All nurses have similar journeys as they advance from self-doubting neophytes to seasoned, self-assured nurses. Their stories are similar; yet different. Using the analogy of the changing style of one’s nursing shoes, the author portrays the professional maturing of nurses, career challenges, and current nursing threats like COVID-19. Intertwined within the narrative is advice for growth, and self-care recommendations for maintaining a professional balance.
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Nursing is a good profession. However, it doesn't fit everyone. Once you become a nurse, you are a nurse for ever. Whatever challenges you meet in and out of your professional life, will make you evolve into a better person. I studied, lived and worked in Africa, Asia, and now in Canada..., and I realize that I have to learn all of my life, and I have to love and appreciate myself with what I have done and what I am doing. Learning, challenges in nursing nursing never end. However, I feel lucky that I was called to be a nurse. I now have a doctorate degree in Public Health, but this degree is a complement to my nursing education. If you are a nurse, be proud nd happy of your profession. You are lucky and blessed. Remember, even if you quit or retire, once you become a nurse, you are a nurse forever, God has called you for this purpose. BE HAPPY AND PROUD OF YOUR PROFESSION!
Samuel Umereweneza, DrPH, MSN, BSN, RN
I nursing and public health researcher and writer. Please, if you have some good ideas about nursing and public health health, communicate with me and work with me. This is my email: [email protected]
I have question for every nurse. Are now scared of COVID-19 pandemic? Does it help you to hate your profession? Are still facing bullies and abuses in your daily life as a nurse? If you do, how do you cope up with the situation? Do you have durable solutions for those endless struggles?
Advanced Merry Christmas and Happy New Year 2021.
How have you evolved as a Nurse throughout the years?
Personally I happened to love nursing than ever before. There are many challenges in nursing profession that take new shape as years pass by especially now facing COVID-19 pandemic; but the stronger the challenges, the stronger person I become! I cherish my profession as a nurse, and have no regret for spending many years, and a lot of money to study nursing. I have to focus on the positive side of nursing, and not on the negative side. There are many rewards associated with being a nurse, which do not have anything to do with money. I love my profession.
In your words I can hear your passion and pride in the nurse you have "evolved" into over the years. Sounds like you have some noteworthy accomplishments. I agree, nursing becomes a part of your life. One directly impacts the other. The key is learning to balance both in harmony. And "yes", I agree, focus on the positives of the profession.
Best wishes in your public health research. Hopefully forum members will offer helpful insight into your COVID questions.
Hi bpav,
Thank you very much for reading my message and for replying. I can see very well in your profile that you taught nursing on both undergraduate and graduate level, and you have many achievements...not only degrees but also academic titles.
I believe you are a female or whatever because at least my name will show you right away that I am male. This doesn't matter though. What I want to say is that in many instances I found myself isolated as male student nurse, or as a male nursing instructor; something you never encountered in your life as a nurse. That is one of the challenges I met, but as I said, it did not discourage me from loving my profession. In fact, many people asked me: "Your male. Why did you choose to study nursing and not medicine? You may have met may challenges but those did not discourage you anyway.
In this word, there are good and bad things. In every profession, there are challenges to face in daily life. As long as we live, we live with challenges which include difficult students, difficult fellow-lecturers or administrators, difficult patients, immature nurses, and difficult family members. However, from every person we meet on the way, we should try to look for a sliver lining, which is the positive side. To me, that is really a balance, and a good spice of nursing profession.
Did you meet some challenges in your professional life, that we can learn from you bpav? or life has always been a bed of roses. If so, please tell me the secret! I guess, you are a big dictionary of experiences that we can learn from...
Has nursing always been "a bed of roses"? Surely not. Yes, I have met professional challenges that at times I could work through, but other times I realized the best option was to change direction or course. I believe the answer is to not respond hastily, but to think the situation through. What would be the pros and cons? What fits best with my future ideals and planned direction? What could I live with, what could my family live with....?
In the "Evolving" article I included self-help or survival suggestions I think are imperative to help one cope with the ups and downs of the profession.
Sometimes in situations such as COVID, I think time is our best option. Sometimes we as nurses just have to persist, rise up to the every day challenges, be innovate, be flexible and remember time will bring change (hopefully for the positive). In time these current challenges will be our history. And, hopefully, someday others will learn from our history, our time.
Hi bpav,
I have learned very important lessons from your passage on "Evolving", and it inspired me very much. If our profession could have been a bed of roses for you, it could have been a surprise, and I would really learn your secrets. Even then, I learned from you how you survived and coped with all the challenges you met on the way. I did many researches on stress of nursing students, and I had intensive readings on stress of nurses; even now and then, I found out that nursing profession is one of the most stressful professions, and thinking of "Fight or Flight" of Abraham Maslow, many nurses and some times nursing students opt to quit and choose another direction and then others choose to continue to fight and face those challenges.
