"Glance at the wheeling Orb of change,/ And greet it with a kindly smile…" Tennyson.
Children play in a colored orb. Writing the first pages of life they are unburdened by memory and also have yet to know recollection's joys.
Wisdom teaches that change is certain. Why not greet it "with a friendly smile?" Instead, you may have spent many days on this turning earth trying to make it stay still.
You may look at your children or at any given moment of happiness and want to freeze it as you would the image in a photograph. Of course, no genie can grant such a desire.
What appears on your scroll of memories when you read through your years of caregiving? Do you recall how the sunlight felt as you walked through the parking lot on your first day? Do you remember your first patient?
What an odd thing resumes are. They list where you went to school, what licenses you may have and where you have worked.
Resumes say nothing about the texture of your experience – the joys and irritations of colleagues now vanished, the feel of the fluorescent lights you worked under day after day, the sounds in the hallways you walked down hundreds of times.
The people interviewing you never ask if you remember how you felt when you walked up to receive your diploma. They just want to know if you have one.
Your resume is public. Your most important memories are private and personal.
You will collect new memories today. On another day somewhere in the future, you will scroll through those memories and read, there, the story of the choices you have made.
-Erie Chapman

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