Smell

  1. Brett DiGiovanna, BA
  1. From Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons; New York, NY 10033

    This particular elderly couple impressed me. Their walls were flooded with pictures. Mrs. Rosen was the artist of the family. Small talk, a check-up visit, and then the social worker and I got up to leave. I had only listened and watched, having been introduced as a medical student. Mr. Rosen looked at me and asked if I still took anatomy, telling me that medical students were spoiled. I asked him why. “The formaldehyde,” he replied, “you never had to smell a rotting body on a battlefield.”

    Suddenly his face became alive. His inquiry was an expression of a pained experience, and by questioning me, he was inviting me into that experience. I felt as if I had glimpsed the real Mr. Rosen and not just the body in the wheelchair. I had not been prepared for this clear view of a man's soul. Nothing I could say would show my understanding. I felt utterly disarmed and naked. My life seemed shallow in comparison, my inexperience embarrassing.

    We left the apartment, but I could not stop thinking of the encounter. It was rare to see so clearly a human for what he was. As a physician, I knew it would be something with which I would have to be comfortable. What was the proper response?

    Riding back to the office I told the social worker what had happened to Mr. Rosen and …

    This 100-word excerpt has been provided in the absence of an abstract.

    | Table of Contents
    Most Read Most Read
    Most Commented Most Commented On
    Annals in the News Annals in the News
    Clinical Trials Clinical Trials
    Comparative Effectiveness Comparative Effectiveness
    Hospital Medicine Hospital Medicine
    • Advertisement
    • Advertisement