Mysteries of Life – Hospital Edition

The hospital waiting room was full of people and I knew that I had a long wait, so I walked the hall to an empty spot with a couple of comfortable chairs that gave me a good view of everyone coming and going and some peace and calm. I felt off my game. My wife’s was in the hospital getting a procedure and I needed some time to myself.

I found myself thinking about a few Mystery of life Questions. Let me know what you think:

–When did the hospital gift shop become a cross between Sharper Image, Five Below, and Target? I expect some flowers and get-well cards, but, oh, I got that and then some. There were neck massagers and foot warmers, karaoke machines and party speakers, headphones, candles and humidifiers, an Iron Man mask, and several miniature Monster Trucks. There were light sabers and puzzles, brightly colored balloons and mylar smiley-faced ones. Let’s say none of it was what I expected. I came close to surprising my wife with an adorable, three-foot high white unicorn. The selling point were three stars, pink, purple, and teal, but I walked away empty-handed (see pictures below.) I could have scored for every mistake I ever made, but, oh, well, maybe I’ll get it next time.

Photo by Pexels.

–There was a parking garage nearby, where you could park for free, but for the visitors who wanted more service, there was valet parking. I get the allure for some folks and I get the need for a big city hospital, but I’m talking a small regional one. When did hospitals go “Kardashian?”

–As I waited and thought more about the gift shop, I wondered, who came up with the idea of unicorns? “We’re going to have a beautiful, mythical, white horse and we’re going to put an ugly horn smack dab in the middle of its head.” Really? 

–What do you do while you’re waiting in the hospital? You try not to look at the other people waiting and instead scroll endlessly through your phone. Everyone is busy with their phone like they’re a big time gambler trying to get their Kentucky Derby bet in before the start of the race or a stock trader trying to make or break their million dollar fortune before the 4 p.m. close or some important GM of a sports team at the trading deadline. What’s everyone really doing on their phones? Looking at stupid cat and dog videos. Of course, I started to scroll and came across the scene from the 2008 movie, Marley & Me, where Owen Wilson’s character says goodbye to his dying Labrador Retriever Marley. “You’re a Great Dog, Marley. A great dog.” It gets me every stinking time. “What’s with the stranger sitting by himself over there bawling his eyes out? Oh, what a shame. He must have gotten some really bad news from the doctor.” Ugh.

–Why does a wait in the hospital feel like a ten-year prison term? A prison sentence or waiting in the hospital? Which is worse? Which are you choosing? The prison term would stink, there’s no getting around that, but at least I might get time-off for good behavior. 

–Okay, the wait at the hospital can drag on, but the “people watching” at the hospital is without par. You see all types. Scruffy types, well dressed, too-cool-for-school types. Annoying old people, annoying young people. And you know what, kind-hearted old people and kind-hearted young people.

–I have a suggestion that will make hospitals ten times more popular and fun: Wheelchair races. You can have different divisions. The Patient Division would probably be the most fun, but you could have a Professional Division too. Who wouldn’t want to go to the hospital? Friday night at the hospital races! It might even become a draw. A regular weekly place to visit? Hospitals might get more volunteers that way. And what better way to help cut down on the high price of medicine. Who’s with me? 

–Little babies and dogs should have free rein in the hospital. In fact, There are too many sad faces. Colleges bring out emotional-support animals at final exam time. Hospitals should have a whole zoo of dogs and cats to come out and help patients and waiting family members. I grew up with the lesson that “cleanliness is next to godliness,” but attitude goes a long way toward healing too.

–As I looked at the balloons in the gift shop, I found myself wondering, who came up with the idea for the smiley face? 😊 Yea, yea, I know, Forest Gump. Well, I wonder who really did and if the inventor’s descendants look at the emojis on smartphones now and say, “We want a piece of that.” 

Photo by Pexels.

–Why are directions in hospitals so bad. I swear I was in places I shouldn’t have been and never came close to the places I was supposed to be, and each time I was following the directions that someone had given me. I get why the directions are bad, many hospitals have been built on and added on over the years, but that doesn’t explain the signage. I was in T or the Teal Section but where was the S or U sections? Nowhere to found. Yes, kind of crazy.

–After sitting for what felt like forever, I went to grab something to drink. I was shocked when I saw a can of Monster and some other high caffeine, high sugar, energy drinks in the concession area. This is a hospital, right? But what really hit me, when I hit the lever for Coca-Cola. What happened to Real Coke? Yes, all these years later, inquiring minds, like me, still want to know.

–Here’s the crazy thing about hospitals and the state of today’s medicine, we all eventually need them.

I missed my chance. The gift of a lifetime.


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51 thoughts on “Mysteries of Life – Hospital Edition

  1. Hospitals are such interesting places aren’t they? Your observations are spot on funny and true!

    I hope that you got the Iron Mask for your wife! And maybe started a wheelchair race or two. That would be so much fun!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I tried to convince the nurse when they let my wife go to grab me another wheelchair and let us race to the exit door. I take it as a win that she paused to think about it for a second. Of course, she could have been figuring out if I was a security threat or whether to call the psych wing! 🤣

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  2. Bring a book! If you know a procedure should take some time, maybe a walk around the area?

    I’ve not been in the gift shop of a hospital in forever. I’m always amused with the sh*t they offer in their vending machines and cafeterias.

