About That Avatar...

It seems to come in waves: new members joining AN and using their own names as user names and their photos as avatars. Although no one truly believes that the internet is anonymous anymore, there are some very good reasons not to be totally obvious, either. AN is a very good place to come to ask questions -- especially questions you don't want to run by the crusty old bats on your unit, or to vent about your professors or bosses, or fellow students or colleagues, your patients or your family. Being instantly recognizable is not a good thing. Nurses General Nursing Article

It seems that every year, there's a new bunch of AN members who use their own photo as an avatar. It's a dangerous practice. The internet isn't really as anonymous as we all like to think it is, but if you're using your own picture as an avatar, you might as well use your own name as well. (And no, Ruby Vee is not my real, live legal name.)

AN is a great place to come to have questions answered -- especially stupid questions that you don't want to run by the crusty old bats who work on your unit. It's a great place to come to vent ABOUT those crusty old bats, those clueless newbies or the manager from Hades. If I come here to vent about that witch of a patient's family member who drank from the sterile saline bottle, lied about it, and then blamed the nursing staff for the horrible infection her husband got and it turns out that she reads this board because she wants to be a nurse some day, I'd be mighty glad my picture isn't up there for everyone to see. If I mention that I've seen a patient with a really rare disease, and claim it was years ago in another state and the patient was the opposite gender -- all of my colleagues would know I was REALLY talking about that patient we have on the unit right now. And if I, inadvertently or otherwise, said something controversial, objectionable or just plain disagreeable, that post would be printed out and shoved under the door of the boss's office one night. At least I'd have plausible deniability since I'm *NOT* using my own name or my own face.

I know a lot of people think they'll NEVER say anything that someone else finds ignorant, abrasive, untrue or otherwise objectionable, and therefore they're safe using their picture as an avatar. I'm here to tell you, though, that you never know what someone else may find offensive. You never know what's going to rile someone up to the point of cyber-stalking, sharing your posts with your boss (or even the one about how your husband never forgets to walk the dog when he's the first person coming home after work, and never REMEMBERS to walk the dog when you're going to be the one to walk into the house first and find the mess . . . hate to find that one printed out on our kitchen table!). You just never know. And you cannot always stop yourself -- at least I can't -- when someone posts something incredibly ignorant -- from telling them how ignorant it is.

A colleague of mine posted on allnurses about what bullies and witches all of the preceptors in our unit are, how everyone she worked with was persecuting her and how she was only going to be on the job for the minimum time possible to get into CRNA school anyway. The avatar she used wasn't her picture, but was an avatar she used for other forums and some of her "friends" at work put two and two together . . . she found herself having a chat with our manager about her extreme unhappiness with her job. I'm told it didn't go well for her. An orientee we were having trouble with posted a whole lot of impassioned venting about her horrible preceptors, her terrible boss and how sick she was of her job. She stayed signed in to AN on the nurse's station computer when she went home in the morning. The Assistant Nurse Manager was not amused when she hopped on the computer and found the vent thread . . . nor was the DON amused when she was given the print-out. Had the orientee not used her own name and a photo of her dog/car/bicycle/boyfriend/whatever that she was very proud of an had shown to all and sundry, we would not have been able to prove who posted the vitriol.

Another colleague made a long, impassioned post about how nurses eat their young, and she knows that because she's been eaten. That post was nearly ten years ago, and she looks back on it now and cringes at how ignorant she was then. Unfortunately, at some point in the interim, she either used her picture as an avatar or posted too much information because now some of her co-workers know who she is on allnurses, and were teasing her about that post the other day. On the other hand, her orientees can never claim she's forgotten what it was like to be a brand new nurse. The evidence is out there!

Be safe, guys. Take a nice picture of a creative bumper sticker or T shirt, a flower, a mountain or your old cat (not the one all of your colleagues know because it's on your locker) and use that as an avatar instead!

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.

Although I have never posted a real picture of myself, I have been 'discovered' twice by people who knew me in real life.

