i want to be a nurse in africa ... or a ballerina




There won't be snow in Africa this Christmas


posted by Jenn

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The day was already going well. As opposed to doing charge, which is how I spend a good seventy percent of my shifts, I got to be a real nurse yesterday. Don’t get me wrong, the opportunity to put my borderline OCD organizational skills to use in coordinating patients, caregivers, and a constantly fluctuating surgical schedule is one that I am grateful for; However, it also turns out that as a charge nurse, you can accidentally go an entire shift without ever cuddling a baby, if you don’t go out of your way to do so.

So, there I was, being a nurse. Doing my thing. Waiting for Aminata to come back from the OR, where she was having her trach tube removed.

And Natalie, our team leader, asks us what music we wanted to listen to / subject our patients to. She rhymed off the options. Came to the end of her ipod genres and offered “Christmas Music?” with a laugh.

We didn’t miss a beat. Christmas was the obvious choice. Regular Christmas fanatics use November 1st as the beginning of permissible Christmas celebration time. Always just a little bit more extreme and unreasonable – I prefer to use October 1st.

And this is the story of how on October 5th at one o’clock in the afternoon, on the max-fax ward of the Africa Mercy, docked off the coast of Freetown, Sierra Leone; four questionably stable nurses belted out “Baby it’s Cold Outside” as our patients looked on in wonder.

I have always wondered what people with very opposite lifestyles & traditions would make of our highly culturally-specific representation of the birth of Christ. I have multiple distinct memories of my brother Dave, belting out with Bono, wondering “Do the Africans even know it’s Christmas?????” (in the overdramatized, sarcastic way that only Dave can achieve). I have known since that first year my brother serenaded me with Band-aid’s hit that there would never be snow in Africa at Christmas.

Turns out there are a few other things that don’t translate either. I guess I can only be left with the thankfulness that acknowledging the arrival of my King to earth has next to nothing to do with the weather or pageants or songs about eggnog. I will probably continue to wholeheartedly embrace these endearing symbols, simply because of the memories they hold in my heart – but if it so happens that this Christmas, I find myself in Africa, without any snow, things will be alright.

The day was already going well. As opposed to doing charge, which is how I spend a good seventy percent of my shifts, I got to be a real nurse yesterday. Don’t get me wrong, the opportunity to put my borderline OCD organizational skills to use in coordinating patients, caregivers, and a constantly fluctuating surgical schedule is one that I am grateful for; However, it also turns out that as a charge nurse, you can accidentally go an entire shift without ever cuddling a baby, if you don’t go out of your way to do so.

So, there I was, being a nurse. Doing my thing. Waiting for Aminata to come back from the OR, where she was having her trach tube removed.

And Natalie, our team leader, asks us what music we wanted to listen to / subject our patients to. She rhymed off the options. Came to the end of her ipod genres and offered “Christmas Music?” with a laugh.

We didn’t miss a beat. Christmas was the obvious choice. Regular Christmas fanatics use November 1st as the beginning of permissible Christmas celebration time. Always just a little bit more extreme and unreasonable – I prefer to use October 1st.

And this is the story of how on October 5th at one o’clock in the afternoon, on the max-fax ward of the Africa Mercy, docked off the coast of Freetown, Sierra Leone; four questionably stable nurses belted out “Baby it’s Cold Outside” as our patients looked on in wonder.

I have always wondered what people with very opposite lifestyles & traditions would make of our highly culturally-specific representation of the birth of Christ. I have multiple distinct memories of my brother Dave, belting out with Bono, wondering “Do the Africans even know it’s Christmas?????” (in the overdramatized, sarcastic way that only Dave can achieve). I have known since that first year my brother serenaded me with Band-aid’s hit that there would never be snow in Africa at Christmas.

Turns out there are a few other things that don’t translate either. I guess I can only be left with the thankfulness that acknowledging the arrival of my King to earth has next to nothing to do with the weather or pageants or songs about eggnog. I will probably continue to wholeheartedly embrace these endearing symbols, simply because of the memories they hold in my heart – but if it so happens that this Christmas, I find myself in Africa, without any snow, things will be alright.