I've realized the limits of language this week. I'm in the process of hiring new aides or, as some might say, replacing aides.
Those words are ridiculously inadequate.
I can't replace a person. Each aide I work with is unique. Every time I interview someone, I look for certain qualities. Reliability - because I need them to show up. Willingness - so they can be my hands and legs.
I'm feeling impatient with words. I hate that I can't explain what this process is like to friends. How do I know who will work out? I don't. I can't replace someone's sense of humor or another's caring touch.
I guess at what a person will be like in moments when I need them most. And that feels inadequate too.
I know it's a leap of faith. And so I choose someone.
Sometimes they make the choice, like the woman who walked into the interview, stared at my wheelchair and said she couldn't handle it. I smiled thinking I already knew that with the sense I've developed. This works the other way too, like a very young man whose smile lights up the room when he talks about how he'd love a job like this and why.
More interviews on the way. The music student who says he can play the violin for me. The out of work dad who just wants a shot at any job. The college students who mostly want a summer job for a summer that's almost over.
This is a permanent position, I tell them. I know that's an illusion, that although some aides stay for years, others move on quickly.
And so must I.
2 comments:
But only I earned the Kitty Apron, right? RIGHT?
Absolutely :)
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