When I at work, I touch people constantly.
I wash and I turn people in bed hourly and will sometimes take my latex glove off to comfort someone, certainly to stroke a brow or tidy a hair which is out of place .
I hear my old tutor from my psychiatric nursing days at these times….
“Being stroked by a gloved hand can be painful and unnatural “ Leslie Brint would say
There are social rules when it comes to touch too,
Some people abhor it.
Others crave it
You have to read people effectively and quickly
Safe “ zones” for touch are innately understood by most
But not always.
Watch out for cues
Huggers often give them
People in grief often regress to childhood states
When touch can heal most things
I don’t hug when I’m counselling.
It’s my strict rule.
But I do always shake hands with my clients.
It’s formal but warm
I like handshakes.
I’m off to work, shortly
With Roger on my knee as we sit at the kitchen table
He’s like me, when it comes to hugs
But he can ask for them where I seldom do
I’m glad he can