I strongly agree with you about different strategies such as being innovative, flexible, self-help and surviving suggestions. I did not read those surviving suggestions; but you are brave because you survived. One of the strategies I used is to change a little bit direction by taking my PhD in public health, and I realized that the combination of nursing and public health made me more confident and opened more options such as teaching in nursing or in public health, and being more on the teaching side than on the bed side. As a bedside nurse, I experienced a higher level of stress compared to being a nursing or public health instructor. However, even if took up public health, I still love nursing profession even more than public health, and I takes public health to help me excel in nursing and decrease my stress level, and it really does.
I am afraid to be too demanding if could ask you for the self-help techniques or surviving suggestions, especially in this difficult times when we are facing this deadly COVID-19 Pandemic that has taken many lives of our fellow nurses and other fellow health care providers.
Your response related to how you coped with nursing by combining a public health degree is well stated. I for one strongly believe in interdisciplinary practice. We can learn a wealth of information from our healthcare colleagues. Instead of being threaten by one another we should embrace each others expertise.
As for my best survival strategies, mine would be writing. The other is talking to and collaborating with colleagues. Working together as a team has gotten myself and my unit friends through some difficult times. Just as we shared the challenges we also shared many laughs together, both at work and outside of work. Nursing friends are important. They get it - because they have been there.
PositiveEnergy, MSN, PhD, RN, APN
1 Article; 30 Posts
“Hello, my name is Corey I’m your student nurse for the day.”
Remember how unnerved you felt the first time uttering those words to a patient? Or, how you once peered longingly at the “floor nurses” who waltzed from room to room with such confidence, administering care that seemed so complex, mentally praying someday to be as poised, calm, and assured? For some, those days might seem a gazillion years ago if you are a seasoned nurse, or like yesterday if you are still a novice, just beginning your career; a nurse (or student) with yet many firsts ahead.
First experiences will forever remain embedded in the nadirs of your mind, like how your hands trembled as you filled the syringe with pain medication to administer your FIRST intramuscular injection! Or, the mental image of this same experience with your clinical instructor peering over your shoulder, watching your every move as you drew up the medication and injected your patient. Scary times, but thank goodness the shot was a success, and the competency signed off. Absolutely, this was a career milestone worthy of a high-five and a happy dance!
On that first day, despite quivering lips and the knot in your stomach you managed to articulate the introductory “hello”. An acknowledgment meant to break the ice and allow you to assume “patient care”. Surprisingly at the end of the day, despite your initial butterflies and feeling a bit overwhelmed, you felt victorious. Not because providing basic care was any grandiose accomplishment, but now you connected with the profession and knew this was where you belonged. You stood steadfast, keeping your shoes planted where they needed to be – ready to meet the challenges ahead.
Recalling such first experiences triggers my own thoughts of the many uphill steps I have taken along my nursing path. Likewise, the reference of steps makes me think of my nursing shoes. For me and I believe for many, our nursing shoes could convey our stories. How as we stride along in our daily routines, we gain experience and new knowledge. Over time, and between good days and bad days we climb the stepladder from rookie to expert. Then, mostly without being consciously aware, we become those seasoned nurses who walk with confidence and possess the intuitive wisdom to immediately size up clinical situations.
Mentioning nursing shoes moves me to share a piece I previously journaled, while recollecting the steps of my own journey. My account, Nursing Shoes, is an evolving tribute, reflecting my growth from a neophyte to a mature, veteran nurse. Today, I would not be the nurse and person I am if I had worn only one style of nursing shoes, or if I failed to change into new, more comfortable shoes when the fit no longer felt right.
As you track my footsteps, I ask you to read between the lines. You will hear emotions reflecting insecurity and self-doubt typically experienced in the early stages of one’s career. However, with maturity, self-confidence, mindfulness, and real grit one’s career can evolve into a rewarding, profitable, and memorable experience. You too, will wear several different pairs of shoes along the way. Some will start out feeling comfortable and just right, but in time begin to feel flawed and misshaped. There will be times you marvel at the shine and newness of your shoes, and other days when you look down and wonder when your shoes started looking so blemished and gray. But hopefully, there will be loads of days when you celebrate the spry bounce and agile step your shoes allow you to take.
I have been a nurse for many years, climbed many steps (and “yes” fallen backwards a time or two), held various roles, and worn a number of different style shoes. Before I tell you my Nursing Shoes story, I will answer the question commonly asked of seasoned nurses like myself. That being, “What wisdoms do you have to share with nurses just starting their careers, and for those nurses feeling overwhelmed with the demands of the profession (probable all nurses at some time or another)?” Here are some approaches I recommend to keep your shoes feeling balanced and to maintain a steady step.
Advice
Now that I have offered some of my general survival recommendations, read on because within my Nursing Shoes musings you will find other embedded lessons and professional wisdoms.
