Written by Elizabeth Exline
Gloria Littlemouse, PhD, MSN, RN, learned at an early age how tenuous the line between life and death can be. At 8, she was hospitalized with pneumococcal meningitis, an infectious disease that generally affects babies and toddlers. She watched as friends in her hospital ward passed away. She understood on some level that she鈥檇 likely join them.
鈥淚 was like, 鈥業鈥檓 OK if I die.鈥 I was never worried.鈥
Destiny, however, had a different plan for her, one in which her brush with death, along with her Navajo heritage and extensive educational and professional experience, would inform her work as a nurse, educator, and end-of-life doula. Hers is a calling few answer because it is so emotionally demanding.
鈥淲ho can do this work?鈥 Littlemouse asks. 鈥淚 can. And I will continue to do it as long as I can.鈥澛
Littlemouse grew up in Los Angeles to divorced parents who came from different worlds. She wasn鈥檛 close to her mother or her mother鈥檚 family, remembering them as emotionally distant.
鈥淭o this day I can鈥檛 remember anything that my mother and I did [together]. 鈥 It鈥檚 still painful,鈥 she says.
Her father鈥檚 side of the family was warmer, especially her paternal grandmother, who taught Littlemouse two vital lessons: how to cook and how to love. 鈥淪he loved endlessly,鈥 Littlemouse says.
The two sides of her family did not get along, and in many ways, Littlemouse found herself navigating life alone. She got a job at McDonald鈥檚 when she was 16, and on her first day she discovered she鈥檇 have to clean the grill.
Thus ended her tenure at McDonald鈥檚 鈥 and thus began her life鈥檚 work: She walked across the street to a nursing home and asked if they were hiring.
Gloria Littlemouse, MSN, PhD
鈥淚 refused to clean the grill at McDonald鈥檚, but I was all right to clean bedpans,鈥 Littlemouse says incredulously. 鈥淎nd let me tell you, back in those days 鈥 there were no disposable gloves. We did everything with our bare hands.鈥
She began to explore this new career path and what it would take to work as a full-time nurse. 鈥淭he opportunity to take care of a patient, that was my first love,鈥 Littlemouse recalls. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I fell in love with [about] nursing.鈥
By 18, she was married (to get out of her family home, she says), and the couple lived off Jell-O and ramen to make ends meet. Eventually, she became a licensed registered nurse and completed her bachelor鈥檚 degree 鈥 and that鈥檚 when things got exciting.
Littlemouse would go on to earn her Master of Science in Nursing at 爱污传媒 in 2009, where the online format and vibrant Indigenous community made it a good fit.
This resonates with Patrick Horning, a UOPX National Tribal Strategic Alliance executive. While tribal students statistically perform at the lowest level among all demographic groups when it comes to education nationally, UOPX committed itself to changing that outcome within its community.
Beginning in 2007, Horning and three other University staff members started the Tribal Relations Department to help tribal students enroll and utilize the students鈥 tribal funding.
After three iterations of that team, Horning knew there was more that could be done. He spent two years traveling the country to speak with tribal government, enterprise, healthcare and education leaders while also researching the barriers tribal students face in education.
In 2018 the fourth iteration of the team was created, and the Tribal Operations Team implemented specific processes to mitigate the educational barriers.
The Tribal Operation specialists, for example, began collaborating closely with tribal students during their first four classes. They reviewed teacher feedback with these students to identify the causes associated with them missing points, and discussed available resources to overcome them. They went over plans with students for managing time so they could have a favorable family, school and work balance. They learned about the traditional customs and backgrounds of Indigenous students so they could help them manage school expectations with culture, which helps them navigate and minimize the feeling of living in two worlds.
It worked. In 2020, more tribal students successfully completed their fourth course than in previous years, and that rate has continued to grow.聽
For Littlemouse, 2020 brought with it a different set of challenges, and she stepped away from her PhD program. It wasn鈥檛 the coursework: She鈥檇 excelled in her master鈥檚 program and had decided to earn her terminal degree at UOPX as well, a PhD in nursing. (PhD programs have since been retired in favor of practitioner doctoral programs.) But the COVID-19 pandemic had arrived, and suddenly her role as regional director of nursing for a hospice facility seemed less important to her than joining the front lines.
