Re: relatively new and stressed
Hi Ames,
Well we have a lot in common. Here's the deal, and what I try to focus on when the people in the OR get me down.
How do you feel about the actual work of the OR?
Do you like being involved with the surgeries? Are they fascinating to you?
Do you like the time (minimal, I know) with the patient when they're awake?
When you get to a place where you know the equipment and what you need, when you need it, do you think that you'll feel better?
If you answered yes to these questions then it's all about waiting, from what I can see. One of the reasons I was hired, at least this is what I think, is that I conveyed and believe that I work well in a team, I can be assertive and I can hold my own. Guess what? None of that is turning out to be true on orientation. Frankly, as an orientee from what I can tell, no one trusts you, no one likes you and no one listens to you. You gotta earn it, and it's time sensitive. The only way to get there is to know the job, and unfortunately that cannot be done in under a year from my minimal experience so far.
I am miserable. I hate the specialty I'm in right now because the surgeons are bullies and the nurses are enablers of said bullies, but I will plow through because putting them aside, I like the job, and you know what? When I finally get to where I know what I am doing, I will not be taking any more of the bullying. Right now, I spend the entire day with my lips crammed together trying to concentrate. By the time orientation is over I'll probably need plastic surgery myself, but hopefully, I'll get there.
A few things that have helped me:
-I stopped spending breaktime in the break room. I leave the unit and either try to get some sunlight or call another nursing buddy, just to get confirmation that someone does actually like me.
-As soon as work is done, I leave. I am trying to incorporate advice that I got on my thread and exercise after work instead of just collapsing. Hopefully it'll burn off some of the tension and anxiety.
-Do you work in a state where overtime isn't mandatory? Because if you do, you might want to politely decline or at least lessen it.
-keep in close touch with your support systems. You really need them right now.
Finally, from what I can see some of the people in the OR have the most rotten personalities that I have ever had the misfortune to experience. You have to wonder how they function in real life, and then you realize that work is probably all they have. Thank God that isn't you. How in heaven's name do people sit next to eachother at lunch and not say a word to eachother????? These are not the people that get to influence your future.
Chin up Ames, we need to get there, because the next orientees need nice people to talk to!
Nursing News