Grey's Anatomy (Season 16)
Grey's Anatomy (2019-2020) is a primetime television medical drama, airing on ABC, that follows Meredith Grey, a first-year surgical intern at the beginning of the drama, and her fellow interns as they struggle to become doctors.
Season 16
Nothing Left to Cling to [16.01]
Meredith (voice over):
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Back in the Saddle [16.02]
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Reunited [16.03]
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It's Raining Men [16.04]
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Breathe Again [16.05]
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Whistlin' Past the Graveyard [16.06]
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Papa Don't Preach [16.07]
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My Shot [16.08]
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Let's All Go to the Bar [16.09]
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Help Me Through the Night [16.10]
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A Hard Pill to Swallow [16.11]
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The Last Supper [16.12]
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Save the Last Dance for Me [16.13]
Meredith (voice over): 'I needed more time'. I can't tell you how often I've heard surgeons say this after losing a patient. We think in time, we talk in time Doses per day. Life expectancy. Take two and call me in the morning. And what is a heartbeat if not a ticking clock? A clock that's always counting down.
Meredith (voice over): Our brains imagine futures we'll never see. We're struggling to overcome a simple, inescapable truth everything ends. But for every clock that counts down, another restarts. Time goes on, and when one thing ends, something new always begins.
A Diagnosis [16.14]
Meredith (voice over): We give children stickers and lollipops after they visit the doctor. We congratulate them for putting on a brave face. "Here's some candy, kid. Try to smile". We do it to adults, too. It's considered impolite to discuss your cancer diagnosis at a dinner party. You're supposed to smile, make small talk, suck on the invisible lollipop. Because for some reason, someone decided a long time ago that naming pain is impolite that hiding it and hiding from it makes more sense. It doesn't. It's a lie, a lie that both comforts and destroys us.
Meredith (voice over):
Snowblind [16.15]
Meredith (voice over): When I was a kid, I would wake up every morning in the winter and immediately open the curtains to see if it was snowing. Where are you, where are you. And it usually was. It was Boston. Everyone loves a snow day. Except for one person. My mother. She always said the same thing 'Meredith, surgeons don't get snow days'. She was right. We don't.
Meredith (voice over): Right after a storm, I would run outside. Whether it was the air or the fresh blanket of snow it always felt magical. Or new. But as beautiful as it is, the snow starts to melt. And you're suddenly standing in dirty slush frozen and unable to feel anything at all. But after enough time, even that disappears. The ground thaws, the days get longer, and though you could never imagine it, you start to feel again. It surprises me every time.
Leave a Light On [16.16]
Meredith (voice over): There's an old joke doctors like to tell. "Hey, Doc, it hurts when I go like this." And the doctor says, "Well, don't go like this." It's a lame joke, but it's nonetheless true. As human beings, we can't help but want to follow our instincts to follow our guts our primal urges no matter how much it may hurt.
Meredith (voice over): We hold onto hope, thinking one small detail, one tiny piece of information will somehow make things right, make it different, make it okay stop the world from spinning off its axis. When the truth is there's really no good way to say goodbye.
Life on Mars? [16.17]
Meredith (voice over): Your body contains approximately 35 trillion cells, and every one of them is constantly being pulled down to earth by gravity. When you're lying down, gravitational forces are spread between the thorax, abdomen, and legs. Stand up too fast, and blood rushes downward, away from the brain. It causes dizziness or even fainting. It's a minor miracle our cells get anything done at all. Because the human body has to perform even the simplest of tasks, either under unimaginable pressure.
Meredith (voice over): You would think weightlessness is a good thing, but it's not. Because people weren't meant to float. Without gravity, we lose blood volume, bone density, muscle. Without it, we're untethered. It may keep you centered. It may keep you safe.
Give a Little Bit [16.18]
Meredith (voice over): In 1847, the American Medical Association published its code of ethics, in which physicians were encouraged to provide free services to the poor as part of their public duty. Hospitals were meant to be centers to care for the sick and poor. They were meant to be places of refuge, places to heal. But somewhere along the way, that changed. Healthcare became a commodity sold to those who can afford it rather than a physician's dutiful service to the public.
Meredith (voice over): It's been said that you haven't lived today unless you have done something for someone who can never repay you. But that's easier said than done. Because when your life's a mess, it's hard to be much help to anyone else. I wish I had something more encouraging to say. And if that sounds too hard. Well, this might not be the life for you.
Love of My Life [16.19]
Richard Webber (voice over): Most people believe that who they are today is pretty much who they will still be in the future. Our minds trick us into thinking our entire history, every choice, every change and chance, has led to this specific moment what we call "Now".
Sing It Again [16.20]
Meredith (voice over): Since our hospital is a teaching program, many of our patients allow their surgeries to be filmed. It's great as a teaching tool. But if you screw up, it ends up online for the whole world to see. Your mistakes will be scrutinized, analyzed, studied, written about, argued over, watched and re-watched. We all make mistakes. We all have moments when we weren't the best surgeon or even the best person. We all have moments we'd rather not relive.
Meredith (voice over): There are certain moments in my life that I wish I could relive: first day of internship, first solo surgery, first time I held my children in my arms. The last lucid conversation I had with my mother. But for every one of those there's one I wish I could forget or do differently. Those are the moments that keep me up at night. And no matter what I do, they keep coming back to haunt me.
Put on a Happy Face [16.21]
Meredith (voice over): Unless you're paid to be there, no one ever wants to go into an O.R. It's freezing, you're naked, and a stranger will be cutting into your body with knives. But what patients don't know and what we try to keep them from knowing is sometimes it's just as terrifying for us. Traumas, heart surgery, anything to do with the pancreas. Any surgeon who says they're not afraid of those is lying. But no matter how risky the surgery no matter how scared you might be your job is to reassure your patient and tell them, "Everything is going to be okay." Whether you believe it or not.
Meredith (voice over): Sometimes, surgeries go better than planned. There's no better gift you can give someone than saying you saved the person they love. I look forward to those moments. Unfortunately, those perfect outcomes are rare. You would think it gets easier, but it doesn't. Each one hurts just as much as the last one. So, we hope for the best and prepare for the worst. Because the worst has a nasty way of finding you.
Cast
- Ellen Pompeo - Meredith Grey
- Justin Chambers - Alex Karev
- Chandra Wilson - Miranda Bailey
- James Pickens, Jr. - Richard Webber
- Kevin McKidd - Owen Hunt
- Jesse Williams - Jackson Avery
- Caterina Scorsone - Amelia Shepherd
- Camilla Luddington - Jo Wilson
- Kelly McCreary - Maggie Pierce
- Giacomo Gianniotti - Andrew DeLuca
- Kim Raver - Teddy Altman
- Greg Germann - Tom Koracick
- Jake Borelli - Levi Schmitt
- Chris Carmack - Atticus Lincoln