I look at my phone and feel my stomach doing flips as I realize how late I am. It doesn't help my nerves either to suddenly discover that I had only taken one pair of pants (the ones I am wearing), a mini skirt and some ridiculous shorts I'll be too embarrassed to wear for the three weeks I will be spending in Poland. I prefer not to go down the list of things I need for this trip knowing it won't help my already quite desperate situation. With sweat dripping down my back I frantically reach the KLM lady at the counter demanding she take me first as I am terribly late and cannot by any means miss this flight. She calmly takes my ticket, glances at me with a hardly hidden air of disgust, and slowly instructs to wait in line as I have plenty of time. Plenty of time!? Were we in the same time zone?
I meet my sister at the Amsterdam airport where we transfer to Warsaw. Seeing her brings a relief. It feels as if I have come full circle together with her and all these years in between, both good and bad, sink deep into the Atlantic as we fly over it. We are returning home. It is a bitter-sweet return, nonetheless. We are scared. The whole three hours separating Warsaw from Czestochowa I cannot help but think how will grandma look after this terrible stroke she suffered a week earlier. Will I be able to help her?
A Polish hospital. First thing that jumps out at me is a big colorful poster picturing doctors and nurses boasting fierce faces ready to fight for a higher pay. The poster reads there will be a strike held the following day and continuing until their requests are met. My aunt and cousin ignore the poster as they pass by it. Asked about what will happen with the patients, they reply in a matter-of-fact tone that unless they are about to die, they will have to patiently wait for the strike to end. "But who decides how severe their condition is?" - I asked worriedly. They looked at each other in surprise and tried dispersing my consternation by saying: "Well, whoever happens to be at the hospital at the time.

http://strasznasztuka.blox.pl/resource/strajk.jpg
The hospital stench is a mixture of heavy sweat, urine, and feces and something else which I cannot recognize right away. We are told to put on torn and repulsively stinking coats prior to entering. I glance over at my sister and see her gradually become paler. She assures me it is fine and we go in. This is not the grandma I know. The one in front of me must be someone else, I try hard to convince myself and feel tears pressing against my eyelids. So this is what
happens when your body gives up on you, when the machine that you hardly reflect on under normal circumstances fails. How easily we forget how fragile we really are. My sister is about to faint. I rush her over to the window where she spends the next half an hour and
then we leave.
This night I have trouble falling asleep. I keep on seeing grandma's face and I try thinking of ways to help her out. We need to get a lotion - her skin looked very dry. I will massage her, especially the right side (the one that is paralyzed). Will I be able to do it though? I have never touched grandma anywhere when she was healthy; how will it feel now? I will make sure she drinks lots of fluids. But, wait, she chokes every time someone gives her something to drink. How will I go about feeding her? I have never fed anyone in my life! What was I doing there? I was helpless.
The next day, however, I approach her bed and without any hesitation start doing all the things I was so worried about the night before. She is smiling and infinitely thankful I do not mind doing these things. I am so happy to be there and yet so terribly exhausted every day I leave the hospital. I put all my energy into her. That is all I can really do and it is so little.
Two days later the doctors return to work. I know this because my aunt plans her day around a short visit to see the doctor in charge in the hospital where grandma is. I see not much has changed since when we lived in Poland. Without a few expensive gifts there would not be any visit to speak of and with them my aunt manages to find out what exercises we can do with grandma, what food she can eat, how we can help her regain her speech and memory etc. Overall it is a fruitful visit. We can proceed with the treatment.
One day grandma is moved to a different room. It is a slow day and my sister decides to read her an article from a popular Polish magazine for women. She gets through half of it when the lady next to grandma raises her voice complaining about my sister reading out loud. "This is a hospital and things are different here. At home you watch TV all the time and waste your time on computers and here you come and pretend you read! Hypocrites, you!" Normally I would keep my mouth shut, but this lady really got on my nerves, "Excuse me, do you think you know me personally to be saying these things?" Her response: "Don't be a smart ass!" I am about to burst. I tell her to mind her own business. This gives her even more reasons to continue talking. My sister keeps quiet so I start talking to grandma: "Name all the animals you had on your farm." Grandma smiles and begins: "Cows, geese, ducks, pigs, a horse!" I ask about the color of the horse and she responds: "Ahhh, grizzled!" We start laughing and the lady next to us gives up and shuts up.
