Doctor's Orders
Abigail was perfectly calm. When she felt calm, the light turned blue. She didn't know how, but the light had been connected to her brain. That woman had told her they'd done some kind of operation when she was brought to the hospital, so that the doctors would know how she was feeling even when her jaw was still wired shut. It was very considerate of them to think of her mood like that. The other doctors hadn't cared about her mood; they just told her she needed to keep the tubes in her arm, that she shouldn't be walking around and needed to use the wheelchair.
The doctors at her new hospital were so much more thoughtful. She didn't remember exactly when she'd come to the new hospital, but ever since then she'd felt so much better. The doctors were so much more considerate, after all. They always asked whether she wanted to take the green pill today, or if she just wanted the pink one. The other doctors hadn't asked that; the woman said it was important that patients be active and involved participants in their own care, exercising consent when choosing treatments. They always asked Abigail what she wanted for dinner, too. Or at least, until her jaw surgery. The doctors said the accident had caused sub-something damage with lasting something, and she'd need reconstruction. But consent is important, so they let Abigail decide whether the eye surgery came first or not. They were so considerate!
Though, now she came to think about it, she couldn't remember being asked about the light.
When she woke up after being transferred, the woman was there in her white coat and blue doctor gloves, the ones she always wore when she was talking to Abigail. She said that the doctors had wanted to be sure that they always knew how she was feeling, so they gave her a light for inside her room that was connected to her thoughts. Abigail didn't remember how she felt when the woman said that, though; the first week in the new hospital was all fuzzy and distant. There were lots of new doctors and she knew that all of them were so
considerate
, but it was so hard to remember. The woman said that was perfectly normal after a big surgery, her memories would come back soon. She couldn't remember what the surgery was for, but maybe that memory would come back too.
Abigail felt her eyebrows begin to furrow, just a little.
Why
couldn't she remember the surgery? If there was a surgery, wouldn't there be... scars? Stitches? Were some surgeries done without cutting people open now? But surely there would be
something
, right? So why couldn't she find them? What surgery did they give her (or was it the last hospital) that made it so hard to remember? Abigail began to feel the oncoming tides of frustration. Maybe upset. But-
But the light was still blue.
That meant Abigail was calm.
The light showed her what she was feeling, and if the light was blue, that meant she was calm. And when it began to pulse, like it was pulsing now, that meant she was even
more
calm than normal. The woman had explained it all to her.
Abigail felt her forehead relax slowly back into smooth, placid relaxation. It was so considerate of the doctors to help her understand how she was feeling. The woman said that lots of patients were very confused about how they were feeling after they came to the hospital. They would think they were "angry" or "trapped" or "used", but that wasn't how they really felt. Abigail nodded along with the memory; she knew how they really felt, because the woman had told her that was how she felt, too.
She felt calm.
The memories began to fade, slowly, as the light pulsed a little brighter, a little faster. When it began to pulse like that, it meant she was feeling so calm that she could hardly hold onto thoughts anymore. When her thoughts began to ebb slowly into the background, leaving her very,
very
calm and peaceful, the lights blinked extra-hard. So that the doctors knew. So that they could understand how to treat her properly. It was important that they know how she was feeling, so they could treat her properly.
She felt very,
very
calm for a long time. For a while she thought she was feeling hungry, but the light hadn't turned orange, so she knew she was just imagining it. One of the side effects of her new medications was feeling hungry sometimes, but the light was so useful in telling her when she was really hungry. But it was still blue. So she was still feeling very,