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    1. It’s funny seeing who comes prepared and who doesn’t. I knew it was going to be a long day so I had my blogging journal with me. I’m going to be writing about hospitals and the crazy things I saw in one seven hour visit for months! Ha ha, no most of my ideas were non-medical related but I was grateful for the blog ideas. As far as the vending machines go, it made me feel good. My diet sucks but I’ve somehow skirted the energy drink line! I’m just a monster on the outside 🤣🤣🤣🤣

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  3. I haven’t seen the hospital shop for about a couple of months. But I know it didn’t stock half of what yours did. And there is nothing special about the carparl either. You park and pay. That’s it.

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    1. The valet line really shocked me. If we went into Philly, NYC, DC/Baltimore, okay I get it. Parking’s so bad there, I might even consider it. But it’s free parking and it wasn’t even much of a walk. Interesting to me! Ha ha.

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  4. I think these cute gifts are for children who are patients in the hospital. The same goes for the gadgets. Smiley face balloons for the new moms!

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  5. The choices we face every day are innumerable. There are so many. I’ve spent a lot of time in the hospital as a visitor for the past couple years. I never made it to the gift store. Now I’m looking a senior housing and they even have a general store if you need it.

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  6. One of our local hospitals had a significant renovation and add-on project awhile back, and if you were visiting someone you parked so far away I thought they should have had a shuttle bus in use. You could drop others off at the door, but somebody drew the short straw for the long walk after parking the car. You do see a little bit of everything at the hospital gift shops, which makes sense since there is always a wide variety of ages and interests represented by those staying there. Pretty cool inventory of items.

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  7. Nooooo…not the wheelchair racing! 👩‍🦽♿👨‍🦽 Brian, I think hospital gift shops are turning into a COSTCO or a Tiffany’s! Bring out the blue boxes!!! 🟦💙🟦 I usually have a book with me to read whenever I know I have to go sit in a waiting room (be it a doctor’s visit or hospital). I simply love your observations, because you can get some good material like this, if you simply bring a notepad with you to jot down things you see or hear that make you go hmmmmm….🤔

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    1. It stunk having to wait. But I came away with 20 pages of ideas. Now some of them are bad, but I think there’s some good stuff in there too. “Um honey, I’m kind of in a writing rut, do ya have any doctor visits coming up. I could use the ideas.” 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️🤣🤣😎

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  8. I agree with so many of your observations. I worked in a PR firm that was located at a hospital. The hospital was the biggest client. I’d eat in the cafeteria and get lost in the underground hallways with bad markings! I hope your wife is doing well.

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      1. I’m glad your wife recovered so quickly. Yes, we were in a little building for our PR firm on the hospital campus called the “Bob Hope Building.” His celebrity Pro/Am golf tournament was the biggest fundraiser for the hospital. It was so easy to walk across the parking lot to the main building and cafeteria for lunch if I wasn’t brown bagging it.

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  9. I know and relate…having spent about 1/70th of my life in waiting rooms of 10 different hospitals.

    Some hospitals have grand pianos on various floor areas, open to “good” musicians. playing chopsticks will get you zip tied though. They also frown on upside down hats for tips. The unicorn I have not seen yet. Some wings on various floors have better coffee and all kinds of drinks. If you are dressed well and carry a clipboard, it’s amazing how many good areas are accessible, including a laptop waiting for someone to post their blog…(or so I heard….)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You know what … I didnt even mention it, a volunteer in the main lobby was playing A Whole New World from Aladdin. I felt like I was in an old piano bar. I was going to yell out play again Sam, but the volunteer was a young kid. I’m not sure he would have gotten the reference. Ha ha

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  10. Wowza…THAT was a unicorn! I think your observations speak to how keen your sense of wonder is…about the nutty stuff all around us – even in/especially in…a hospital. But this? My fave part of your post re: the creator of the smiley face: …”the inventor’s descendants look at the emojis on smartphones now and say, We want a piece of that.”
    Whoa no…if that were true/actionable I’d be a whole heap of trouble, wouldn’t I? 🤣😁🤣

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  11. I have to say, Brian, from your posts about waiting at the hospital and waiting at the airport, that you are so good about using your time for great observations. I love sitting alongside you. Great point about unicorns!! Hope your wife is healing well!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I better be good at observation because I’m horrible at waiting Wynne. Ha, ha. I have no patience. I figure it’s better to be observing than pouting in the corner. Ha, ha. She’s doing good, a little sore, but healing well. Thank you so much for asking.

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  12. Oh Brian! You summed it up well. I think you should petition the hospital board about wheelchair races. 😄
    I often think how they need to have murals in the patients rooms who have the lovely view outside their window of the parking lot or other buildings. A mural of the ocean would be great or maybe unicorn and flowers. 😉
    I hope your wife is recovering well!

    Liked by 1 person

  13. Your thinking is spot on. I’m with you. The one thing I’d add for anyone with a long wait- bring a book. Nothing is better than reading, and it’s perfect when you’re there for a long time.

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  14. Your reflections on the hospital experience are both insightful and amusing. You’ve captured the essence of waiting room boredom with a keen eye for detail and humor. Your imaginative suggestions for improving the hospital environment, from wheelchair races to therapy animals, add a delightful touch of whimsy to an otherwise mundane setting. Keep sharing your unique perspectives!🎉

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