Thanks for all you do, professor!
Hospice care, eh? Bless his soul for that. I knew a girl who worked hospice, and she was so casual with the idea of death. She had seen so many people pass, held several of them as their heart just stopped. I'm guessing it wasn't easy at first, but she apparently grew a thick skin and it never bothered her to talk about the people in her life that were dying. She mentioned once that it felt colder in the room when somebody died, but I don't know if that is placebo or something really happening.
Hospice care, eh? Bless his soul for that. I knew a girl who worked hospice, and she was so casual with the idea of death. She had seen so many people pass, held several of them as their heart just stopped. I'm guessing it wasn't easy at first, but she apparently grew a thick skin and it never bothered her to talk about the people in her life that were dying. She mentioned once that it felt colder in the room when somebody died, but I don't know if that is placebo or something really happening.
She mentioned once that it felt colder in the room when somebody died
Well a lot of gases leave the body upon death, so it's possible being near one of them causes a chilled reaction.
>She mentioned once that it felt colder in the room when somebody died
Well a lot of gases leave the body upon death, so it's possible being near one of them causes a chilled reaction.
IIRC he actually works in hospice care. I remember seeing pictures of his bookshelf and annotation system way back when he used to post on SBBH on Voat. He's way more organized than I am :)
Edit: I remember the hospice details from when Mick faked his death and Locke made some post saying how severe hospice care was and he knew because he worked in it. I could be mis-remembering, but that's what I recall.