The little girl sits in a hospital room.
She lives here. In this bed. In this university hospital. She lives in this gown. She usually plays on her iPad. All by herself. This is her life.
She’s been sad lately.
“A lot of people don’t think about the mental health of a dying child,” says the girl’s mother. “But when you’re a kid, and a doctor tells you that you’re dying, it screws you up.”
The child is 10 years old. Her beautiful head is smooth and bald. The cancer has stolen one of her eyes. The surgeon removed her eyeball recently in an operation called enucleation.
If you want to have your heart ripped out, talk to a kid who has undergone enucleation.
She is brave, yes. She is a fighter, absolutely. But even heroes get blue sometimes. She is, after all, human.
Cancer treatment sucks. Treatment has ruined her social life. Treatment has destroyed her childhood. Some days, the girl barely has the energy to breathe.
But she still wants to be a kid. Her little
brain still says: “Hey! You’re 10 years old! Go be a kid! Run around and play!” But her body says no.
And all this makes her sad. She is a living science project. She lives from medication to medication. Her face is puffy from endless treatments. Her energy levels are often non-existent.
Enter the nurses.
“We wanted to do something that would make her smile,” said one nurse, who shall also remain nameless—although if, perchance, we were to give this RN an actual name, we might call this nurse Angela.
Angela brings her Bluetooth speaker into the child’s room. Angela and four other nurses have dance parties for the child. These nurses perform serious dance routines with complicated parts and intricate steps.
“We don’t dance easy routines,” says Angela. “I actually have to watch videos and practice at home, and my husband’s…