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Jul 25, 2005, 08:13 PM
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I went to college for an athletic training degree right out of high school. I then got my master's in counseling and worked as an athletic trainer for a few years. In the meantime, I had a daughter and got married. Athletic training hours were too funky for a family with only one car. Hubby (at the time) was making good money so I stopped being an athletic trainer and decided to be a stay at home mom. Got pregnant with daughter #2 who was born at 26 weeks gestation. I spent A LOT of time in the NICU and watched and learned from the nurses there. The idea of "Hey- I might like doing some of this stuff" was planted in the back of my head. Daughter #2 came home and my days were filled with therapies and developmental clinics and RSV shots. As she got older and healthier, I started looking into nursing school and what it would take to become a CNA first at that point. Got pregnant again and had a son so everything got put on the back burner. Divorced my husband about a year after our son was born was born. I decided that since child sopport was sporadic at best that I needed to be able to support myself and my children without having to rely on my ex. Working as an athletic trainer was definitley NOT an option as a single mom. I went to CNA school and have been working as a CNA for almost 2 years now. I finished up the pre-reqs for nursing school (had to take A&P again since it had been longer than 10 years since I had taken it last) and I am now in the middle of my first and second year in an ADN program. I absolutely LOVE it!!!
I have really enjoyed reading everyone's stories
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Jul 25, 2005, 09:16 PM
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 It is really neat to read everyones' stories. My story is complicated and yet simple to explain. I had a full scholarship to Northeastern University pre-med. I fell in love december of my senior year and left school.  My first husband left after my first little girl died at 3 months old of crib death. The nurse was the only person in the ED(This was 1970) who held me while I wailed and didn't judge me or question if I were somehow to blame! The idea started to take root that horrible night.
I became a nurse's aide and then my very abusive second husband decided to leave me and my 2 beautiful little girls age 3 and 7. I knew I couldn't raise them on my aide's salary and though I didn't like the idea of welfare I vowed to myself I would make good on the opportunity it afforded me to realize my dream and care for my family.
I met a wonderful man in nursing school and 2 more beautiful girls and 25 years later, here I am. I have had a wonderful career as a critical care nurse.
I recently joined the ranks of the "clipboard high heeled nurses", as my FAVORITE ED doc affectionately calls me, and am learning all I can about the wonderful fascinating world of the microscopic as our hospital's Infection Control Nurse. I am also the Employee Health Nurse, Survey Coordinator, Emergency Preparedness Representative at the local and state level and the Education Coordinator of our 16 bed Critical Access Rural hospital.
The things I have loved most about Nursing is the privilege of caring for people in the worst days of their lives and having the ability to make it just a little easier to take and I have never stopped learning not one new thing a day but MANY.
Sorry to be so long winded.
Eeyore
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Jul 25, 2005, 09:47 PM
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Nursing was not my calling! I was a confused teenager in highschool who wanted to go to art school in New York. Little did I know, I was headed down the wrong path in life and hanging around the wrong crowd. I had a vehicle to get me through school but it wasn't dependable enough to go to college too far off, my mother wasn't supportive at all about me going to any college. She told me that I would have to start working after high school. She said that she just couldn't help me with college. I ended up getting pregnant my Senior year due to some poor choices on my part. Dealing with a teen pregnancy was hard on me and my mother. It was definately not easy. I ended up on wellfare. It was embarrassing for me..I missed out on prom. All of my friends going to parties, driving new cars, attending big universities, while I stayed in our small town raising my first born. I definately reaped what I sowed. ( But my son is beautiful and the light of my life and a blessing!!!) There was a friend of our family who we new from church. She was going through the nursing program and encouraged me to go. She drove me to the college and got me an application in 1997. I started college in 1997 after graduating highschool 1996, (Background info: my mother didn't attend my highschool graduation, it hurt me that no one showed up to my graduation) My family all live out of state, and she was getting over a break-up with her boyfriend and couldn't come.
Anyway, I finished Hishschool, started college with the encouragement and the help of the really good friend. I started taking my prerequisites for the ADN program and didn't get accepted the following year because they were too full. I did however, get accepted to the LVN program. I graduated Dec. 1999, took state boards and started working Med-Surg Jan 2000. I've been working on the same Med-surg floor ever since. Somewhere between Jan 2000 and July 2005 today: I avoided the Sept. 11th New York incident b/c I didn't go to art school, I married my husband in 2002 after he returned from the Marines and I we had my second child. Still, working in the same hospital I decided to go back to school. So here I am in the transition LVN to RN program due to graduate May 2006. I have so many awesome co-workers, CNA's, RT's and RN's at my hospital that are so positive and have taught me so much over the years. That hospital is like family we all feel that way, we love our community and taking care of people. I guess art school wasn't where God intended me to be after all.
School is tough, but I know I'll get through it! Becoming an RN will benefit my patients and my family. I'll be able to spend more time with them. I don't want to miss anything important in my kids lives! ...And I want to be able to help them get through college if they choose to go.
Last edited by nitenurse7 : Jul 25, 2005 at 09:56 PM.