When she was ready to return to the PhD program, however, she discovered it had been retired. She wrote to UOPX, begging to be allowed to finish. She received a letter thanking her for her service and granting her permission to complete the program, which she did in 2022.
John Ramirez, MBA
Dean of Operations, College of Doctoral Studies
鈥淭he exception was warranted due to mitigating circumstances beyond her control that prevented her from working on her dissertation,鈥 recalls John Ramirez, dean of operations for the College of Doctoral Studies at 爱污传媒. 鈥淒uring the COVID pandemic, as a healthcare professional, she risked her own well-being to care for her patients and place duty first. 鈥 I am extremely proud to be part of the effort to ensure she was granted to exception. I keep the picture she sent me of her at work during the pandemic as a reminder of the exceptional students we have in our college and their selfless service.鈥
Indeed, Littlemouse鈥檚 approach to her career and education embodies both selflessness and a lifelong learning mindset. She currently works as an assistant nursing professor at Vanderbilt University, and she passionately commits herself to a variety of additional endeavors and causes, from presenting and training on behalf of to combating human trafficking to earning certification in artificial intelligence.聽
Littlemouse鈥檚 achievements may command a certain level of respect on their own, but combined with her life story, they inspire awe.
Her familial experience, for starters, might鈥檝e been enough to deter most people from pursuing a dream. Her mother鈥檚 side of the family eventually disowned her. Friends passed away. Most painful of all was the loss of her children. As she entered her 40s, she discovered she wanted to have a child.
鈥淚 realized my ex-husband was the only man I really knew and asked him to father a child with me,鈥 she says. She became pregnant multiple times but miscarried her son, her daughter and then her twins.
Such loss might鈥檝e broken anyone else. For Littlemouse, it became a calling. She had faced death many times, and she came to understand it.
鈥淲hen you see the emotion at the bedside, that鈥檚 love,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen I see the mother wailing for her child, that鈥檚 love. When I see the children crying at the bedside of their parents who are dying, that鈥檚 love. So, to me, the best way to explain love is through death.鈥
Littlemouse became a Caritas coach and a , training that complements her nursing experience and her spiritual and cultural background. With this foundation, she ushers people toward that which few ever feel truly prepared to face: mortality.
鈥淢y grandmother called it a gift, and sometimes I said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 a gift. I think it鈥檚 a burden,鈥欌 Littlemouse says. 鈥淚 literally feel the connectivity to [a patient鈥檚] soul. I feel their pain and suffering. 鈥 But I feel the love, and for that reason, I do the work.鈥
Love, at the end of the day, is the guiding force behind her life and work, whether she鈥檚 presiding over someone鈥檚 passing or helping the living face life.
One day, for example, Dr. Littlemouse recalls a friend calling to ask her to help her son. He鈥檇 been in the military, her friend said, and had come home but was suicidal. When he arrived at Littlemouse鈥檚 house, the effect was immediate.
鈥淚 saw death walking through my door,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 saw this huge black shadow on him, like literally sitting on him, smothering him.鈥
Calling upon her Din茅 (Navajo) ancestors, Littlemouse began to move energy in and around him. By the time she finished, he sat up, hugged her and cried. A month later, he appeared on her doorstep with flowers, deeply transformed and profoundly grateful.
鈥淚 always tell people who ask, 鈥榃hat can I do?鈥 to just be love out there. To me, love is everything,鈥 she says.聽
Today, Littlemouse still works occasionally with private clients outside of her professorship, and she advocates for love, inclusion and healing in multiple capacities, whether as a presenter, trainer or educator.
Whereas some people overcome great odds to find their traditional happy ending, Dr. Littlemouse鈥檚 story is a little different. Her happy ending is a work in progress, always with her and yet unlike anyone else鈥檚.
More profoundly, it appears to be deeply intertwined with the fate of others.
鈥淵ou know, I just send it out there to whoever needs love,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ittle things that we do with great love 鈥 that brings change to our world.鈥
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Elizabeth Exline has been telling stories ever since she won a writing contest in third grade. She's covered design and architecture, travel, lifestyle content and a host of other topics for national, regional, local and brand publications. Additionally, she's worked in content development for Marriott International and manuscript development for a variety of authors.
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