After two weeks I feel extremely tired. If I don't leave, I'll go crazy- I think to myself. So I pack my bags and together with a friend we take the train to Krakow.
I meet my sister at the Amsterdam airport where we transfer to Warsaw. Seeing her brings a relief. It feels as if I have come full circle together with her and all these years in between, both good and bad, sink deep into the Atlantic as we fly over it. We are returning home. It is a bitter-sweet return, nonetheless. We are scared. The whole three hours separating Warsaw from Czestochowa I cannot help but think how will grandma look after this terrible stroke she suffered a week earlier. Will I be able to help her?
A Polish hospital. First thing that jumps out at me is a big colorful poster picturing doctors and nurses boasting fierce faces ready to fight for a higher pay. The poster reads there will be a strike held the following day and continuing until their requests are met. My aunt and cousin ignore the poster as they pass by it. Asked about what will happen with the patients, they reply in a matter-of-fact tone that unless they are about to die, they will have to patiently wait for the strike to end. "But who decides how severe their condition is?" - I asked worriedly. They looked at each other in surprise and tried dispersing my consternation by saying: "Well, whoever happens to be at the hospital at the time.

http://strasznasztuka.blox.pl/resource/strajk.jpg
The hospital stench is a mixture of heavy sweat, urine, and feces and something else which I cannot recognize right away. We are told to put on torn and repulsively stinking coats prior to entering. I glance over at my sister and see her gradually become paler. She assures me it is fine and we go in. This is not the grandma I know. The one in front of me must be someone else, I try hard to convince myself and feel tears pressing against my eyelids. So this is what
happens when your body gives up on you, when the machine that you hardly reflect on under normal circumstances fails. How easily we forget how fragile we really are. My sister is about to faint. I rush her over to the window where she spends the next half an hour and
then we leave.
This night I have trouble falling asleep. I keep on seeing grandma's face and I try thinking of ways to help her out. We need to get a lotion - her skin looked very dry. I will massage her, especially the right side (the one that is paralyzed). Will I be able to do it though? I have never touched grandma anywhere when she was healthy; how will it feel now? I will make sure she drinks lots of fluids. But, wait, she chokes every time someone gives her something to drink. How will I go about feeding her? I have never fed anyone in my life! What was I doing there? I was helpless.
The next day, however, I approach her bed and without any hesitation start doing all the things I was so worried about the night before. She is smiling and infinitely thankful I do not mind doing these things. I am so happy to be there and yet so terribly exhausted every day I leave the hospital. I put all my energy into her. That is all I can really do and it is so little.
Two days later the doctors return to work. I know this because my aunt plans her day around a short visit to see the doctor in charge in the hospital where grandma is. I see not much has changed since when we lived in Poland. Without a few expensive gifts there would not be any visit to speak of and with them my aunt manages to find out what exercises we can do with grandma, what food she can eat, how we can help her regain her speech and memory etc. Overall it is a fruitful visit. We can proceed with the treatment.
One day grandma is moved to a different room. It is a slow day and my sister decides to read her an article from a popular Polish magazine for women. She gets through half of it when the lady next to grandma raises her voice complaining about my sister reading out loud. "This is a hospital and things are different here. At home you watch TV all the time and waste your time on computers and here you come and pretend you read! Hypocrites, you!" Normally I would keep my mouth shut, but this lady really got on my nerves, "Excuse me, do you think you know me personally to be saying these things?" Her response: "Don't be a smart ass!" I am about to burst. I tell her to mind her own business. This gives her even more reasons to continue talking. My sister keeps quiet so I start talking to grandma: "Name all the animals you had on your farm." Grandma smiles and begins: "Cows, geese, ducks, pigs, a horse!" I ask about the color of the horse and she responds: "Ahhh, grizzled!" We start laughing and the lady next to us gives up and shuts up.
After two weeks I feel extremely tired. If I don't leave, I'll go crazy- I think to myself. So I pack my bags and together with a friend we take the train to Krakow.