ChatterBank19 mins ago
A Few Weeks Ago----
8 Answers
I think it was on chatterbank , there were 2 poems about people in care homes who had memory loss. I think they were entitled "What do you see"
Can anyone help me to find these please. I wanted to copy them at the time but was having problems with my system.Now up and running again I do not know where to locate them. Many thanks Brenda
Can anyone help me to find these please. I wanted to copy them at the time but was having problems with my system.Now up and running again I do not know where to locate them. Many thanks Brenda
Answers
Thanks for that DTC how apt and full of sentiment.
20:34 Wed 23rd Oct 2013
Brenda, this was over a year ago, but I think it's the one you mean http:// www.the answerb ank.co. uk/Chat terBank /Questi on11554 79.html
This one, gness? http:// www.the answerb ank.co. uk/Chat terBank /Questi on12851 39.html
http:// www.the answerb ank.co. uk/Chat terBank /Questi on12851 39.html
This one, gness?
This one, gness?
This one perhaps?
NURSE'S RESPONSE
TO CRABBIT OLD WOMAN
What do we see, you ask, what do we see?
Yes, we are thinking when looking at thee!
We may seem to be hard when we hurry and fuss,
But there's many of you, and too few of us.
We would like far more time to sit by you and talk,
To bath you and feed you and help you to walk.
To hear of your lives and the things you have done;
Your childhood, your husband, your daughter, your son.
But time is against us, there's too much to do -
Patients too many, and nurses too few.
We grieve when we see you so sad and alone,
With nobody near you, no friends of your own.
We feel all your pain, and know of your fear
That nobody cares now your end is so near.
But nurses are people with feelings as well,
And when we're together you'll often hear tell
Of the dearest old Gran in the very end bed,
And the lovely old Dad, and the things that he said,
We speak with compassion and love, and feel sad
When we think of your lives and the joy that you've had.
When the time has arrived for you to depart,
You leave us behind with an ache in our heart.
When you sleep the long sleep, no more worry or care,
There are other old people, and we must be there.
So please understand if we hurry and fuss -
There are many of you, and too few of us.
Anon.
NURSE'S RESPONSE
TO CRABBIT OLD WOMAN
What do we see, you ask, what do we see?
Yes, we are thinking when looking at thee!
We may seem to be hard when we hurry and fuss,
But there's many of you, and too few of us.
We would like far more time to sit by you and talk,
To bath you and feed you and help you to walk.
To hear of your lives and the things you have done;
Your childhood, your husband, your daughter, your son.
But time is against us, there's too much to do -
Patients too many, and nurses too few.
We grieve when we see you so sad and alone,
With nobody near you, no friends of your own.
We feel all your pain, and know of your fear
That nobody cares now your end is so near.
But nurses are people with feelings as well,
And when we're together you'll often hear tell
Of the dearest old Gran in the very end bed,
And the lovely old Dad, and the things that he said,
We speak with compassion and love, and feel sad
When we think of your lives and the joy that you've had.
When the time has arrived for you to depart,
You leave us behind with an ache in our heart.
When you sleep the long sleep, no more worry or care,
There are other old people, and we must be there.
So please understand if we hurry and fuss -
There are many of you, and too few of us.
Anon.