Tag: suicide

To Kaitlyn, a Girl I Will Never Know.

I’ve been wanting to write this to you for a while. I go to work, and though I’ve never met you, I think about you. I talk to a patient, and while I’m standing there, there you are again, tugging at my heart. Maybe it’s because I know of your mom, and I know of her heartbreak. Maybe it’s because I know you will never be able to doΒ what you were meant to do.

This is what I know about you. You were a medical student. You went to school in North Carolina. You cared for people.Β And you wanted to care for them at the greatest capacityΒ possible. You wanted toΒ helpΒ peopleΒ during their times of sickness, strengthen them in their weakness.Β But your life was robbed from beneathΒ you. SoΒ this will never happen. And the world hasΒ lost another great physician.

I hear you were a loving person, one who illuminated the day of allΒ whomΒ you came across. Of course you did. You were your mother’s shining star. But what no one knew, and what you didn’t reveal until your departure, was that you were also suffering. Deeply. But you were good at hiding it with your smile. And because it was a genuine smile, we were beguiled. Especially those closest to you.

bench

When I think of you, my heart aches. Maybe it’s because I feel that I understand you better than I have a right to. Maybe it is because I once smiled a similar smile. I weep because of what you did, and because I think I understand why.

When I think of you, my soul is anguished. You were going to be a remarkable physician. You would have touched others with your empathy, changed lives with your care. They would have remembered you, not simply because you wereΒ the one who eased their suffering andΒ comforted their souls, but because your spiritΒ would haveΒ brightened theirΒ lives. No one had the right to take that away from you.

I’m sorry I never got to know you.

But even now, you will not be forgotten.

β€’

β—Š A Tribute to her Mother: Rhonda Elkins β—Š

β—Š A Poem Dedicated to Kaitlyn and her Mother β—Š