My name is
Dawn Sheppard and I have
been at Carswell for almost
four years. I've been incarcerated
for a little over seven.
Being here today has been
a really neat experience.
This is a privilege, definitely
a privilege for me. We have
a truly wonderful warden
and I'm real grateful that
Warden Bogen allowed me
this opportunity today.
I didn't
really get involved in the
hospice program by choice.
When it started, I was involved
with other programming in
the prison. Melissa Johnson,
the head social worker in
the hospice program, called
me and said that I would
make a great hospice volunteer.
At first I answered, "Naw,
not me!" I knew what
hospice was about. But I
said I would think about
it, mainly because I live
with a terminal illness
myself: I'm HIV positive.
I didn't think that I would
be ready to deal with something
like a hospice program.
But I prayed about it because
I do have a very strong
spiritual side. Finally
I came to the conclusion
that God had laid it on
my heart that the hospice
is where he wanted me to
be.
I
got to sit with the first
hospice patient at Carswell,
also an AIDS patient. When
she came in, she was in
a really bad state of dementia;
I think she had toxoplasmosis
as well. Once they started
medicating her, she really
improved. One thing about
the federal system I can
vouch for is that they have
very good medical care.
With all the attention,
love, and care that we gave
her, and the encouragement
well, she's home now and
doing well. She moved out
of the hospice and about
a year later went home.
I have experienced
the death of three ladies,
sitting with them and being
with them. As hospice volunteers,
we try to help them live
until they die. There's
not a whole lot we can do,
being where we are, but
we do our best. We don't
have a specific hospice
unit, but we do have an
inpatient medical floor
with about twenty-six beds.
Some of the rooms are for
two persons, some are for
four, and there are also
single rooms. When a person
becomes a hospice patient,
they put her in a little
separate room by herself.
We have televisions in all
our patients' rooms, and
microwaves and ice machines
on the unit. We try to make
the patients as comfortable
as possible. Some of the
hospice patients are able
to get up and get in wheelchairs,
and we can take them outside
or to the library, which
is on the medical floor.
A lot of patients like to
read the Bible; they really
focus on the spiritual aspect
of things. This really helps
me a lot, because I was
so afraid of death for so
long. I was afraid of dying
because I didn't know what
it would be like. So talking
about these things with
patients is helpful.
One patient,
who I think was about seventy-four
years old, was a very spiritual
person. I took her to church
a lot. She also liked to
play cards, so I would come
and play cards with her
and try to do things to
make her as happy as possible.
She took sick all at once;
one day she was up talking
and laughing with us and
the next day she was dying.
I sat with her that night;
it was one of the neatest
things I have ever experienced.
About one in the morning,
I was reading her the Twenty-third
Psalm. I didn't know that
it was her favorite psalm.
I was holding her hand and
talking into her ear, and
all of a sudden I heard
this loud thunder booming
across the sky. She just
opened her eyes, closed
them again, and took her
last breath. It was so neat
because the day before she
was talking about how good
God is and hoping that when
she is ready to go she doesn't
suffer. And she didn't seem
to suffer at all; she just
went.
After she
took her last breath, I
went to get the nurse--that's
what we are trained to do--and
the nurse got the house
physician. They do allow
you a few minutes with the
patient if that's what you'd
like. Lightning just flashed
across the sky for about
five minutes afterwards.
It makes it so much easier
on me when I know that somebody
is going home to be with
God.
The women
at Carswell are from all
over the country. I'm from
New York, and there's no
way I'm going to get visitors
on a regular basis. Our
hospice patients might be
from California or Florida--so
far away that most of their
families can't afford to
come to visit them. Some
can afford it; they might
have money to stay in the
hotel and come back the
next day. When they are
allowed to come, they have
special visiting hours.
But a lot of families can't
afford it, and that's where
the inmate population fills
in. The hospice team has
worked with a lot more inmates
than the eight hospice patients.
We've done a lot of hospice-like
interventions with them,
while they remain free of
being labeled as hospice
patients.
One of the
neatest parts of this program
is that it not only helps
the patients, but it strengthens
me also. Being a hospice
volunteer brought out qualities
that I never thought I had.
I grew up in a lot of dysfunction.
I didn't know what it was
to love and to be loved.
This program has really
taught me how to be a companion
to someone; it's taught
me great communication skills;
most of all it's taught
me compassion and how to
care for people. Those are
things that I thought I
would never have. It's been
a very rewarding part of
my sentence. By the grace
of God I've got five-and-a-half
months to go; this is something
I want to continue to do
out there. This is a volunteer
program. I don't get paid
for it. I still have my
seven-hour-a-day job as
the chapel clerk. I'm also
involved in other programming
and activities, so my day
is pretty full. But the
volunteer program helps
me and it helps my time.
I'm just grateful I can
help someone today. This
is something I thought I
would never do in life--to
be able to touch a dead
person, or just be with
somebody like that. Today
I know that I don't have
to be afraid of the patients
and I don't have to be afraid
of death.
I'm really
grateful that we can have
this program at Carswell,
because we do have a lot
of deaths here and there
are a lot of ill women.
It can get really draining
emotionally. But there's
a lot of support afterwards.
If I need to talk about
something, or if I need
to cry, all of the staff
are there. And being a hospice
volunteer helps me, but
it also helps the staff
continue to look out and
to do their job and to have
us there helping out. It's
been a really neat experience
for me. I can't talk too
much longer because I have
to get back before the count.
I'm really grateful that
I had the opportunity to
come here today.
Dawn Sheppard was the
only inmate attending the
Prison Hospice Forum (November
13, 1998), held in conjunction
with the National Hospice
Organization's Annual Symposium
and Exhibition in Dallas.
She spoke about her experience
as an inmate volunteer in
the prison hospice program
at the Federal Medical Center-Carswell
in Fort Worth, Texas.