He lay quietly in the hospital bed, the steady beeping of the monitors filling the room like background music in a bad dream. Wires and tubes were attached to him like some kind of sci-fi experiment, and a clear oxygen mask clung to his face, fogging slightly with every shallow breath. Surgery was behind him, but recovery still loomed ahead.
In stepped a young student nurse, no older than twenty-two, clearly nervous, doing her best to mask it with professionalism. She offered a polite smile and a quiet “Good morning,” as she wheeled in a cart with warm water and supplies for a sponge bath.
As she began gently wiping down his arms, the man stirred. His voice, muffled beneath the oxygen mask, was raspy but urgent.
“Nurse… are my testicles black?”
She froze.
Eyes wide, she blinked twice, unsure she had heard correctly. “I… I’m sorry, sir?”
“My testicles… are they black?” he repeated, more emphatically this time, eyes pleading through the haze of medication and age.
The nurse turned beet red. “Sir, I’ve only been asked to wash your upper body and feet.”
But he interrupted again, desperate now. “Please… I just need to know. Are they black?”
Convinced that his concern might be related to poor circulation or post-operative complications, and wanting to ease his obvious distress, she finally nodded. “Okay… I’ll check.”
Trying her best to maintain her composure, she pulled back the blankets, lifted the gown, and examined his private area with the same professionalism she’d been trained to uphold, even as her cheeks burned.
After a careful and respectful inspection, she looked up and said gently, “Everything looks completely normal. No bruising, no discolouration. You’re okay, sir.”
The man looked at her with glassy eyes, pulled the oxygen mask down slightly, and whispered with a crooked smile:
“Thank you… but I was just asking… are my test results back?”
The silence hung for a beat before the young nurse burst into laughter, quickly followed by the patient himself, who clearly hadn’t lost his sense of humour, surgery or not.
Moral of the story:
In life, timing is everything but pronunciation can save you from one hell of an awkward moment.
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