Re: Terrible breach of professionalism?
here we are, hospice nurses, who've been beckoned to care for families at the most vulnerable and daunting time of their lives.
we are recipients of all their anger, frustration, pain, sorrow, fear, and LOVE.
we tend to our dying pts, with medical profiency, infinite patience, experiential discernment, and an all-inclusive commiseration...
always executed with finesse and mastery.
with everything we give of ourselves in this specialty (NOT meant martyrly!), who
wouldn't cry?
i'm serious, and am not even alluding to the human component of our work.
i am talking about all that is expected of us - in doing, acting, saying, sensing, negotiating, evaluating...
let's face it - even if we do feel "called" to do what we do, it is no easy feat.
we have to be many things to many people, while remaining focused on who needs us most, our pts.
so while we are seemingly doing our jobs, it just so happens that sometimes, our stressors are such, that we break...
we cry, we grieve, we have mini-tantrums.
then we dry our eyes and continue in upholding some of the most impoverished souls on earth.
if we don't cry r/t the mere requirements of our job description, then we do so r/t the privilege and honor of being involved in the most intimate times of a family's life.
breach of professionalism?
i think not.
rather, consider it a testimonial to who we are, and what we do.
'[real' hospice nurses cry...
even if it's not in our job description.
leslie
Nursing News