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Jul 28, 2005, 12:11 PM
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I am only starting university in September, and am 32 Y.O. I think I can trace the exact moment when I thought that I would like to be a nurse. I was 15, living on the streets, and in the hospital. I hit a tree whilst drunk and stoned riding my bike to get more drunk and stoned. I busted my kidney into 3 pieces, and spent 6 weeks in the hospital. One of the long nights of pain sticks out sticks out more than the rest. I had so much pain that I will never forget that night as long as I live, it is so clear in my mind as if it just happened. A nurse was holding my hand and comforting me, in my worst hour, I asked her "How can you bear to see me in such pain, does it not bother you. She said that not being able to help would bother her more.
Even at such a horrific time I was so impressed, by how strong these women were, and how much they seemed to care. The doctor would only come round in the morning, and always brought bad news or would rebuke me for something that a typical 15 Y.O. would do or say. I dreaded seeing the doctor, every morning he would come by and wake me up and give me more bad news and make me feel useless. When I was having trouble, the nurse would be right there by my side helping me, trying to ease my situation.
The whole time I thought would it not be awesome to be a nurse, to have such a power to help and heal, after all the doctor just yelled and insulted me. But I thought to my self, alas only women can be nurses. One day a man walks in and tells me he is the nurse for the day, and the next thing that come out of his mouth was, "Don't worry I am not gay." I had been poked and prodded so much, and had tubes going in and out of every orifice I did not care if he was Liberace.
Anyways, all through my 20s I was looking for shortcuts, a way to get a good job with no real schooling, I finally realized that for a guy like me there are no short cuts. So I had 2 choices, go back to school or, work at the same very secure, but at the same time a dead end job. I decided on engineering or nursing, and since I worked in mobile hydraulics design everybody thought I would choose engineer. I like Bio much more than math, and always got the highest marks in Bio with minimal effort, or so it seemed to me anyways. It turns out I work very hard at Bio, I just enjoy it so much I do not realize I am actually putting any effort into it. Plus there is that little incident that happened when I was 15 that I will never ever forget as long as I live.
After then drug and alcohol haze lifted in my late 20s I was able to think properly, marrying a woman who is against drugs and does not drink also helps. So after a few years with clear thinking I now know that nothing on this earth will stop me from becoming a nurse. 4 more years. I hope I get to work with some of you people when it is my time.
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Jul 28, 2005, 05:36 PM
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Originally Posted by loserboy
I hope I get to work with some of you people when it is my time.
First of all, you are NOT a loser...you are a winner! And I would be proud to work with you!
Elizabeth
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Jul 28, 2005, 06:34 PM
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Well, many things have guided my decision...I honestly think it started when I was a child...a truly "when I grow up I wan't to be a..."
Fast forward, I worked for a CPA for years...while he was sick with lung/esophogeal cancer and up until he died. He worked until he couldn't work anymore, so not only was I his assistant, I was his caretaker 9-5.
Worked as a bartender for a while...fun but not fulfilling
Worked as a corrections officer for almost a decade...fun, somewhat fulfilling but not being able to "help" people and having to being able to deal with all their meds and medical problems...not fun. I learned alot about the medical field in those years.
Worked for an optometrist for a couple years, until I had baby #4 and decided to stay at home with all four kids. Well, I sure gained alot of knowlege there!
A few years ago my mom was diagnosed with breast cancer...I took care of her for over 3 years...10 different chemo's, recurrences, so much radiation she practically glowed in the dark and finally hospice care. I fell in love with her nurses (especially her chemo nurses) and taking care of her...and was with her to her last breath-kept her at home and comforted and made her a deathbed promise that I would continue with my education and get my RN no matter what it took. She lived in a rather rural area and was only in hospice a short time so, I was her main caregiver...the nurses told me how to take care of her and medicate her and keep her comfortable and I was able to do that on my own. The nurse only came a couple times and my mom died alone with me, in my arms. I knew at that moment, that the promise I made was going to be the promise I kept. Now almost 2 years later, I start nursing school in just a few weeks and I know she is smiling at me from up above. I'm amazed at the amount of support I've gotten from my friends and "most" of my family-they are very proud as well.
I began the journey thinking "I'm going to be a hematology oncology nurse" ... now I've realized that I will not make my decision until I've experienced all clinical areas...and decided what is right "for me".
Neat stories from everyone
~T
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Jul 28, 2005, 07:10 PM
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My mom is a nurse ( she just retired 2 years ago) and I just sort of followed in her footsteps I guess. I found an old picture of me when I was about 4 years old wearing my mothers nursing cap. I guess that was a sign of my destiny. I enjoy taking care of people and that is why I became a nurse and have never regretted it.
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Jul 28, 2005, 08:21 PM
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Originally Posted by brian
Everyone has his or her own story about how or why they became a nurse. What's your story?
Please be as detailed or as short as you wish. It'll be interesting to hear everyone's stories.
Simple... I like white shoes.....
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Jul 28, 2005, 09:20 PM
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Originally Posted by TreetopAngel_RN
First of all, you are NOT a loser...you are a winner! And I would be proud to work with you!
Elizabeth
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Jul 30, 2005, 07:57 AM
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Originally Posted by brian
Everyone has his or her own story about how or why they became a nurse. What's your story?
Please be as detailed or as short as you wish. It'll be interesting to hear everyone's stories.
Son was born prematurely in 1985, husband had fallen off of a house and had an external fixator to left lower extremity; took care of them both, found I had a knack for it...Husband left in 1992 after I started college, graduated in 1996, son starts nursing school next week...
It's a good thing
Atlantarn
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