Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 7 | Page 20

(continued from page 17) You talked to the straw man. That was the important thing. You told him what you had done that was Malo, that was bad, then you set him on fire, and he took the bad things away from you. Willie and I stared at each other. This man was serious and he wanted this, but starting fires around oxygen and blowing up the fire alarm were not things I could permit. Jorge explained. I asked, could we draw the straw man, and he could talk to it, and his daughter could take it outside and burn the paper. They conferred. I said, no other way. Jorge had to go back to work; this was it. I sent Willie to get a red ink pen from the nurses, and he drew a man in a hat, and then in red ink lots of flames around him. Mr. Arturo liked it. We left him alone. Then Willie solemnly took the paper from him, I sent him outside to burn it, and I slept for nearly three hours. I was grateful for the sleep, and grateful for the concept, that you could burn your sins away in someplace not Purgatory. That was a thought to be thankful for. Dr. Barry practices Internal Medicine with Norton Community Medical Associates-Barret. She is a clinical associate professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Medicine. 18 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year from the staff of the Greater Louisville Medical Society