Woe is Me, I am Undone: Lament in a Time of Suffering and Distress

M. Fowler
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Abstract

The demands of nursing care in a pandemic are both extraordinary and hazardous. Beyond exhaustion, those demands can be the cause of profound suffering and distress while the nurse must, even so, persevere. The act of composing a lament offers nurses and other healthcare providers a means to express personal grief and suffering as they go about caring for those stricken with COVID-19; as they become an intermediary for families who cannot be with loved ones in their dying moments; as they worry about triage and clinical decisions that must be made; as they fear the very act of nursing itself with inadequate protective gear; or as they worry about carrying a virus to their own loved ones. The ancient, structured, literary form of a personal lament has conceptual footing in the humanities, offering a means of examining and expressing one’s suffering, grief, and distress. This article considers why to lament, and introduces to readers an individual lament and its structured template of seven elements that guides one into their suffering – and then out again. A lament can be formulated orally or in writing, and can be an exercise that is strengthening, healing, and clarifying, in the midst of the nursing demands of this pandemic, and those that may yet emerge.
哀哉、我灭亡了。在困苦困苦的时候应当哀号
在大流行期间,护理工作的要求非常高,也很危险。除了疲惫之外,这些要求可能会导致深刻的痛苦和痛苦,而护士必须坚持下去。撰写哀歌的行为为护士和其他医疗保健提供者提供了一种在照顾COVID-19患者时表达个人悲伤和痛苦的手段;当他们成为无法与亲人在弥留之际相聚的家庭的中介时;因为他们担心分诊和必须做出的临床决定;因为她们害怕在没有足够防护装备的情况下护理;或者他们担心会把病毒传染给自己的亲人。个人哀歌这种古老的、结构化的文学形式在人文学科中有概念基础,它提供了一种审视和表达个人苦难、悲伤和苦恼的手段。这篇文章考虑了为什么要哀叹,并向读者介绍了一种个人的哀叹,以及它的七个元素的结构化模板,这些元素引导人们进入他们的痛苦,然后再出来。哀悼可以以口头或书面形式表达,可以是一种练习,在这场大流行和可能出现的护理需求中加强、治愈和澄清。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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