Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Candystriper

One of the blogger friends that I follow recently blogged about how her sister talked her in to volunteering in a hospital when she was a girl.  She was all for working an hour a day thinking she would be reading books to little kids.  Instead, they put her in a geriatric hospital doing much more than reading little books.  It was a cute story and you can read it on Jane's blog here.  It brought to mind a time when I was a girl and my mom and I had visited someone in the hospital.  I saw some girls my age dressed in these cute red and white striped pinafores and learned that they were volunteers in the hospital.  I loved those little striped jumpers and thought it would be really cool to be a Candy Striper.  A friend and I looked into it and we were told that with just a few training classes, we would be given a uniform and we could start volunteering.  I remember being told that our job would be taking library books and magazines to patients, delivering flowers and cheering up the patients. Besides, it might be nice to be a nurse someday.

During the first training session, we learned how to make beds.  I wondered why we were learning to make beds, but I did what I was told and I could fold those corners with the best of them - no fitted sheets back then.  Next we learned about bed pans and I knew I was in trouble.  Hey, no fair!  Where were the magazines and the pretty flowers?  Why was I not cheering up patients?   Why was I not being told how to flit in and out of the hospital hallways looking cute and having fun like those other girls I saw?  They must have changed the job description.

I lasted about six weeks on my first job of volunteering.  I was never so glad in all my life to get rid of something as I was the day I turned in that ugly red and white uniform.  And I had a whole new respect for nurses. 

7 comments:

  1. Oh, I have heard of the word "Candystriper". From your post, I remembered the meaning.
    Yes, the work must be no ideal, clean job. My father is in the old-people's home. And suffering from dementia. I cannot thank the staffs there enough for they care.

    Love, xoxo Orchid.

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  2. Hee Hee! You drew the short straw with your little spell of volunteering, my friend. :( It would have been lovely to just go around with the magazines and flowers, wouldn't it?!

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  3. Glenda thank you for mentioning my post here and I love your story ... it's similair expectations to my own - and then the ghastly reality. As I said my sister still nurses - in fact she phoned me just now having read that post and we laughed about the whole experience!

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  4. Orchid, it's wonderful to have nice care for your father. In our country there are some good facilities, but there's also plenty of bad ones. Thisisme, I have a habit of drawing short straws - especially where volunteering is concerned. Jane, your post brought back all those memories and yes, I think they do sugarcoat the duties of those hospital volunteers. If they didn't, no-one would ever do it, would they? LOL

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  5. I was a candystriper with my best friend. We really liked it. We mainly delivered flowers and once my friend got to hold a newborn baby. They also gave us little vouchers to get free lunch from the cafeteria. Thank goodness, no beds had to be made.

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  6. Tara, it wasn't bedmaking that were a problem - it was the bedpan duty. Can you imagine hospitals today allowing 14 / 15 year old's handling a bedpan? lol

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  7. Oops, when I changed the wording on that last comment, I forgot to change the "were" to a "was".

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