- Published: 1 May 2017
- ISBN: 9780143785354
- Imprint: Random House Australia
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 400
Not Your Average Nurse
From 1970s London to Outback Australia, the True Story of an Unlikely Girl and an Extraordinary Career
Extract
A teaching hospital in London: September 1970
Big trouble awaited me on my first day on the job, but I wasn’t a bit surprised. The god of bright young things has always had a custard tart ready to smack in the face of a girl like me.
Green as a spring twig, I’d completed two weeks of basic nursing instruction in a classroom and was spending a supervised morning on a ward, one of several such half-days that would occur before the end of two months’ Preliminary Training School (PTS), if I lasted that long.
‘You elderly men need to look neat and tidy,’ I told Mr Snape as I straightened his top sheet.
‘Oh, go away, you stupid girl,’ he snarled. ‘I’ve got socks older than you!’ Sticking out a determined chin, he messed up the sheet and childishly kicked his legs about.
Challenged, I threw him the death stare I’d perfected in 1957 in the playground at Castle Street Primary School. In return, Snape launched his version of the same look he had perfected in 1916 in the war-torn trenches of the Western Front. Back and forth our faces raged until, totally outclassed, I turned away.
To the casual observer, I was a fresh-faced eighteen-year-old girl, dressed in a newly minted King’s College Hospital student-nurse uniform. My crown was a paper cap attached to my strawberry-blonde up-do with hairgrips, and my overly long, blue-and-white-striped waisted dress was protected from germ warfare by a starched white apron that could stand up on its own.
From my perspective, I looked fabulous − very cool and now – and the only problem with the image was that I wasn’t actually at King’s College Hospital. Somehow a terrible mistake had occurred and I was standing in what appeared to be a dilapidated eighteenth-century school hall, but was in reality a male geriatric ward at St Giles Hospital in Camberwell, an area of South London classified as a Poor Law parish in 1835. And not much had changed.
Formerly a workhouse for the destitute, St Giles had been developed into an infirmary about a hundred years before I arrived, and its present state of crumbling antiquity was three moons and a shooting star away from the grandeur and excitement of King’s College Hospital in Denmark Hill, where I was supposed to be. I planned on writing a stern letter when I discovered who was responsible for this appalling mix-up.
Around me on the ward, which was unimaginatively identified by a capital letter and a number, and which I am rechristening ‘Dickens’, courtesy of the workhouse connection, the air was filled with groans, vocal complaints, death-rattling coughs and unpleasant odours.
Scurrying about in this oppressive atmosphere, second- and third-year student nurses delivered bowls of steaming water, pulled curtains around beds, lifted men onto wheelchairs and pushed them here and there, filled things, emptied things, and wrestled with trolleys and oxygen cylinders. Frustrated that a staff nurse had directed me to pointlessly tidy top sheets, I observed the other nurses’ purposeful industry with mounting annoyance.
Another new student nurse, Fenella, was also on Dickens. A tall, dark-haired girl with lovely apple cheeks and a plummy voice, Fenella wouldn’t have been out of place on a hockey field at an English boarding school. On arrival, she had been dispatched to the clinical room to clean lotion cupboards, and I was pleased it was her, not me: I would have broken a bottle of rare potion from the Amazon that had cost a hundred pounds. I was safer with sheets. It’s pretty hard to break sheets.
I was straightening the bedding of a sleeping man when a cross-looking woman in a green sister’s uniform marched onto the ward and headed towards me. Short and scrawny, with a malignant fierceness behind her steel-grey eyes, she was identified by her name badge as Sister Morag, the ward sister who was to supervise me.
‘Good morning, Sister,’ I said with the confidence of someone who has practised the line while watching Dr Finlay’s Casebook. Surely now I would be allocated a sensible job.
Sister Morag frowned. Uh-oh . . . maybe she thought this sheet-tidying lark was my idea.
‘Staff Nurse told me to tidy sheets,’ I said accusingly and scoffed for good measure.
‘It’s important for beds to look tidy,’ she said sharply. ‘And when you’ve finished that, you are to disinfect everything in the sluice, scrub the bath and bowls in the bathroom, wash the tooth mugs and spittoons, clean the flower vases, wet-dust the patients’ bedside lockers and then prepare the kitchen trolley for the patients’ morning tea.’
