Gurney, and knew that I was now on my own. I entered the cold operating room, and tried not to look at all the strange gadgets around me.
My antatheseologist approached my bedside, and delivered one last shot to my IV. The voices, began to get fuzzy, and then everything went black.