It was an unusually busy day for the hospital staff on the sixth 
floor. Ten new patients were admitted and Nurse Susan spent the morning 
and afternoon checking them in.Her friend Sharron, an aide, 
prepared ten rooms for the patients and made sure they were comfortable.
 After they were finished she grabbed Sharron and said, “We deserve a 
break. Let’s go eat.” Sitting across from each other in the noisy 
cafeteria, Susan noticed Sharron absently wiping the moisture off the 
outside of her glass with her thumbs. Her face reflected a weariness 
that came from more than just a busy day.
“You’re pretty quiet. Are you tired, or is something wrong?” – Susan asked.
Sharron
 hesitated. However, seeing the sincere concern in her friend’s face, 
she confessed, “I can’t do this the rest of my life, Susan. I have to 
find a higher-paying job to provide for my family. We barely get by. If 
it weren’t for my parents keeping my kids, well, we wouldn’t make it.”
Susan noticed the bruises on Sharron’s wrists peeking out from under her jacket.
“What about your husband?”
“We can’t count on him. He can’t seem to hold a job. He’s got . . . problems.”
“Sharron,
 you’re so good with patients, and you love working here. Why don’t you 
go to school and become a nurse? There’s financial help available, and 
I’m sure your parents would agree to keep the kids while you are in 
class.”
“It’s too late for me, Susan; I’m too old for school. I’ve
 always wanted to be a nurse, that’s why I took this job as an aide; at 
least I get to care for patients.”
“How old are you?” – Susan asked.
“Let’s just say I’m thirty-something.”
Susan
 pointed at the bruises on Sharron’s wrists. “I’m familiar with 
‘problems’ like these. Honey, it’s never too late to become what you’ve 
dreamed of. Let me tell you how I know.”
Susan began sharing a 
part of her life few knew about. It was something she normally didn’t 
talk about, only when it helped someone else.
“I first married when I was thirteen years old and in the eighth grade.”
Sharron gasped.
“My
 husband was twenty-two. I had no idea he was violently abusive. We were
 married six years and I had three sons. One night my husband beat me so
 savagely he knocked out all my front teeth. I grabbed the boys and 
left. “At the divorce settlement, the judge gave our sons to my 
husband because I was only nineteen and he felt I couldn’t provide for 
them. The shock of him taking my babies left me gasping for air. To make
 things worse, my ex took the boys and moved, cutting all contact I had 
with them.
“Just like the judge predicted, I struggled to make 
ends meet. I found work as a waitress, working for tips only. Many days 
my meals consisted of milk and crackers. The most difficult thing was 
the emptiness in my soul. I lived in a tiny one-room apartment and the 
loneliness would overwhelm me. I longed to play with my babies and hear 
them laugh.”
She paused. Even after four decades, the memory was 
still painful. Sharron’s eyes filled with tears as she reached out to 
comfort Susan. Now it didn’t matter if the bruises showed.
Susan 
continued, “I soon discovered that waitresses with grim faces didn’t get
 tips, so I hid behind a smiling mask and pressed on. I remarried and 
had a daughter. She became my reason for living, until she went to 
college.
“Then I was back where I started, not knowing what to do 
with myself – until the day my mother had surgery. I watched the nurses 
care for her and thought: I can do that. The problem was, I only had an 
eighth-grade education. Going back to high school seemed like a huge 
mountain to conquer. I decided to take small steps toward my goal. The 
first step was to get my GED. My daughter used to laugh at how our roles
 reversed. Now I was burning the midnight oil and asking her questions.”
Susan paused and looked directly in Sharron’s eyes. “I received my diploma when I was forty-six years old.”
Tears streamed down Sharron’s cheeks. Here was someone offering the key that might unlock the door in her dark life.“The
 next step was to enroll in nursing school. For two long years I 
studied, cried and tried to quit. But my family wouldn’t let me. I 
remember calling my daughter and yelling, ‘Do you realize how many bones
 are in the human body, and I have to know them all! I can’t do this, 
I’m forty-six years old!’ But I did. Sharron, I can’t tell you how 
wonderful it felt when I received my cap and pin.”
Sharron’s lunch
 was cold, and the ice had melted in her tea by the time Susan finished 
talking. Reaching across the table and taking Sharron’s hands, Susan 
said, “You don’t have to put up with abuse. Don’t be a victim – take 
charge. You will be an excellent nurse. We will climb this mountain 
together.”
Sharron wiped her mascara-stained face with her napkin.
 “I had no idea you suffered so much pain. You seem like someone who has
 always had it together.”
“I guess I’ve developed an appreciation 
for the hardships of my life,” Susan answered. “If I use them to help 
others, then I really haven’t lost a thing. Sharron, promise me that you
 will go to school and become a nurse. Then help others by sharing your 
experiences.”
Sharron promised. In a few years she became a 
registered nurse and worked alongside her friend until Susan retired. 
Sharron never forgot her colleague or the rest of her promise.
Now
 Sharron sits across the table taking the hands of those who are bruised
 in body and soul, telling them, “It’s never too late. We will climb 
this mountain together.”
By Linda Carol Apple
 
 
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