Hmmm. That didn’t sound right. Shouldn’t I be bed-bathing patients and taking temperatures? Practising things I had learned in class? Nothing she mentioned required supervision or special instruction. I mean, I already knew how to clean. Who didn’t?
Genuinely puzzled, I asked, ‘Is it the cleaner’s day off?’
Wham! Pow! Zing!
Wrong question, Maggie. Sister Morag narrowed her eyes and pressed her thin, bloodless lips together. Thrusting out a furious pointy finger, she ordered, ‘Get to work!’
Now, here’s the thing: I was already standing where I needed to be, so what was I supposed to do? Thankfully, flight mode kicked in and I walked swiftly away. And I kept walking until Sister Morag disappeared into her office to breakfast on bullets and eye of newt.
Left to supervise myself, and scared that every patient might have a heart attack, I cautiously approached the nearest bed. Cleverly, I checked the patient’s name on the label clipped to the iron bed head. Plaques identifying the consultants’ names were displayed above the beds. Like religious icons.
‘How are you, Mr Cartwright?’ I asked brightly as I straightened his sheet.
‘What’s it to you?’ he grumbled.
‘S-sorry,’ I stammered. ‘Can I get you anything?’
‘A cure would be good,’ he replied, and I laughed because I thought it was funny.
‘That wasn’t a joke,’ he said indignantly. ‘Now go and annoy somebody else.’
As I moved from bed to bed, a pattern was emerging: politeness from me, rudeness from patients.
‘Good morning, Mr Pettigrew,’ I said.
‘What’s good about it?’ he wheezed.
‘Can I straighten your sheet, Mr Hogg?’
‘No! Sod off!’
Disheartened, I surveyed the human landscape. There were twenty-four Anglo-Saxon men slumped in beds and armchairs around the ward, and all of them were older than god with forests growing out of their ears. Victims of strokes, dicky tickers, pneumonia, liver disease and other failing organs, I tried to normalise the men by telling myself that each of them was someone’s grandfather – a dear old soul with a favourite cap and an unfinished wood project in his shed – but the idea didn’t work. They were simply too horrid.
‘Are all elderly male patients unpleasant?’ I asked an attractive student nurse, Rosie O’Brien, when our paths crossed at the wall sink halfway down the ward.
‘Only those on Dickens,’ she said, and tucked loose strands of Titian hair under her second-year frilly hat. ‘But it’s nothing an AK-47 wouldn’t fix.’
My laughter drew Sister Morag’s attention. Through the glass in her office window, she fixed me with an icy stare that seemed to be saying, ‘You are enjoying yourself and it has to stop.’
‘Whoops,’ Rosie said, and I grimaced. I liked Rosie instantly. Where other nurses bustled about, Rosie appeared to glide everywhere like a swan. I was pleased when we were sent to morning tea together in the hospital refectory.
‘We really shouldn’t judge the patients harshly,’ Rosie advised me. ‘You have to remember that most of them are poorly educated, working-class men who’ve had their lives torn apart by war, injury and the Depression.’
That pretty much defined my mother’s father, Grandpa Leonard Higgins, and he hadn’t been disagreeable. I mentioned this to Rosie.
‘I suppose I shouldn’t make excuses for them,’ she reasoned, then lit a cigarette and blew smoke rings in the air. ‘But they’ve lost their place in the world and I feel sorry for them. I can’t help it.’
Impressed by her generous attitude, but far from understanding it, I asked, ‘Are they rude to Sister Morag and the doctors?’
Rosie shook her head. ‘Good Lord, no, Maggie. They resent us because we’re young independent girls pursuing a career. To them, we should be married and having babies. Besides, they know they can be as rude to us as they want.’
‘Why is that?’ I asked, a smidgen alarmed.
‘Because everyone else is,’ Rosie quipped, and we laughed, although my mirth was tinged with concern.
Not Your Average Nurse Maggie Groff
‘Over time, I nursed victims of war, the posh, the poor, the famous and the infamous . . . Oh, the stories I tell!'
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