The Perfect Shift - Page 4
Register Today!- Feb 6, '05 by kbrakerwifemumRNQuote from kbrakerwifemumRNI am a second semester nursing student in an ADN program. I have been hearing nothing but horror stories and jokes about nurses eating their young, and quotes like "when there is trouble, nurses round up the wagons, and they shoot IN!!". I have also found in my clinicals women who do act that way, but I have also found some who have gone out of their way to facilitate my learning and encourage me. I was at my first childbirth on Friday, and it touched me in a way I will never forget. The nurse I was assigned to was compassionate, sweet, and did not hesitate to let me perform and learn. At the end of my clinical shift I understood the posts I have been reading. There is no other profession (for me) where I can feel so fulfilled, challenged and excited on a daily basis. Nursing is for me! I can see the challenges ahead, but I am grateful for a place where I can read about the positive, the negative, the funny and the sad. Thank you all.

- Feb 10, '05 by happtheartsVery Cool !
I was told by an old Irish RN when I first got into nurseing. That if we treat the Pt's like we would like to be treated It would all come back to us some day. She was right. I also hope when I get old .I get a nurse like me .To take care of my needs. - Feb 10, '05 by VivaLasViejasQuote from happtheartsThat is sooooo true........when I was in the hospital earlier this week, everyone--from the doctors to the housekeeping staff--went out of their way to make sure I was taken care of. What goes around, does come around......now I know that every effort I ever made on behalf of my own patients has been worth it.Very Cool !
I was told by an old Irish RN when I first got into nurseing. That if we treat the Pt's like we would like to be treated It would all come back to us some day. She was right. I also hope when I get old .I get a nurse like me .To take care of my needs.
- Mar 30, '05 by UnewmeB4When my daughter decided to become a nurse, I suggested she work as an aide, first, to make sure that is what she wanted to do. I was so excited! I told someone this, and another nurse, swear to God, said, "I want better for my daughter!" This was in front of a patient. How sad. I replied(after picking my jaw off the floor) "What could be better than this? There are so many areas to work in, so many more options than so many fields? Where else to you get to go and play with people all day?"
The patient loved it...the nurse didn't.
My daughter had already been to one semester at college for teaching, and had worked over a year in day care, when she came to this decision.
That is why I told her, if she was REALLY serious, she should work on the Respiratory floor,the most difficult floor in the hospital, as I knew some of the nurses who worked there, and knew she would get trained properly.
"Well", says proud Mom, "It was like a duck to water. She graduates in May, and I have had the privilege of working with her when I float to that floor. She was indeed trained well. She gives wonderful patient care, and spends time talking with pts. I don't doubt she will be a credit to the profession."
Her floor has been going through some major crises, and she is not afraid to speak up in support of her co-workers who work. She knows how to write to the managers when things are not right. She knows that there is no piont in complaining if you are not going to address the problem with someone who can do something about it.
So, that is my story. Pass the LOVE of what you do to others. Encourage people to get into the profession.Agnes Anne and SarasotaRN2b like this. - Mar 30, '05 by RainDreamerThank you so much for sharing that, Marla! I can't wait until I graduate and am able to get out there and hopefully have experiences like this. The last patient that I took care of during clinicals told me "thank you for taking such good care of me". Even something that little meant so much to me, it really made me feel good.
Again, thank you for sharing that. I hope I can be as good of a nurse as you are some day! - Jun 16, '05 by marylyricQuote from mjlrn97As tough as nursing can be, especially in the Med/Surg arena where we deal with some of the most challenging patients and situations imaginable, there is the occasional shift that reminds us of why we became nurses in the first place:
Yesterday was just such a shift. Coming on at 3 PM as usual, I was met by the day shift RN who told me, "You'll have a MUCH better day than yesterday".....which was great news, because the previous day hadn't been all that difficult, just busy.
Then I had my annual performance review, which was positively glowing.....yes, I've worked hard, but I didn't necessarily think anyone had noticed. I was wrong. Not one negative word was said about me by my peers, and management sees me as a "positive leader on the floor" with a "can-do" attitude. They want me as a preceptor/trainer, and they also want me to start giving in-services. Now, I knew the evaluation would be a good one, but I've never had one THAT good before, so I was pretty much walking on air as I started my rounds.
My five patients were stable, pleasant, and doing much better than they'd been the previous day, some of which was due to my good care (or so they told me
). I was busy, but not so busy that I couldn't help my co-worker who was drowning with her three patients and a new admit; I was also able to get an IV started on a patient who'd had all the ICU nurses poke her a couple of times each. This patient and I immediately became friends, and we chatted and joked and shared stories about our similarly-aged kids and home situations once we got her pain and nausea under control.
