Six Sentiments for Season Six: Nurses Week 2020

Heeeeeeey Nurseeeeeee!

In honor of Nurses Week 2020 and what will be my sixth year of nursing, I wanted to make a post with the six observations I have about who I am as a nurse and pieces of wisdom I wanted to share.

  1. I came into this profession shiny and new with clean, pressed edges and resounding hope. While I still believe in the goodness of people, my cotton is a bit wrinkled now from the disregard shown by humanity. It’s intact still, not threadbare and laid waste from years of abuse quite yet. You can see the change notably from six years ago. Sometimes something really good happens that irons out the wrinkles and makes the cotton look renewed though. Sometimes when a small tear happens, a kind soul will come along a patch it up. In our profession, we can’t expect our cloth to stay immaculate–we should expect it to become a bit dirty and a bit worn. But we need to allow ourselves to let it be repaired and refreshed. Our work is meaningful.
  2. Protect your “helpers.” Value them. Now when I say “helpers” I don’t mean that these people are there to serve YOU (The Nurse)–you are all there for the common goal of bettering a patient. These individuals help in making your jobs easier though. So value them. Protect their interests. Are your respiratory therapists lobbying for better equipment? Join them. They know their specialty and there is probably a reason. Is another nurse abusing her patient care technician? Step up. Be a leader by advocating for that person. Is the department paramedic pushing for more privileges their license allows them to do? Speak up! These are our team mates. Rally to their sides.
  3. Pass on what you learn. It is so easy to find information and hoard it but its better for a department when you disseminate it. In this pandemic, I early on volunteered to moderate a Facebook Group Covid-19 Healthcare Professionals (click for link) which at the time (early March?) had like 300 people. The idea was to have a place for professionals to share information and develop a community. It quickly grew to over 84,000 people (at time of writing). Ideas flew like crazy from how to prevent skin breakdown from face masks to setting up vents and pumps outside negative pressure rooms. But the idea was this: knowledge sharing. Teach what you know to others–precept new team mates and if more experienced or older staff ask for help with something, teach without judgement. Do all acts for the betterment of the whole.
  4. Nursing will disappoint you. A lot. Frequently. Management will promise you the world only to give you scraps whether on purpose or not. Toad, Four Year Degree in Bladder HoldingPatients will burn you despite you breaking your back for them. The pay will never equal the work some days. Lunches won’t come some days and your bladder will harden to that comparable to those weird frogs that hibernate for years in Australia (I pulled out that metaphor from somewhere…don’t @ me).
  5. You don’t always get what you want (to quote the Rolling Stones). In fact–get used to it. I had a lot of “no’s” told to me in six years. Career paths I thought I wanted that went to other people. It hurt, guys. Baaaaaaaad. But the funny thing about “no” is sometimes it’s just a primer for “because here’s this instead! TA-FRIIIIGGGGIINNN-DAAA!” And it really is better. I didn’t always trust that I was told no for a reason. I felt like that no was my own resounding failure when in reality it was just because I was a better fit elsewhere. That job I thought was perfect? It took a wiser nurse sitting me down and telling me I wouldn’t be happy doing it. I didn’t believe her for a while and I was bitter at her assumption–how could she possibly know what I wanted? But she was right. I should’ve listened instead of being angry. Because my dream job offer came half a year later. Even if you don’t get that dream offer like I did right away, keep at it. Something I always tell new nurses or nurses trying to strive for something is this: Never accept “no”–rephrase it as “not right now.” By accepting that no and letting the door slam in your face, you’re missing possibilities of three more doors opening just down the road to even better opportunities.
  6. While nursing has given me the most painful memories and caused me some of the worst heartaches–it has given me so much more. It has given me purpose. Friendships. Meaning. It has saved my life when I felt it didn’t mean anything. Days I didn’t want to get out of bed–I knew I was needed by my coworkers and patients. Somedays that made the difference for me just knowing that the work I did with my two little hands caused change gives my career meaning. I’m proud of what I do and I couldn’t imagine doing anything else even on my worst days… find meaning in your work. This will help you power through the ugliest parts of our job.

 

So this week… this whole month… this whole year… hold your heads up high, Nurses.

We have faced insurmountable odds in some parts of the world and in those not necessarily being inundated by viral illness but rather facing unemployment from low-census or budget-cuts. The world sees us and while they may not necessarily empathize with our plights and administration may still gift us pizza parties (not you night shift–you get half eaten stale donuts because “tradition”) instead of safe staffing and all the things we really need…we’ll still keep showing up and providing top-notch care.

Happy Nurses Week!

 

 

Ladies of First Response

Happy International Women’s Day to all my fellow women! We live in the Age of She! Gone are the days where women had only limited choices of occupation; we have the choice of being professionals, being mothers, or being both. As women, we stand on the shoulders of absolute giants. Whether or not you agree with the fundamental beliefs of particular notable women, there is no denying how they have blazed a trail for all of us.

Women who opened the door for us in medicine, aviation, emergency services, and science.

From the mother of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale –a social reformist and statistician in the Crimean War era. To Valérie André, a French army surgeon and parachutist turned helicopter pilot who flew into the combat zones of Vietnam to triage and retrieve casualties. On to Molly Williams, an African American slave woman, who answered the call as America’s first female firefighter when the men of the company were stricken with a virulent strain of flu.

These women laid the foundation for all of us. It is up to us to continue the push.

While women are, indeed, quite able to do all that men can, we often are underestimated, still. However, ladies, it is our job to stop pushing the fact we are women down the throats of our male peers and simply continue to advocate to the fact “I am an able bodied, human being, full of promise and passion, and I have the intellect you do… I am here, I am not going anywhere…”

We can be more than just our jobs. We can be mothers, girlfriends and wives, feminine and fun, absolute powerhouses in the gym… we are not defined strictly by our professions. However, we should recognize the time and place for each. Wear your make-up to work. Talk about your job at home. But always be cognizant there are people out there who will try to drag us down simply because we are not men–we garner a different kind of attention.

I recognize this may sound anti-female. But I promise it isn’t.

I work in a flight base where I am the lone female whereas the others have a more healthy distribution. I am not unaccustomed to being one of the only or one of a few females in a fire company. I was always the girl (stop) friend in the group of guys. So I had to earn my respect and it was made tougher by the fact I’m little (I graze 5 foot on a good day). I realized once I started focusing on myself more, I lost some of my friendships with the guys or other people started treated me differently. Don’t let it dishearten you! Continue to come in to your jobs, your schools, your places you volunteer and keep working hard–it will earn you the respect you want. However, embrace and improve yourself, personally, as well–just don’t shove it down the throats of your fellows because the ones who matter, will still be there through your changes.

International Women’s Day is a day with focus on overcoming bias against women. It is a day for us to build each other up and encourage each other to embrace who we are. So I challenge you to be the best you that you can be, in all avenues of your life. Remember to always treat yourselves with the respect you deserve and be positive to other women out there trying to build their own self-respect.

-Clear skies and tail winds!