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  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  2. Medicine and Meaning
  3. Half-Life 

Half-Life 

Brenique Sheldon

When I was small,
I practiced playing nurse
on my father.

A plastic stethoscope,
a borrowed authority,
my ear pressed to the steady drum
of someone I believed was permanent.

He would close his eyes on purpose,
wait for me to panic,
then laugh

and I would bring him back.

Back then,
I thought returning was simple.

My uncle existed in a room
that never slept.

Dialysis breathed in cycles,
a tired orbit,
a machine teaching his blood
how to be clean again.

He spoke less each time I saw him.
Not because he had nothing to say,
but because words require a future tense.

He was on a list.

Which is another way of saying
he lived suspended
between two endings.

My father learned his body could betray him
by the time I was ten.

Crohn’s disease…
a quiet thief,
taking in pieces small enough
no one applauds their disappearance.

I began to understand then:
strength is not loud.
It is what remains
after certainty leaves.

At eighteen,
I left.

Uniform pressed into sharp lines,
name stitched over my chest
as if identity could be contained
by thread.

Distance makes loss theoretical
until it doesn’t.

My grandfather dissolved slowly.

Dementia turned his memories into constellations
visible,
but unreachable.

By 2018,
even the light had finished traveling.

There are absences
that do not announce themselves.

They accumulate.

Quiet as decay.

I never intended to step toward medicine.

It had already taken enough.

But purpose does not knock.
It appears.

A shadow day.
A dim room.

A man lying still
while something unseen moved through him,
mapping what could not be felt.

A kidney scan.

No alarms.
No urgency.

Only waiting.
Only the soft rotation of the camera,
faithful as gravity.

I watched the screen
as his body translated itself
into light.

Faint at first.

Then undeniable.

And something in my chest
something I had carried without language
shifted

Not grief.

Not closure.

Something else.

Like recognizing a voice
you haven’t heard in years
coming from a room
you don’t remember entering.

The machine continued its orbit.

Unconcerned with past or future.
Only presence.
Only truth.

And for a moment,

I understood

some things do not leave.

They change form.

Bio

Brenique N. Sheldon was born and raised in Los Angeles, CA. She is a military veteran and a nuclear medicine student pursuing a career as a medical dosimetrist. In Half-Life, she reflects on personal encounters with illness and loss, exploring the quiet endurance of those who face vulnerability. The poem is a meditation on presence, care, and the unseen persistence of life. This is an invitation for all health care professionals to remember the humanity, connection, and purpose that guide their work. In the stillness of presence, what lingers long after the moment has passed?

Posted by Chadley Uekman on April 9, 2026

Filed Under: 13-poetry

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