The capper, however, was the 80-something patient who'd been admitted from a local nursing home for pneumonia and woke up around 10 PM utterly confused and terrified.......she had no idea where she was, and she was coughing so much that her poor little chest must've felt like raw hamburger. On top of it all, she was legally blind, dehydrated, and she sobbed while her eyes burned from the dryness. She wasn't my patient, but when her light went off I'd checked on her and found her in a near-panic state. Luckily, all my patients were stable and sleeping, and I was able to sit with this lady and hold her hand while her nurse scampered around getting the things I asked for: a heated blanket for her chest, some warm broth, and some pain medication.
I must've sat there for half an hour, stroking her hand, talking with her, and then listening to her........turns out she used to be an LPN many years ago, but was fired when she started having seizures. As we talked, we started to laugh over some of the things we'd seen and done as nurses, and what was really special was watching that fearful little face glow into beauty and serenity as she drank the soothing broth and the deep, painful coughing spell ended. All this time she was holding onto my hand as though it were a lifeline, and by the time the pain meds kicked in, she was so calm that when I told her I needed to get back to my patients, she was able to let go.......but not before she'd kissed my hand and thanked me for being there with her.
I floated out of that room on Cloud Nine.......and when I got back to the nurses' station, I said to the assembled group: "Now THAT'S why I do what I do". There was a new grad there, and her eyes lit up as I told her about what had just happened.........I wanted her to know that these are the moments that make a career, the ones we remember long after they have passed, the ones we live on for weeks and months when we have a long stretch of those incredibly insane days when nothing goes right and it seems that all we get for our efforts is complaints from patients and nasty-grams from management.
Yes, that's why I love what I do, and why, long after I'm too old and used up to run the floors anymore, I will treasure the moments I've collected like colorful seashells, each one unique and beautiful in its own way.
Have a great day, everyone!

beautiful - Jun 17, '05 by PMHNP10Quote from mjlrn97As tough as nursing can be, especially in the Med/Surg arena where we deal with some of the most challenging patients and situations imaginable, there is the occasional shift that reminds us of why we became nurses in the first place:
Yesterday was just such a shift. Coming on at 3 PM as usual, I was met by the day shift RN who told me, "You'll have a MUCH better day than yesterday".....which was great news, because the previous day hadn't been all that difficult, just busy.
Then I had my annual performance review, which was positively glowing.....yes, I've worked hard, but I didn't necessarily think anyone had noticed. I was wrong. Not one negative word was said about me by my peers, and management sees me as a "positive leader on the floor" with a "can-do" attitude. They want me as a preceptor/trainer, and they also want me to start giving in-services. Now, I knew the evaluation would be a good one, but I've never had one THAT good before, so I was pretty much walking on air as I started my rounds.
My five patients were stable, pleasant, and doing much better than they'd been the previous day, some of which was due to my good care (or so they told me
). I was busy, but not so busy that I couldn't help my co-worker who was drowning with her three patients and a new admit; I was also able to get an IV started on a patient who'd had all the ICU nurses poke her a couple of times each. This patient and I immediately became friends, and we chatted and joked and shared stories about our similarly-aged kids and home situations once we got her pain and nausea under control.
The capper, however, was the 80-something patient who'd been admitted from a local nursing home for pneumonia and woke up around 10 PM utterly confused and terrified.......she had no idea where she was, and she was coughing so much that her poor little chest must've felt like raw hamburger. On top of it all, she was legally blind, dehydrated, and she sobbed while her eyes burned from the dryness. She wasn't my patient, but when her light went off I'd checked on her and found her in a near-panic state. Luckily, all my patients were stable and sleeping, and I was able to sit with this lady and hold her hand while her nurse scampered around getting the things I asked for: a heated blanket for her chest, some warm broth, and some pain medication.
I must've sat there for half an hour, stroking her hand, talking with her, and then listening to her........turns out she used to be an LPN many years ago, but was fired when she started having seizures. As we talked, we started to laugh over some of the things we'd seen and done as nurses, and what was really special was watching that fearful little face glow into beauty and serenity as she drank the soothing broth and the deep, painful coughing spell ended. All this time she was holding onto my hand as though it were a lifeline, and by the time the pain meds kicked in, she was so calm that when I told her I needed to get back to my patients, she was able to let go.......but not before she'd kissed my hand and thanked me for being there with her.
I floated out of that room on Cloud Nine.......and when I got back to the nurses' station, I said to the assembled group: "Now THAT'S why I do what I do". There was a new grad there, and her eyes lit up as I told her about what had just happened.........I wanted her to know that these are the moments that make a career, the ones we remember long after they have passed, the ones we live on for weeks and months when we have a long stretch of those incredibly insane days when nothing goes right and it seems that all we get for our efforts is complaints from patients and nasty-grams from management.
Yes, that's why I love what I do, and why, long after I'm too old and used up to run the floors anymore, I will treasure the moments I've collected like colorful seashells, each one unique and beautiful in its own way.
Have a great day, everyone!

That's beautiful.
