I Ask For "Nothing".

Written spur of the moment, brought about by propaganda posters and half-hearted "thanks" murmured by folks that clearly don't mean it. At all. It was an odd moment when I realized I was offended. I felt spotlighted when I, honestly, had done nothing important to note. Nurses General Nursing Article

When it comes to nursing, I respect the profession for what it is, what it has been, and where it is headed. Am I proud to be part of the profession? Sure, in a subtle, I'm proud my hair is long kind of way.

I own no nursing paraphernalia. I do not announce what I do readily at meet n' greets or reunions. I prefer to refer to myself as a Frustrated Carpenter or a Confused Ninja.

Ever since stepping foot into the profession, Nurse's Week has always been a tough pill for me to swallow.

You see, I'm used to flying under the radar. I do what I do because it needs to be done. And that's the truth. I am here because I choose to be. I could be pastry chef or a crotchety stay at home couch warmer content to spend her days writing scathing letters to the editor while snorting Cheeto powder.

But no. In my professional life, I'm a nurse.

And for the record, I'm not a hero. Never have been one, never will be one, don't want to be one. That is way too much pressure. I look at what I do as getting paid to do the right thing. Hey look, you're not breathing. How 'bout some oxygen?

It's nothing special. It's just the right thing to do.

My patients know I exist because when they wake up, their IV sites have mysteriously migrated, the gaping holes in the abdomen are miraculously closed, and, if you are a peds patient, you may have a new stuffed bear friend dressed in scrubs to keep you company.

It took me a while to get used to the idea of never being seen let alone remembered. And now, my thanks comes daily in the form of self satisfaction and appreciation for the little things. When a tubed trauma patient gives me a thumbs up before going to surgery and a middle finger when I assess his pain as he wakes, I'm doing something right. When a surgeon saves an especially naughty joke just for me and tells it with an excited gleam to his eye like a kid on Christmas morning confronted with a gaggle of puppies, I know that my work has been noticed. And when my coworkers creep up to me mid case to bump shoulders, stand close and communicate with sidelong glances and hidden smirks, I know it's all fine.

And those are the things that keep me going.

Not the brunches offered by guilt obligated physicians or luke-warm lunches served by begrudging Nurse Managers. I don't need their approval. I don't need their recognition.

nothing.jpg And when the nation decides to herald nurses in random clips on the news, it causes a bitterness to surge unbidden to the fore.

You want to thank me? You want to honor nursing?

To management/corporate leaders: Then lower nurse to patient ratios so I and my brothers and sisters in healthcare can truly do the job to best of our abilities.

To the Government: Offer clinics that can be accessed by all people in a way that makes sense and for once removes the terrible choice of food or healthcare. We send so many resources overseas, which is all fine, but what of our folks here at home? Research more than the Cancer "flavor of the day". For the love of all thing sacred, stop denying reimbursement funding based up on greater, more ridiculous parameters.

To patients/families: Remember that time you called the Nursing Supervisor to complain because I sheered the britches off your child's shattered femur and then had the audacity not to escort you to the coffee shop before taking said kidlet to surgery? Yeah...not cool. Kindly learn what to truly complain about. Better yet, respect the fact I helped save his leg or something.

To the fellow healthcare workers: Treat each other with dignity and respect. Thank each other. Recognize each other. Why do we need a week or a day at all?

My feeling: if you truly need a day to give you a reason or remind you to show someone appreciation, be it your mother, your spouse, etc, then something is amiss, don't you think?

I had a doc try to worm a thank you out of me for a lunch his group provided. My answer was simple, "One sandwich does not make up for a bunch of distressing conversations. You made my orientee cry last week, in case you forgot. Perhaps in the future you can treat us all decently as people and I will thank you. But for now yes, the sandwich was tasty. I appreciate the effort."

He seemed affronted. Surprise.

I let him mull it over as I waddled off, diet soda in hand, to go settle before having to scamper off to another case.

Perhaps my refusal to kowtow and play nice in the sandbox makes me a bad person. I don't know. But I think I'm alright with that.

But I suppose it's time to get to the point, isn't it? Tick-tock, CheesePotato, we don't have all night.

In summation: Thank me as one person to another, for what I have done and not because of the letters at the end of my name. Thank me genuinely and at the moment it happens.

And I shall be sure to return the favor.

~~CP~~

Thank you for putting it out there! I've always felt that I get paid to do what I love to do (thanks, enough). Like you, no one forced me into nursing it was my choice. After countless "gifts" over the years (an emory board come to mind...) the one "gift" that remains most precious to me is the one I received from one of my first graders (yes, I'm a school nurse) who hugged me and said, "It feels like home when you fix me". Like the commercial says, "Priceless!"

Excellent article! Again!

