Hello all—I hope you are well and enjoying your summers so
far.
I am interning with Rebecca Schwarz, the coordinator of a
program at the Fletcher Allen Hospital called Art From The Heart, an incentive
to engage pediatric hospital patients and their families through any kind of
art or creative communication. The program is extremely flexible to each
volunteer, so it is easy and natural to change the activities of the program to
fit our individual interests and strengths. This being said, while AFTH is
primarily art projects like painting, drawing, and so on, I am going to be
implementing reading and writing once I get going.
There will be obvious gaps in my ability to write about this
experience or provide specific examples because of patient confidentiality
rules and obligations, but I promise that it will not hinder communication too
much.
Last week was my first integration into the program and it
was a whole lot of information and policies and sanitation guidelines to take
in all at once. Most challenging of all, being the should-be-simple act of
navigating the hospital. Let me just tell you that most hospitals make
sense—once you figure out one floor and how it functions you can usually take
that understanding and incorporate it to every floor. Not here. Every floor is
different because there are technically three separate hospitals and buildings
happening that are connected by a series of tunnels and talking elevators with
different names. Luckily, so far I have been partnered with people who know
where they are going so one instance where I walked confidentially in the wrong
direction and right towards the morgue—I could be stopped.
Anyway, training went well—Rebecca took myself and the
second intern, a psychology-art major from Connecticut through all the steps
and we learned the behind the scenes functions of the Art Cart, proper hand
washing, and our service to every single person we meet in the hospital
environment. We were also lucky enough to be able to squeeze our Contact
Precaution training in, too. This means that we will be allowed in hospital
rooms that require us to wear PPE for our own health safety and that of the
patients.
After training last week I went on two Shadow Shifts, meaning I tag
along with the scheduled AFTH volunteers and jump right into the program but
have their seniority to fall back on. I've done three shifts this week--they are for about 3 1/2 or 4 hours in the morning. The first part of the morning is always
spent on the inpatient ward, where children stay overnight (or many nights) and
can either occur in the playroom or their individual rooms if they are not well
or interested enough to go to the playroom. We are given a list of children’s
first names, rooms, and any precautions that we have to take specific to each
room. We are not allowed access to specifics such as why they are in the
hospital or anything like that—that way, when we walk into a room, it doesn’t
matter what’s “wrong” with the children, we’re just there to play.
This is probably the most awkward part of the day because we
walk around and knock on each door and ask the patient or their parents if
they’d like to come to the playroom or if we can come inside to do any kind of
art activity they want. I’m learning that in some situations it’s very easy and
comfortable to ask and that in others I’m an unwelcome interruption. Two other
big lessons so far are that 1) most pre-teens and teens are still very much
asleep at 9 AM and 2) my biggest competition is, and will probably remain to
be, iPhone products.
The second part of the morning happens in the Children’s
Specialty Center, where patients go for appointments that they don’t have to be
hospitalized for but where they still welcome distractions. Our first priority
there is the infusion room—that’s where things like chemotherapy happen.
Outside of that, we occupy the waiting room and grab any child’s attention we
can.
If there aren’t any patients who are up for art-making in
either place, there is time to organize the Art Cart or make Art Kits—little
paper bags filled with a pre-determined project for children or whomever wants
to create an art project on their own.
You select a few craft supplies that might somehow go together and write
a tag-line on the bag that someone can follow. I made one Tuesday morning where
I made an astronaut out of construction paper and pipe cleaners and put some
more paper and fun things in the bag with the tag-line “Create a Super
Spaceship for the Astronaut.” I’m thinking that these kits might be a good
opportunity for stories. For example, if I write a small story appropriate for
content and age of the ward and then ask them to draw a picture of the
characters or something like that. I’m also going to create some interactive
stories…like stories where there are blank parts and instructions of what kind
of noun to put in the blank so the children are actually creating their own
stories. This is one of my goals to have going by the next time we post.
Other than that, I’d like to get to know the program a
little better and how I can change or help it where necessary. There are some
extra writing opportunities on the side that I’ll be able to be involved with
too, such as a separate blog for AFTH, writing for a coloring book, and
potentially a very special project involving poetry that I can’t tell you about
yet. Of course I’d like to also get better at going place to place and avoiding
getting hopelessly lost. I need to be more wary of Insta-Foam, too—when exiting
a patient’s room Monday I got sprayed in the face whilst trying to sanitize my
hands. Most importantly though, I’m excited to continue to have the opportunity
to connect with the kids and take a little of the burden and emotional impact
off the parents for even the smallest moments.
Here’s a few short stories I can share that will tell you a
bit about what I’m up to:
On Tuesday my partner and I were laughing with a boy who accidentally threw the paper airplane we had just made over a railing
and down onto a lower floor.
Another time I played with a sibling of a patient so the
parent could relax a little. This one was
too young to do art or anything, so we just made a tower out of blocks and
knocked it over.
At the Specialty Center I had been working with a girl for a
while and she decided to ask if I would help her make a Father’s Day card. We
did—complete with two poems and cut-outs of things her father likes and a
special message.
What happens in these moments is that I can feel the
hospital disappear. It disappears for all of us, and for a few minutes, it
doesn’t matter that the hospital has brought us together or that we have to
play around IV poles and cords or that anybody’s sick at all. No one is
thinking about what we are doing there—we’re just playing. If that had to be my
only accomplishment for a whole month, I’d take it.
I'll even comment first!
ReplyDeleteKristen, I think your internship is so interesting because it involves so many different elements separate from just writing. There's art, teaching, patient communication, etc. I really like some of your ideas about new activities you could possible do for this, I think they would work well if you can incorporate them. What's better than doing something you love and having it be a public service? I know you have to keep confidentiality, but I'm interested to hear what stories you'll have. The project sounds great.
Wow, Kristen, I really admire you for taking on an internship like this, because I am not sure I could do it. I think I would get so emotionally involved that I'd be a mess by the end of the summer, but it sounds like you are really enjoying yourself, and have already gotten a lot out of the experience. Like Sarah said, you are doing so many different things that you'll never be bored, and I really like the idea of writing stories for the kids to illustrate. It's a fantastic segue into writing stories of their own, which would be a really cool thing to be part of. I'm really looking forward to seeing what else you get to do this summer!
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