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Date: | Sat, 8 Jan 2000 18:36:01 -0800 |
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I'm a bit late on the hug thread [have been on call in the NICU].
Kathy - I have to admit I'm surprised you haven't spoken up on the hug
issue - maybe you sense the hug's importance to the hugger like Pat had
mentioned.
Perhaps this suggestion belongs in the "little white lie club" book, but I
think it helps to refuse something offered very sincerely on terms that the
"offerer" can understand. Such as: "I'll have to pass on the hugs, I've
found they trigger my nausea."
Nausea. That's something that heme/onc workers understand.
I'm just about the only doc that I know that hugs. The usual circumstances
are the new cancer diagnosis of someone's child, the "there's nothing more
that we can do for your child" discussion, and after a child has died. The
parents of children who have died often greet me with a hug, even years
later. It's meaningful in the right situations. [My six year old asked me
after a particularly hug filled week "Mommy, don't you wish you had a NICE
job?"]
I've worked with a few teary new breastfeeding moms, but it has been more a
matter of offering a box of hospital tissues [too small to blow your nose
well after you've been crying] and mentioning that lots of moms feel
overwhelmed at first [you get nodding] and waiting for the moment to pass.
Gail Hertz, MD, IBCLC
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