"Won't be needing this anymore. Get home safe."
I wonder briefly if he will really use that for tube fare - then chide myself for it. If he's willing to wake half-sleeping, grumpy travellers to get a few pounds, then who am I to make assumptions.
I spent the last few days of an extended layover here in London catching up with some former ship-mates from Benin. Eve & Caleb, a lovely couple from New Zealand (temporarily living and working here) were generous enough to put me up in their tiny flat (at the tippy-top of a RIDICULOUS amount of stairs). It's a little bizarre seeing the itty-bitty living space most Londoners have, along with the pricey-est of sports cars that line all the streets. Give me a jalopy and a country lot over that - any day.
These days were packed with exploration; there is an awful lot to see around this city, and fortunately, if you're a history nerd like me, a lot of it is free! Everywhere I went, however, I had reminders of where I'm going, and who I want to be.
One of the first places I visited was the British Museum (did I mention nearly all the museums in London are free!?), home to just SO many of the world's most important historical relics. As I wandered through the endless maze of cultural icons, my brain half-dead from jet lag, I wondered how many of these items were obtained with the permission of their rightful owners. While I suspect in recent years agreements have been reached with many of the now-independent nations from whence these treasures were plundered, I doubt that was the case 100+ years ago. The objective side of my brain argues with the subjective...
"Yes, but...the scientific and academic value of having all these specimens in one collection is enormous, and has led to countless breakthroughs! Look at the Rosetta Stone! LOOK AT IT!! How on earth did they carve that so small..."
"Yes, but...does the scientific value outweigh the ethical and moral travesties that got them here in the first place? And the aftermath that still ripples down generations later?"
Beninoise carvings |
As you can imagine - this was all a lot to process on 3 hours of fitful airplane sleep - so I'm glad I'm writing about it now. It definitely needs more of my thought.
This sculpture struck me especially.
It was created by a member of the Fulani people. It reminded me of one particular patient I had last year who was also Fulani... |
Well, it was either this or the McDonald's with the mossy, thatched roof.
Later on, we met up with another nurse from the ship - and what else would 3 nurses do with an afternoon out than visit the Florence Nightingale museum!
The small medicine chest Nightengale brought with her to Crimea. |
Now, good ol' Flo might have a bit of a stereotypical reputation in many people's minds, but she is known as the mother of modern Nursing for a reason. She turned what was essentially a chambermaid's job into a genuinely respected profession. She established training schools and standards that are still relevant in essence, though some are a bit dated. Her Notes on Nursing is a lasting guide to what is still the core of nursing today - caring. Looking at the patient holistically; beyond the often narrow perspective of medicine.
"Stop that at once - I'm beginning to get cross!"
A teacher's voice rose slightly as we entered the foyer of the hole-in-the-wall museum. A group of chattering, fidgety schoolchildren flitted about. As we sidled around them into the exhibit, a woman in a puffy black dress with white apron and bonnet whispered, "don't worry, they'll be sitting quietly for 45 minutes."
Despite our skepticism, they did just that, as the woman captivated them with her first-person tale of Nightengale's life. Bits of her well-rehearsed story carried to us as we absorbed the museum's information. I knew Florence rose from obscurity during the Crimean War, but I suppose I hadn't grasped the extent of the challenge that she faced.
Pursuing nursing against her aristocratic parents' wishes, she would eventually lead a small contingent of women to a British field hospital, where wounded and dead were being brought by the boatload from the front. They were overrun by dying and diseased men, most with little or no hope for survival. It was not a place you recovered from.
It was a place where you waited to die.
Florence's intervention and pleading letters for supplies, most of which she paid for herself, gave those men a chance. While she said she regretted how many men were still lost, it cannot be denied that she saved countless. She insisted on clean shirts, clean bedsheets, soap, sunshine, and even activities to keep morale high. She turned a place of death into a place of hope.
It is no wonder her nightly rounds, checking on each and every soldier by lamplight, became the stuff of legend. She was revered and honored, and her larger-than-life reputation gave her the momentum she needed to revolutionize nursing the world over.
The very-different-from-what-most-people-imagine lamp belonging to Nightengale. |
Well, I've rambled long enough to kill most of this night - the lights just came on in the terminal and the check-in counter is about to open. By tonight I'll be in Cameroon, and have more stories of my own, far-less-momentous nightly rounds to share with you.
In the meantime, if you consider my ramblings worth your time, I'm working to set up a podcast in which I'll chat with various crew about their experiences on board. You can check it out here - and subscribe if you're interested in more.
That's all for now, folks.
Á la prochaine.
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