Nursing Shoes
Ah, my dear nursing shoes. They have been with me every step of the way as I have grown from novice to expert. Just as I have changed so has the style and comfort of my shoes. My original shoes were the traditional snug fitting, highly polished white leather nursing shoes that hugged one’s foot. They kept my foot secure and in place. They prevented me from slipping and falling with their soft, almost flat, non-conductive copper-colored rubber soles. Their style truly mirrored me as the nurse I was at the time. I wore this style as a student and a new RN. At the time, I did little thinking outside the box, I adhered to the rules and regulations learned in nursing school, and intentionally conformed to the practices of the other nurses I observed. I backed up my actions by the book and did nothing out of the ordinary. The feel of my shoes mirrored my inner fear of making a mistake, or of being different. All my actions were housed in the novelty of being a new graduate.
After going through several of these traditional shoes, I began to wear shoes of softer white leather that gave around the contour of my feet. My new style was more contemporary. Now I preferred loosely fitting, white leather clogs with closed heels (open heels were not permitted for safety reasons). The softer grip allowed my foot freedom, but the fit was not so loose that my step would wobble and cause me to fall. My shoes were me. They were relaxed, accurately reflecting a nurse with newfound confidence. As a maturing nurse, I felt less inhibited in sharing ideas with supervisors and colleagues. I was advancing, leaving the novice behind, and moving towards the more expert-thinking nurse, but I was not quite there yet. I still had a few more changes of shoes.
My next and most preferred shoes would be chic ones. They offered me the ultimate support, contoured to my feet, and allowed me to move with grace. These were the white nursing shoes designed with the latest foot technology to provide ultimate comfort and a free-spirited step. For some, and even me, this was in the form of a white canvas or white leather sneaker fabricated specifically for the active nurse in mind. In this style, as I walked in my supremely soft and comfortable shoes (my white leather sneakers) my step was secure. I felt sure-footed and confident in how balanced I felt. As I progressed, I occasionally stopped, cleaned the scuffmarks off, and smiled as I continued down my nursing path.
Later, in my career the clog style-nursing shoe became popular once again. Only this new shoe was vibrantly different. Now these clog shoes were a multitude of colors, rather than predominantly white. For me these shoes signified the essence of nursing. No longer did I see nursing solely through white lens, but now I saw whirls of different colors intermingled throughout. These new brushes of colors epitomized the aesthetic, multi-dimensional, and multi-cultural aspects of care.
The hodge-podge of colors in the fabric of my shoes signified the diversity, deeper philosophical understanding, and phenomenology of human nature I came to appreciate. I saw my own newfound wisdoms reflected in these colors. In the palette of my shoes I saw: Tints of indigo that splendidly exemplified my now advanced level of nursing intuition and critical thinking. Spats of yellow intermingled with the luster of blue denoted the peace I felt in knowing I possessed a deeper understanding of my profession, and of who I was as a nurse. Splashes of orange symbolized optimism, which I learned was essential to bequeath. Gleams of red denoted my passion that all nurses tell their stories. The glimmer of purple, my most favorite shading, I believed represented imagination, a vital attribute. Collectively for me, these colors signify the hues of our profession as we adjust, redefine, and invent new and creative ways to handle healthcare challenges.
Most recently as I contemplated retiring my colorful shoes and storing them amongst the dust bunnies in my closet, our world, and our profession turned upside down with the tsunami, COVID-19. Now some frontline nurses shield their shoes with standard hospital-grade, blue foot covers. Coverings clad by frontline nurses to complete their ensemble of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). Protective layers worn from head to toe with the hopes of safeguarding others and themselves from corona hitchhikers. Sadly, despite these protective efforts, this horrific COVID wave has taken the lives of nurses. Because of this threat to nurses, and to all of mankind, this virus can be considered one of nursing’s most monumental challenges.
With the mounting COVID stress there are times now, especially after a stent of caring for COVID patients when one’s feet ache, a mere extension of a heavy heart. Whether coming or going to work, one’s shoes feel lined with lead. A heaviness that changes the normal Spring in one’s step to a slow and weary pace. Our nurses are tired, but everyday continue to put on their shoes and maintain the pandemic march. I think about how our nurses need something special to come along (vaccine) so they can put aside those heavy, uncomfortable shoes and once again strut full-stride ahead.
When I look down and see blue covered shoes, I think of the ocean and its glimmering waters. An intriguing mental image that gives me hope. In this sphere of nature, I see something never stagnant, always changing, and forever creating a new tapestry of life. This is why I have hope that change is ahead, just on the horizon as we ride the waves of this unprecedented pandemic. At times the waves feel like they are mounting, quite over our heads. But countless waves have risen before, and eventually folded into the sparkling waters of the shore. This predictable rhythm of the wading ocean is what gives me hope, that COVID too will recede like the ebbing ocean tide. Though we are experiencing rough waters at this time, a vaccine will be developed and the colossal waves will break. Then once again, nurses, their families, and mankind will advance forward with sure-footed steps.
Step, Step…Breathe (SSB)
Corey