- Jun 17, '05 by marylyricQuote from UnewmeB4When my daughter decided to become a nurse, I suggested she work as an aide, first, to make sure that is what she wanted to do. I was so excited! I told someone this, and another nurse, swear to God, said, "I want better for my daughter!" This was in front of a patient. How sad. I replied(after picking my jaw off the floor) "What could be better than this? There are so many areas to work in, so many more options than so many fields? Where else to you get to go and play with people all day?"
The patient loved it...the nurse didn't.
My daughter had already been to one semester at college for teaching, and had worked over a year in day care, when she came to this decision.
That is why I told her, if she was REALLY serious, she should work on the Respiratory floor,the most difficult floor in the hospital, as I knew some of the nurses who worked there, and knew she would get trained properly.
"Well", says proud Mom, "It was like a duck to water. She graduates in May, and I have had the privilege of working with her when I float to that floor. She was indeed trained well. She gives wonderful patient care, and spends time talking with pts. I don't doubt she will be a credit to the profession."
Her floor has been going through some major crises, and she is not afraid to speak up in support of her co-workers who work. She knows how to write to the managers when things are not right. She knows that there is no piont in complaining if you are not going to address the problem with someone who can do something about it.
So, that is my story. Pass the LOVE of what you do to others. Encourage people to get into the profession.
Thanks so much for sharing. It is nice just to hear someone support the nursing profession to the point that they would suggest it to their daughter.
Thanks for the positive sound off. - Jun 26, '05 by mtw2400Quote from marylyricThanks for reminding me why I became a nurse! Loved the perfect shift story.beautiful
- Jun 26, '05 by live4todayQuote from mjlrn97Awwwww Marla! How sweet! Your post brought tears to my eyes, and put a smile in my heart. :kiss That is what nursing is all about to me, too.As tough as nursing can be, especially in the Med/Surg arena where we deal with some of the most challenging patients and situations imaginable, there is the occasional shift that reminds us of why we became nurses in the first place:
Yesterday was just such a shift. Coming on at 3 PM as usual, I was met by the day shift RN who told me, "You'll have a MUCH better day than yesterday".....which was great news, because the previous day hadn't been all that difficult, just busy.
Then I had my annual performance review, which was positively glowing.....yes, I've worked hard, but I didn't necessarily think anyone had noticed. I was wrong. Not one negative word was said about me by my peers, and management sees me as a "positive leader on the floor" with a "can-do" attitude. They want me as a preceptor/trainer, and they also want me to start giving in-services. Now, I knew the evaluation would be a good one, but I've never had one THAT good before, so I was pretty much walking on air as I started my rounds.
My five patients were stable, pleasant, and doing much better than they'd been the previous day, some of which was due to my good care (or so they told me
). I was busy, but not so busy that I couldn't help my co-worker who was drowning with her three patients and a new admit; I was also able to get an IV started on a patient who'd had all the ICU nurses poke her a couple of times each. This patient and I immediately became friends, and we chatted and joked and shared stories about our similarly-aged kids and home situations once we got her pain and nausea under control.
The capper, however, was the 80-something patient who'd been admitted from a local nursing home for pneumonia and woke up around 10 PM utterly confused and terrified.......she had no idea where she was, and she was coughing so much that her poor little chest must've felt like raw hamburger. On top of it all, she was legally blind, dehydrated, and she sobbed while her eyes burned from the dryness. She wasn't my patient, but when her light went off I'd checked on her and found her in a near-panic state. Luckily, all my patients were stable and sleeping, and I was able to sit with this lady and hold her hand while her nurse scampered around getting the things I asked for: a heated blanket for her chest, some warm broth, and some pain medication.
I must've sat there for half an hour, stroking her hand, talking with her, and then listening to her........turns out she used to be an LPN many years ago, but was fired when she started having seizures. As we talked, we started to laugh over some of the things we'd seen and done as nurses, and what was really special was watching that fearful little face glow into beauty and serenity as she drank the soothing broth and the deep, painful coughing spell ended. All this time she was holding onto my hand as though it were a lifeline, and by the time the pain meds kicked in, she was so calm that when I told her I needed to get back to my patients, she was able to let go.......but not before she'd kissed my hand and thanked me for being there with her.
I floated out of that room on Cloud Nine.......and when I got back to the nurses' station, I said to the assembled group: "Now THAT'S why I do what I do". There was a new grad there, and her eyes lit up as I told her about what had just happened.........I wanted her to know that these are the moments that make a career, the ones we remember long after they have passed, the ones we live on for weeks and months when we have a long stretch of those incredibly insane days when nothing goes right and it seems that all we get for our efforts is complaints from patients and nasty-grams from management.
Yes, that's why I love what I do, and why, long after I'm too old and used up to run the floors anymore, I will treasure the moments I've collected like colorful seashells, each one unique and beautiful in its own way.
Have a great day, everyone!
