Nursing!!
Stats:
Name Chelsea
Current position: RN. nurse supervisor: at a care care
center through Fairview Health Sevices:
Years of nursing.
Offta… years in health care: 10 (as soon as I turned 18 I took my first job
in the health care field). Worked years as a licensed nurse: 8.
I’ll address the question I get most often first: why did I
become a nurse?. My mom is a nurse, half
my family is in healthcare-it was what I knew and what I knew I could be good
at. And, I'm a practical gal- I knew I'd
always have a job, make decent wages and the schooling wouldn’t put me in debt
until my 40’s. I don’t have a fabulous
story of “the one nurse who changed my life” or “ the dream to change peoples
future”. Sorry, I’ve got nothing.
I have seen far
too many nurse quit in the first year, sometimes first 6 months. For most, I feel
nursing is a complete shock when you start your first job.
To say yes to “ can you work every other
holiday is one thing” but how many
Christmas Eves away from your family do you take? As I become older and
start thinking of starting my own family I am more aware of the sacrifice of
parents. Just last Halloween I was working the evening shift and watched as
husbands, grandparents, brought the nurses’ children into my work so their moms
could see them in their costumes and I thought “someday my husband will be
doing that”. And I pay more notice to the the nurses sharing pictures they get
on their phones of their children Christmas morning before they start their
am med pass. My own fiancé knows all too well of the 12am phone call on New Year's Eve as I spend another ball drop in my scrubs.
And yet, (besides right
now) for the ones who stick the job out you don’t hear us complain. One of my
favorite things about nurses is the mindset that “we are all in this together.”
How can you complain about missing a girls night out when your co-nurse may be
missing her child's 1st step. You learn that being upset about
having to work a mandatory extra shift will not make that shift go by quicker.
Our patients lives don’t stop for weekends or nights- nether does our job. We do it for the passion of taking care of
others; a passion they may fade or waver slightly, but is always present in
every nurse.
I currently and have always worked in geriatrics or long term care. Its not the most prestigious, fast paced field but its without a doubt where I belong. It can be changing -. everything you think an 80year + person couldn’t do I can firmly say, “ oh yes they can!” I always say if I can mentally survive a double shift working in a locked dementia ward then I can survive anything. And it can be wonderful- to be a part of someone's livf every day- to meet their families, to hear their stories, to become the familiar face they know.
Many years ago I had
a nurse mentor say to me:
"When people are
born that nurse or doctor will look at the clock and state their time of birth.
In sense that is when their life book begins. Their pages fill with stories, memories,
and milestones. And when all is said and done, when the book is almost full,
they come here [a long term care center] and we get to help them fill the last
pages of their book. We are there on the last page- and we have the power to
make that one last positive story. Wither it be making sure they are pain free,
calling in a beloved family member to be with them or maybe ourselves taking
the time to be there with them. And we call the time of death. We are the last
sentence of their book."
My job is an honor. I am blessed to meet every patient who
comes my way who trusts me with their book. To trust I will give them the care
they deserve.
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