21. hey guys how you been?

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Hey people so I was dead tired when I worked this originally so it's going to be a strange one lol
Enjoy

Third person pov

Peter was tired. No exhausted ( I mean same tho)

Last night was tiering, Peter knows that he loves his job but he sometimes wishes he had more time for sleep.

Last night after having May look at the gash on his face Peter went to his room and flopped on the bed in pure exhaustion not even thinking about eating to aid his healing on his face.

That may be why the next morning he woke up with a pillow covered in blood from the wound on his face that had reopened in his sleep.

Peter being only half awake yawned widely only to be met with a pricing pain in his face.

The stitches came undone and Peter couldn't help but groan in annoyance. Walking sluggishly to the bathroom he pulls out the first aid box and the staturing kit. Peter sighed deeply as he began going over the check list in his head and began the process.

1.Wash hands and prepare the wound. Wash your grubby hands like a doctor to reduce the chances of infecting the wound. Prepare the wound for suturing by cleaning out any debris with water. Clean out as much blood as possible. Put on latex gloves.

2 Use your needle driver to grab the needle. Make sure the needle clamp locks in place. Pull all the threads out of the suture kit.

3 Use the tissue forceps to expose the side of the wound you’ll begin the suture on. This lets you see what you’re working with and how deep the wound goes. Line up the edges of the wound as much as you can.

4 Push the needle through the skin at a 90-degree angle about a centimeter to the right of the wound. Don’t go below the fat. Just right above it.

5 When you’ve gone deep enough, twist your hand clockwise so that the needle starts coming up on the other side of the wound. You want the needle to come out straight across from the first needle hole.

6 When the needle has come out on the other side of the wound, unlock the needle driver, reattach it near the tip of the needle (you don’t need to lock it), and pull until you have about 1-2 inches of thread left on the right side of the wound. Release the needle.

7 Using your left hand, hold the thread on the left side of the needle and wrap twice around the tip of the needle holder.

8 Slightly open the needle holder and grab that 1-2″ of thread on the right side of the wound.

9 Using your left hand, pull the long part of the thread. The part of the thread wrapped around the needle holder will slide off. You’ll have created a simple overhand knot with two loops. This is called the “first throw.

10 Tighten things so that the tissue is just touching and make sure the knot is lying flat.Time for the “second throw.” Using your left hand, hold the long end of the thread and wrap it once around the needle driver clockwise. Slightly open the needle driver and grab the short end of the thread. Using your left hand, pull the long part of the thread. You’ll finish off your surgeon’s knot with another overhand knot.

Repeat step 11 one more time for a “third throw” to really create a secure knot. Instead of wrapping the thread clockwise around the needle driver, wrap it counter-clockwise. This will prevent the knot from slipping.Cut the excess thread.

10 Move a quarter-inch down the wound and repeat the process.Make sure all the knots are lined up on the same side. Mine is on the left side of the wound.

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