I feel the same way and wanted to say something like this when I was reading through a thread a few days ago with folks complaining about not getting Nurse Week recognition. :bored: I'd rather they didn't do anything actually except the wonderful suggestions you mentioned. But I understand Nascar's rock-and-a-hard-place situation. Damned if you do; damned if you don't.

Hey, did y'all know it is also Teacher's Week? ;)

Specializes in Nursing Professional Development.

I love this article.

Thank you.

YES. I am always down for cake and donuts!

A nurse after my own heart :laugh:.

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..

I love your message. Thank you so much. It needed to be mentioned.:up:

Back to Earth, nurses. You all know that if that "lukewarm lunch" isn't served once in awhile you cry because you're not recognized. You expect presents at Christmas and potlucks on your birthday. And no matter how low the nurse:patient ratio is (here in CA it's 4:1 on an acute floor) half of you will skip orders, ignore phone calls, get other people to start your IVs (do you even KNOW how to start one?) and firmly play the Blame Game instead of owing up to any mistakes. You know that at least 10% of your coworkers do such idiotic things that the MDs consider all nurses to be fools so when something bad happens they automatically throw a tantrum. Stop calling at 2 in the morning for a Chapstick order. Do I believe the author actually had this conversation with a doctor over a sandwich? No. Everyone gets puffed up when they talk about who they are. For someone who admits to "flying under the radar" she also wants everyone to see how cool she is.

Specializes in Alzheimer's, Geriatrics, Chem. Dep..
Back to Earth, nurses. You all know that if that "lukewarm lunch" isn't served once in awhile you cry because you're not recognized. You expect presents at Christmas and potlucks on your birthday. And no matter how low the nurse:patient ratio is (here in CA it's 4:1 on an acute floor) half of you will skip orders, ignore phone calls, get other people to start your IVs (do you even KNOW how to start one?) and firmly play the Blame Game instead of owing up to any mistakes. You know that at least 10% of your coworkers do such idiotic things that the MDs consider all nurses to be fools so when something bad happens they automatically throw a tantrum. Stop calling at 2 in the morning for a Chapstick order. Do I believe the author actually had this conversation with a doctor over a sandwich? No. Everyone gets puffed up when they talk about who they are. For someone who admits to "flying under the radar" she also wants everyone to see how cool she is.

Who are you talking to in this post?? sounds like you are talking about a very few exceptions, or you've been conversing with too many doctors who don't know jack about what we do.

GREAT READ!

Specializes in LTC, Hospice, Case Management.
Back to Earth, nurses. You all know that if that "lukewarm lunch" isn't served once in awhile you cry because you're not recognized. You expect presents at Christmas and potlucks on your birthday. And no matter how low the nurse:patient ratio is (here in CA it's 4:1 on an acute floor) half of you will skip orders, ignore phone calls, get other people to start your IVs (do you even KNOW how to start one?) and firmly play the Blame Game instead of owing up to any mistakes. You know that at least 10% of your coworkers do such idiotic things that the MDs consider all nurses to be fools so when something bad happens they automatically throw a tantrum. Stop calling at 2 in the morning for a Chapstick order. Do I believe the author actually had this conversation with a doctor over a sandwich? No. Everyone gets puffed up when they talk about who they are. For someone who admits to "flying under the radar" she also wants everyone to see how cool she is.

Just mean and uncalled for!

Specializes in LTC, Hospice, Case Management.
To those that took the time to read and comment, I thank you, truly.

Let-me-love-you.gif

Dear Nascar Nurse--

First of all, I think I may have blushed myself stupid with your compliment. It is too kind.

Secondly, may I just say you sound like a conscientious manager, one who genuinely makes effort to relate, to empathize and to support your staff. That is a gift. A rare trait not commonly found in managers.

And heavens yes, you are stuck between a rock and a hard place when it comes to dealing with upper management who does have control over ratios, expectations, and budget, and the staff that feel the weight of those decisions and blame you for upper level choices.

After all, anyone can follow, but not anyone can lead.

I don't envy you. Not in the least. But is it fair to say that I may envy your staff just a little?

~~CP~~

P.S.

I know there are spelling errors, but I'm typing one handed as Kid is being a wild child and demanding that mommy throw the ball right now Now NOW!!

So yeah. Good dog.

Dang...where did those heart icons go? Thanks CP!

Specializes in Acute Care, CM, School Nursing.

"I had a doc try to worm a thank you out of me for a lunch his group provided. My answer was simple, "One sandwich does not make up for a bunch of distressing conversations. You made my orientee cry last week, in case you forgot. Perhaps in the future you can treat us all decently as people and I will thank you. But for now yes, the sandwich was tasty. I appreciate the effort."

NICE!!! :yes: