A pandemic nurse's love letter to New York
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[May 28, 2020]
By Shannon Stapleton and Clare Baldwin
NEOSHO, Mo. (Reuters) - The coronavirus
pandemic has restricted almost everyone's freedoms in America but for
Meghan Lindsey it has done the opposite. This is the freest she has ever
felt.
Traveling to New York City at age 33 to work as a COVID-19 nurse was the
first time that Meghan, a married mother of two, had ever left southwest
Missouri.
"It was my first time on a plane," she said, describing how she came to
work 12-hour shifts in the intensive care unit at NYU Winthrop Hospital.
"Flying into New York was the first time I'd ever seen the ocean."
There are many stories about the lonely coronavirus deaths in the city's
hospitals and the traumatic work of the nurses who staff them.
Meghan's story is about unexpected opportunities. It's a story of how
the pandemic gave a woman the chance to strike out into the world,
confront danger and make a difference, and how her husband stayed home
to care for their daughters. It's a story about new beginnings.
"I always wanted to do something for my country," said Meghan. "This was
a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to do something meaningful."
Meghan's first nursing shifts in New York were a shock.
There are a lot of sick people in Missouri with chronic diseases like
diabetes, where the progressions are slow and the declines are familiar.
COVID-19 patients are stunned by a virus that turns their lives upside
down and in many cases ends them.
"One of my patients had her toes done up all nice and pretty and still
had her jewelry on," said Meghan.
Because they were coronavirus patients and visitors were banned, it was
Meghan who would hold their hands as they died.
"Once you FaceTime and you meet their family and you hear them crying
and sobbing, you know their cute little nicknames and you start to know
them, it just gets to be really personal," said Meghan. "You have a hard
time separating yourself and not truly grieving for them as well."
Despite all of the death, Meghan's time in New York City's COVID-19
wards was unexpectedly affirming. The pandemic gave Meghan something
that her life in Missouri so far had not: a feeling of everything
sliding into place.
When Meghan graduated from nursing school, it wasn't like she imagined.
It turned out to be just a job. She mourned.
"Now for once, it's actually something important," said Meghan. "This is
the first time since I've become a nurse that it's like, 'yes, this is
why.' I can make a difference, and I can help, and I am strong enough
for this."
Her kids, she said, are proud. "They know that what I'm doing is hard
and that I put my life in danger."
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Traveling nurse Meghan Lindsey poses for a portrait in the Brooklyn
borough of New York, U.S., May 4, 2020. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Meghan is from a small town in Missouri. Most Sundays, she goes to
church. Her mom was a manager at Walmart and her dad worked
construction. Before he lost his job to the pandemic, her husband
Aaron sold fire suppression systems to small businesses.
Meghan is the first in her family to finish college and has long
held her family together. As thrilling as it was to be in New York,
it was also hard.
Meghan often wondered if she should come home. Her husband Aaron
told her no. He and the girls were fine, what she was doing mattered
and he was proud of her. He sometimes called her superwoman.
"If he wasn't such a good dad and there for my children, I could
never do this," said Meghan. He deserves credit too, she said, "but
I guess you could say the limelight's on me."
Being a COVID-19 travel nurse isn't glamorous. Meghan had to wear
protective gear during her shifts and there was a lengthy
decontamination process when she got home each night. She lived in a
hotel room with another nurse and had to find a laundromat every few
days to wash her scrubs.
But sometimes it did feel like a grand adventure. She saw the Statue
of Liberty. She heard someone speaking Russian. She learned how to
fold a slice of pizza.
Restaurants sometimes gave her and her friends free food "because
we're nurses," she said with a bit of awe. She took selfie after
selfie standing in the middle of empty New York City streets and no
cabbies honked at her.
Her husband Aaron said he was sometimes a little jealous (it's New
York), occasionally worried (again, New York), but mostly he was
just really proud. "Meghan hasn't been out there in the world," he
said. She nailed it.
Now, at the end of her contract, Meghan is unsure of what the future
holds.
She is back in a small town in the Midwest. She no longer has a job
and she is coming off the biggest high of her life. She sometimes
asks herself, will I have the desire to go back to this life?
Something about New York stood out to her: people there had
aspirations to make something of themselves.
(Reporting by Shannon Stapleton and Clare Baldwin; Editing by Kieran
Murray and Lisa Shumaker)
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