One was a former coworker who figured out who I was circa 2007. She based it on the crazy details I posted about our former workplace and their practice of escorting nurses out to the parking lot once they were fired.

A former classmate figured out who I was in 2010. She based her conclusions on the details I posted about the disorganized LPN-to-RN bridge program we were both attending at the time.

So this is a reminder that Allnurses.com is the largest nursing website of its type, and astute readers can put two and two together to come up with you if your fingers are a bit too 'gabby' when typing out the details of your personal life. Beware and use caution when making revelations.

Thank you for posting this. While my avatar is just a generic one I chose from AN, my username is one that I use all the time. I just googled my previous username and so much about me came up. My pintrest account with my REAL NAME popped up. Needless to say, I changed my username right away.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.

I posted a reminder to be careful when posting the year before last:

https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-student/careful-when-posting-769713.html

Since we have added so many newer members since the reminder was posted, perhaps it is time for a refresher.

Specializes in PCCN.

Back to bagface avatar LOL

Specializes in Psych (25 years), Medical (15 years).

Ruby Vee, I respect your opinion and truly enjoy reading your posts, threads, and articles.

HOWEVER, I like living on The Edge.

(Oh, and BTW: As I've said before, my avatar is not a pic of my wife and me. The pic came with the wallet and it seems that the Guy I stole it from didn't carry much cash on him.)

I'm just happy when people use unique avatars, rather than the oft-used vanilla flavors. I often "recognize" posters by their avatars. When several posters in one forum use the same avatar, I get confused.

I got called out, so to speak, by a former co-worker, with the avatar I have now and the same user name. The post wasn't anything bad, breaking HIPAA or anything that could come back to haunt me. I just happened to be talking about something at work that I had asked on AN. She said was that you who posted on AN. I looked at her in a confused sort of way and said, what's 'allnurses'? She went on to tell me all about AN. I got away with it. Funny thing, I had been a member her long before she had. (although I never did figure out who SHE was on AN).

I've seen several people post with their full names who rant and rave about their current workplace, school, teachers, etc...not too smart. While I thought I was pretty anonymous with my user name and avatar, I was recognoized. Using your real name and/or photo...just not smart.

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
I'm just happy when people use unique avatars, rather than the oft-used vanilla flavors. I often "recognize" posters by their avatars. When several posters in one forum use the same avatar, I get confused.

​A snowboarding kitty is pretty unique; I always smile when I see your avatar.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
Good point, but I am quite curious about something: you had two people post on allnurses about how miserable they were in your unit...maybe you guys should figure out what's going on? Could there be some miscommunication or something that's upsetting orientees?

Oh, there was definitely a miscommunication:

"I didn't graduate the top of my class at Duke to clean up poop!"

"This job is RUINING my social life! I have to work THIS WEEKEND again! I just worked a weekend last month!"

"I show up every day. What more do they want?"

"How am I supposed to LEARN anything when my preceptor won't change her schedule to fit mine?"

"I shouldn't HAVE to clean up poop! I'm going to be a CRNA!"

Specializes in Hospice.
Oh, there was definitely a miscommunication:

"I didn't graduate the top of my class at Duke to clean up poop!"

"This job is RUINING my social life! I have to work THIS WEEKEND again! I just worked a weekend last month!"

"I show up every day. What more do they want?"

"How am I supposed to LEARN anything when my preceptor won't change her schedule to fit mine?"

"I shouldn't HAVE to clean up poop! I'm going to be a CRNA!"

Do NOT mess with Big Red!

Specializes in Emergency Room.

Great post! It's definitely something to think about especially since I use my real picture.

Even though I'm "young", I've never gotten why people put everything about their life on social media. I remember when I first started using facebook, it was so unusual to me that I could know what a coworker or classmate's car, boyfriend/girlfriend, cat, mom, vacation, wedding, baby shower, fight with best friend, drunken escapades, and on and on looked like without even knowing them personally. I can know about your favorite books, movies, sex life, etc by just looking at your facebook page. I don't get it and I never have. I think most people just don't think.