My friend Morgan Love is in the hospital again.
I’ve lost count of how many times she’s been in the hospital. She’s slept in a hospital bed more times than any human I’ve known.
By now, Morgan knows everything there is to know about hospital life. She is savvy in all things medical. She knows healthcare institutional routines, backward and forward. She can sign official medical documents in her sleep. She knows the entire medical staff by name, age, rank, and denominational preference.
If you go to the hospital to visit this 20-something, you’ll have to wait in line behind all the nurses, therapists, techs, doctors, surgeons, specialists, and probably even members of the custodial crew, who are all waiting their turn just to say hello.
You might also see her fellow Delta Gamma sorority members dropping in. Or other random people visiting, who all want to bask in her glow.
She’s just one of those people.
People visit Morgan the same way they gather to visit the statue of a saint who grants miracles. Probably because Morgan is always happy. Even when
she’s not actually happy, she’s “always happy,” if you know what I mean.
Morgan’s mother—who also lives in hospitals with her daughter—once told me, “She doesn’t ever admit when she’s in pain. That’s why it’s hard to know if she’s hurting. She’s more worried about you than she is about herself.”
I don’t think I’ve ever seen Morgan not smiling. I don’t even know what she looks like when she frowns.
You will never hear her complain. You will never hear her condone the complaints of others. She will even defend those who have wronged her.
There have been times when various medical staffers from various medical institutions have made significant errors. I’m not talking about small mistakes. I’m talking serious oversights that affected Morgan negatively.
And yet, Morgan will advocate for them. She will softly say,…