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After a wonderful 6 months maternity leave home with my girls, I'm headed back to the NICU and I need some encouragement. Help me remember WHY I love my job despite the horrendous hours.
OH, and my fridge died so 3/4 of my frozen milk supply was thawed:( and therefore ruined.
Need funny NICU moments to cheer me up! Thanks!
one nurse was telling me a story of how back in the day when the Neos did circumcisions, and they used a board to strap down the arms and legs to prevent moving. One little boy somehow wiggled his arms free of the straps and reached up and grabbed the Neo by the hair (and he only had a small ring of hair left) pull his head down and then proceeded to pee in the Neos mouth. I nearly wet my pants when I heard the story and if I had been there I am sure I would have.
one nurse was telling me a story of how back in the day when the Neos did circumcisions, and they used a board to strap down the arms and legs to prevent moving. One little boy somehow wiggled his arms free of the straps and reached up and grabbed the Neo by the hair (and he only had a small ring of hair left) pull his head down and then proceeded to pee in the Neos mouth. I nearly wet my pants when I heard the story and if I had been there I am sure I would have.
OMG, that is hysterical!
My very first primary is now 2.5 years old. He was a sick 27 weeker (spent time on HFOV, pressors, multiple transfusions, clinical NEC, impossible to get IV access on). I'm not sure how much 2.5 year olds are supposed to talk, but man, this kid seems smart! He carries on conversations, tells you all about what he did that day, what his older brother is up to, how much his baby sister cries. He is a funny little kid! I saw him last in September, before that in July. A few weeks ago his mom e-mailed me to tell me that everytime he sees someone with blond hair like mine, he says, "Mommy, is that Kate?"
How great is that??
I love all the points made! I especially love the two page letters thanking the doctors and RRTs, with a page and a half of it dedicated to thanking the nurses. Always makes me tear up, and makes it worth all the BS you had to put up with. Also makes you realize it does'nt go unnoticed.
If all of those wonderful points dont work, just think about all the cookies and treats that parents bring in because they can't think of any other way to say thank you, then to make our scrubs seem tighter lol.
I laugh when you have a like a 1000 g kiddo, and you get them tucked in nice and cuddly prone with all your proper developmental positioning. You look back maybe 10 or 15 minutes later and she has somehow climbed up out of your bendy bumper and got herself turned sideways (or upside down...) in the isolette. Head hard up against the door and toes tucked in between the platform and the side wall. And they're sound asleep but look like they're about to exit their little plastic house. And you're oh so glad the doors latch tight on your isolette. They may look a little scrawny but they are strong little buggers!
The grandfather of my late primary just sent a letter to the unit and the VP of nursing praising all us primaries - said we were remarkable women who exemplified everything that nurses could be at their best. I cried, but in a good way. :)
That is really nice! It always hits me in a strange way when families who have lost a baby have nothing but praise and thanks for the nurses. At a time when they should be grieving and thinking of themselves and their family, they think of us. What an awesome job we have.
mgalloLPN
172 Posts
Thank you all for sharing these.