this one is pretty dated, but here goes anyway...
when i told some people who had been friends with my parents when they were alive that i planned to quit my editing job and return to school to become a nurse, their comment was, "but aren't nurses loose
because of all the ...uh...parts they have to see?":uhoh3:
imagine my goddaughter when she was about two standing there with her hands on her hips looking absolutely totally defiant, and you have my exact reaction!
I work in an extremely busy 85+ bed Level IV Neonatal Unit. A friend said to me once: "You must have such a nice job. You can just sit and rock the babies all night.":clown:
Uh....yeah...sure...AFTER I help Dr. A put in a chest tube in Baby B... after I've done heelstick labs. on each of my assigned kids...after I finish up this blood transfusion...after I write down my baby's vital signs every hour b/c he's critical...after I've given my 18th oral med. of the shift...after I've spent an hour talking to a frightened mother and trying to calm her down...after I've signed a narcotic out, found a 2nd nurse to witness and verify it and co-sign my electronic chart; then go back to the Narcotics cart with her, so we can log the drug out and how much was wasted....then wake a sleeping preemie becuase he has to have an Xray....
Oh yeah; I have an easy, breezy, beautiful job!
dinah77, ADN
530 Posts
Mine was when I met a good friend of mine on the bus on the way to clinicals while in school and she was SHOCKED that they allow lowly nursing students to "work with real, live people"
Naw, we just come out of nursing school with nothing but textbook knowledge and yet can mysteriously do skills well.......
Probably due partially to the fact that her dad is a physician:uhoh3: