"Did you see it? Was there really a baby?"
"Yes, sir. I did." And I proceeded to talk to him about how we can never make another Momma, and how dangerous ectopic pregnancy can be and...
"Was it alive?"
Our eyes locked. His filled with tears. And, this giant of a man, I hugged. And he cried. Hard. I didn't.
This is why that picture has gathered so much attention. We are often seen as cold, emotionless, robotic, overpaid bookworms that get to wear scrubs and call ourselves "Doctor". If we're really lucky, the patients even call us that too. (Although I don't mind that half of this city calls me "Fletch") What you don't see is what we look like on the drives home, what we tell our best friends, spouses, and colleagues. Why sometimes we walk into our children's rooms, children that we sometimes haven't seen for literally days, and hold them while they sleep. You don't get to see us cry. That's not part of the deal. We swoop in, save the day, smile cheerfully and discharge you back home like mini superheroes.
I've hauled pregnant women twice my size down the hall singlehandedly, in a bed, with the breaks stuck on, then all but throw her on a c-section table to help save her baby's life. You don't believe me? There's a hospital with wheel marks down the hall to this day from her room to the surgery suite. How did I do it? I don't know. I've delivered a premature baby, breech, in a triage room.
Wanna know a secret? I was scared to death, both times, and hundreds more. No one would ever know. When you are the doctor, then you run the room. If you panic, everyone else does too, if you are nervous, everyone else is. These feelings spill all over the room and eventually to the patients and their families as well. If you aren't strong, then no one else can be either. And so, day after day, we muster superhuman strength emotionally, mentally and sometimes even physically for our patients.
Every once in a great while, we have a moment when our guard comes down, the tears flow, the cape comes off, and you all now see, that we're human too. Just like you. I'm just grateful that no nurse ever got a pic of me, and grateful for that doctor's sake that there are no identifying factors in his picture. He probably splashed his face at the drinking fountain on the way back in, grabbed a chart, worked the rest of his shift, and hopefully saved a couple more lives by the time the sun came back up. The day we can't grieve over the ones we can't save is the day we need to hang up the cape for good.