I'll Look at Your Facebook Profile Before I Tell Your Mother You're Dead
Photo by Marcus Hendry MD

I'll Look at Your Facebook Profile Before I Tell Your Mother You're Dead

It kind of keeps me human. You see, I’m about to change their lives — your mom and dad, that is. In about five minutes, they will never be the same, they will never be happy again. Right now, to be honest, you’re just a nameless dead body that feels like a wet bag of newspapers that we have been pounding on, sticking IV lines and tubes and needles in, trying desperately to save you. There’s no motion, no life, nothing to tell me you once had dreams or aspirations. I owe it to them to learn just a bit about you before I go in.

Because right now . . . all I am is mad at you, for what you did to yourself and what you are about to do to them.

I know nothing about you. I owe it to your mom to peek inside of your once-living world.

Maybe you were texting instead of watching the road, or you were drunk when you should have Ubered. Perhaps you snorted heroin or Xanax for the first time or a line of coke, tried meth or popped a Vicodin at the campus party and did a couple shots. Maybe you just rode your bike without a helmet or didn’t heed your parents’ warning when they asked you not to hang out with that “friend,” or to be more cautious when coming to a four-way stop. Maybe you just gave up.

Maybe it was just your time, but chances are . . . it wasn’t.

So I pick up your faded picture of your driver’s license and click on my iPhone, flip to Facebook and search your name. Chances are we’ll have one mutual friend somewhere. I know a lot of people.

I see you wearing the same necklace and earrings that now sit in a specimen cup on the counter, the same ball cap or jacket that has been split open with trauma scissors and pulled under the backboard, the lining stained with blood. Looks like you were wearing it to the U2 concert. I heard it was great.

I see your smile, how it should be, the color of eyes when they are filled with life, your time on the beach, blowing out candles, Christmas at Grandma’s; oh you have a Maltese, too. I see that. I see you standing with your mom and dad in front of the sign to your college. Good, I’ll know exactly who they are when I walk into the room. It makes it that much easier for me, one less question I need to ask.

You’re kind of lucky that you don’t have to see it. Dad screaming your name over and over, mom pulling her hair out, curled up on the floor with her hand over her head as if she’s trying to protect herself from unseen blows.

I check your Facebook page before I tell them you’re dead because it reminds me that I am talking about a person, someone they love—it quiets the voice in my head that is screaming at you right now shouting: “You mother fucker, how could you do this to them, to people you are supposed to love!”

Dr. Louis M. Profeta is an emergency physician practicing in Indianapolis. He is one of LinkedIn's Top Voices and the author of the critically acclaimed book, The Patient in Room Nine Says He's God. Feedback at louermd@att.net is welcomed. For other publications and for speaking dates or inquiries visit louisprofeta.com.

lynne newton

Environmental Protection Agency

10mo

On the evening of September 22, 2020, the police came to my door to inform me that my 28yo daughter was dead. One month almost to the day before she bought a Harley. I had no idea. She lost control of the bike in a mountain canyon and went off the road. My life has whittled down to before and after Bridget died. I cry every day.

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Thank you for this article and thank you for doing (much more than) your job! Having lost my sister and my mother (cancer and old age), I know this lasting pain. I don't envy you and all the other medics out there...

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Mark Beddis PhD

Business solutions consultant

2y

It's hard that every year I get a reminder about my brother's work anniversary when he lost his fight with cancer several years ago. I've got no idea how switch his social media accounts to reflect that. Any ideas?

My past job made me feel the same way, although to a much smaller degree. I used to update criminal records, including aligning suspects' fingerprints and mug shots into the correct digital positions to be transmitted to the FBI's criminal database, where the data would permanently stain/ruin the rest of their careers. Most were 18- and 19-year-old marines and sailors who volunteered to serve their country but must have thought they could get away with this or that stupid thing (DUI's caught entering base were a common offense). On paper my job description was to simply/quickly transcribe an FD-249 form exactly as it was filled out, to trust the arresting officers to get everything right, but after my dozenth form I stopped trusting the handwriting and even the accuracy of the officers' booking work and started verifying almost everything from central case files, personnel records, and communicating with officers when necessary. Besides ensuring accuracy, it also helped me to humanize suspects before driving the last nail into their reputation as an outstanding citizen with a promising future. But again, this doesn't hold a candle to your job. Thank you for helping us all to understand what you and others in your field go through.

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