Lady Glaucomflecken
@lglaucomflecken.bsky.social
Working to make healthcare more human.
Speaker. Podcaster. Writer. Advocate.
SCA lay responder.
Co-survivor of cancer (2x), sudden cardiac arrest and medical training.
Hypermobile 🦓
Married to that funny guy.
glaucomflecken.com
@medsky.social
Speaker. Podcaster. Writer. Advocate.
SCA lay responder.
Co-survivor of cancer (2x), sudden cardiac arrest and medical training.
Hypermobile 🦓
Married to that funny guy.
glaucomflecken.com
@medsky.social
Unfortunately, yes. They didn't mean it in the way that it sounds, but it still stung.
July 7, 2025 at 8:55 PM
Unfortunately, yes. They didn't mean it in the way that it sounds, but it still stung.
On the worst day of someone's life, your words have the power to further traumatize or to bring whatever comfort can be found.
Choose carefully.
Choose carefully.
July 6, 2025 at 7:53 PM
On the worst day of someone's life, your words have the power to further traumatize or to bring whatever comfort can be found.
Choose carefully.
Choose carefully.
You may not remember the encounter. They never forget it.
**"I would have liked it better if you had seen him collapse."**
One sentence can echo in someone’s mind for years. Be intentional, especially when things are hard.
**"I would have liked it better if you had seen him collapse."**
One sentence can echo in someone’s mind for years. Be intentional, especially when things are hard.
July 6, 2025 at 7:53 PM
You may not remember the encounter. They never forget it.
**"I would have liked it better if you had seen him collapse."**
One sentence can echo in someone’s mind for years. Be intentional, especially when things are hard.
**"I would have liked it better if you had seen him collapse."**
One sentence can echo in someone’s mind for years. Be intentional, especially when things are hard.
Small kindnesses become lifelines.
An offer of a warm blanket. A referral to a social worker. A kind, “How are you holding up?”
These are remembered more than clinical details.
They tell the co-survivor that someone sees and understands their pain, and they will be cared for, too.
An offer of a warm blanket. A referral to a social worker. A kind, “How are you holding up?”
These are remembered more than clinical details.
They tell the co-survivor that someone sees and understands their pain, and they will be cared for, too.
July 6, 2025 at 7:53 PM
Small kindnesses become lifelines.
An offer of a warm blanket. A referral to a social worker. A kind, “How are you holding up?”
These are remembered more than clinical details.
They tell the co-survivor that someone sees and understands their pain, and they will be cared for, too.
An offer of a warm blanket. A referral to a social worker. A kind, “How are you holding up?”
These are remembered more than clinical details.
They tell the co-survivor that someone sees and understands their pain, and they will be cared for, too.
The co-survivor's world is cracked open by the thought of losing the person they love, the responsibilities that now fall on them, and the weight of making decisions while traumatized or grieving.
The illness may not be contained in their body, but they are suffering from it, too.
The illness may not be contained in their body, but they are suffering from it, too.
July 6, 2025 at 7:53 PM
The co-survivor's world is cracked open by the thought of losing the person they love, the responsibilities that now fall on them, and the weight of making decisions while traumatized or grieving.
The illness may not be contained in their body, but they are suffering from it, too.
The illness may not be contained in their body, but they are suffering from it, too.
Co-survivors are navigating trauma of their own.
When a patient faces a critical illness, so do the patient's closest loved ones.
If a person is accompanying someone to an oncology ward or an ICU, their two bodies might be separate, but their lives are most likely intertwined.
When a patient faces a critical illness, so do the patient's closest loved ones.
If a person is accompanying someone to an oncology ward or an ICU, their two bodies might be separate, but their lives are most likely intertwined.
July 6, 2025 at 7:53 PM
Co-survivors are navigating trauma of their own.
When a patient faces a critical illness, so do the patient's closest loved ones.
If a person is accompanying someone to an oncology ward or an ICU, their two bodies might be separate, but their lives are most likely intertwined.
When a patient faces a critical illness, so do the patient's closest loved ones.
If a person is accompanying someone to an oncology ward or an ICU, their two bodies might be separate, but their lives are most likely intertwined.
Read this and more on my Typeshare Social Blog: https://typeshare.co/kristinflanary/posts/day-1-why-im-getting-back-to-writing-online-uv5f6
Day 1: Why I'm Getting Back to Writing Online
I recently signed up for Dickie Bush & Nicolas Cole's cohort-based course, Ship 30 for 30.Here a
typeshare.co
July 4, 2025 at 6:49 PM
Read this and more on my Typeshare Social Blog: https://typeshare.co/kristinflanary/posts/day-1-why-im-getting-back-to-writing-online-uv5f6
This is so kind, thank you!
March 14, 2025 at 1:10 AM
This is so kind, thank you!
Oh, not that one. I am referring to “quiet” in a healthcare setting.
January 11, 2025 at 12:30 AM
Oh, not that one. I am referring to “quiet” in a healthcare setting.
Quiet. If healthcare workers say it’s quiet during a shift, it’s jokingly-not-jokingly considered tempting fate.
January 11, 2025 at 12:30 AM
Quiet. If healthcare workers say it’s quiet during a shift, it’s jokingly-not-jokingly considered tempting fate.
Not quite yet, but she’s a huge fan of @neildegrassetyson.com
December 24, 2024 at 3:56 AM
Not quite yet, but she’s a huge fan of @neildegrassetyson.com