How I Fell in Love with Nursing

This is the story of how I fell in love with the nursing profession. It tells how I learned its real meaning. And how my life changed, from wanting to become an engineer, to becoming a licensed nurse. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Nursing was never really my cup of tea.

I never pictured myself wearing whites and a fancy little white cap. As a child, my dream was to become an engineer, a civil engineer. This manifested as I grew up being fond of drawing different, sometimes weird, structures and solving complicated math problems. Taking up nursing never even crossed my mind.

All of these changed when one day, as I was just about to take a scholarship exam in my dream university, my uncle told me that I rather take up nursing. I refused then and there.

What about my dream? My aspirations? But he reasoned that nurses are the most in demand abroad. And that if I should choose a career, I should choose one that would give me a better fortune, which as he said at that moment, was nursing.

I knew right then that there was nothing I could do. With the financial crisis my family is going through and the cost of college education in our country, I could never survive a year in the university without the help of my uncles and aunts. So as I said yes to my uncle, I felt my dreams shattered into tiny little pieces that I will never be able to pick up again. The next moment, I found myself enrolling in a nursing school.

"Why did you take up nursing?"

This was the question that our teachers threw at us during the first few weeks of my freshmen life. Some answered that it was like their calling. And yes, many others said that it was the most in demand job abroad. And when it was my turn to be asked, I was so confused that all I answered was a short, "Why not?"

At the middle of the first semester, I took up a nursing aptitude test which, as they say, measures a students inclination towards nursing. And if you get a low grade at that, you should start shifting to other courses. When the results came out sometime after, I scored a 99% percentile rank. I was puzzled. I never thought I was inclined to be a nurse. Could the test be inaccurate? Well, I soon forgot about it.

My third year was the turning point of my life. This is when I first wore my whites-my clinical uniform and my dainty little white cap. This is also when we took up major nursing subjects. And this is when I met my very first patient, Josie, the woman who changed everything I thought nursing was all about.

Josie(not her real name) was a patient in our affiliated hospital's ob ward. She was about to give birth to her first child. I was assigned to her. I took her vital signs, checked on her contractions, their durations, and frequencies, listening to her baby's fhb, and all that a 3rd year nursing student is expected to do. In other words, I took care of her.

As she was en route to the labor room, I was kinda nervous. I felt for her. It was a deep concern that grew throughout the short period of time that I took care of her.

Would the delivery be okay?

Would she be safe?

Would the baby be fine?

These are some of the thousand things that came rushing to my mind. And I could only pray.

The delivery turned out to be fine. The baby was a healthy little girl, and Josie was safe. I received them again in the ward. I attended to them both. All the time I thought that I was just doing my job, that it was automatic, that it is what I should do as a nurse. But all of these changed when Josie was about to be discharged.

before she entered the car that will bring her home, Josie took my hand and muttered a little thank you. I was taken aback. I did not expect it. Well, I was just doing my job. But as i was returning to the ward, I looked around. I saw the nurses taking care of the sick people around me. I saw them being so thoughtful and caring. I saw their concern. And as I look at them, I saw me.

As I reached the nursing station in my ward, I was a changed person. I knew then that I was not just doing my duty just because I had to, nut because of my genuine concern for people, especially for the sick. That, I consider, was my birth as a true nurse. And I knew, for I felt it, that there was no greater feeling that a nurse would have than a patient smiling back at you, saying thank you for the care that she has given.

Now, after many humps and bumps along the road, most of them financial, I'm already a licensed nurse. And when people ask me why I took this job, my only answer is, "I didn't pick my job, it picked me."

This is inspiring! I will read this everyday. Thank You

That was a lovely story thankyou for sharing - I got into nursing late as I never wanted to be a nurse now my only wish is that I had started sooner as I love what I do.

Hi Just read your little story as I went into nursing by pure chance, it happened whilst I was 19 and in a lost environment waitressing and did not know what career pathway to take, had done a secretarial course, was bored, oneday whilst waitressing a customer said" You would make a very good nurse", little did he know how he changed my life.

I arrived at the main training hospital the following day, knocked on the Matron's door and asked to sign on, I did the State Enrolled Nursing course, passed then went onn a gap year to the UK. ( I am from South Africa) worked another 4 yrs back home and then applied to nursing school 4 year diploma, was thrilled to get in as my grades were not good. It was hard work but I passed and have never stopped working as a nurse, I have now been working in the UK for nearly 8 years and am hoping to move to Canada. Yes your relatives were right, nursing will always provide work easpecially in these depressive years. It has been hard work and our salaries in South Africa and UK are very low, apparently much better in Canada and USA. Carry on nursing !!

thanks to all of you guys..your comments moved me to tears..i never thought that I would get this much appreciation..thank you all.thank you allnurses.com,kudos to you!you are a venue where people can touch each others lives..kudos to all nurses and to all those people who are working hard not only for themselves but for the people they love..long live us all!

Specializes in Harm Reduction/Public Health.

I have always felt that I should do something that I am passionate about my entire life. I always thought that I had a pretty good idea of what I wanted to do, but that did change many times. I have been fascinated with many care-related fields and one of my major passions is horticulture. Since I was very young, I always had a very maternal personality. Out of highschool I received a degree in Environmental Horticulture and worked in that field for a few years.

Towards the end of 2008 I one day woke up in the hospital in Seattle and had found out that I had been there for over a month in a coma. They told be that I had contracted Necrotizing fasciitis and that I almost had lost my whole leg, and very nearly my life on the day of Thanksgiving.

Now, I feel that when you know how bad things can get, you know what good is. One of the nurses said that I might be a good candidate for the nursing profession and ever since that day I found out that I have a strong affinity towards that. Being an aspiring nurse has been my life thus far. I am finishing prerequisites currently, and am planning on finishing a degree in Public Health at a local University before eventually entering an accelerated MSN Nurse Practitioner Program as well.

I am slowly but steadily achieving my goals, and it has been an absolute joy so far.

Specializes in Nursing Eduator.

It is a calling that many of us first ignore or don't even know exists!....Very inspiring story and you are right when you say..."Nursing chose you!" It is a fulfilling career! Thank you for the story!

It is a calling that many of us first ignore or don't even know exists!....Very inspiring story and you are right when you say..."Nursing chose you!" It is a fulfilling career! Thank you for the story!

thank you so much..your appreciation is a priceless reward for me..yes,nursing really did find a way to enter my life..now i'm praying for more future nurses to answer their calling so that we can see a lot more smiles in our patients..i hope my prayers come true..

Specializes in 3 mos Ortho, 1 year CICU.

*tear. Thanks, I needed that.

@hello-wannabe: which one?the article or the prayers?hehe..anyway,whatever it is,you're welcome..thanks for dropping by, too..ö

smile.pngsuch an inspiring article.hope i could be like you years from now.

we hve quite the sme story,but now i learn how to love my course.

i'm on my 4th yr ryt now.tc.

it is so flattering for you to say that you want to be like ME someday..thank you for seeing me as a good example..but I am no great person..i just had a story to tell and touching your life in this very little way is a blessing..be the best you can be!godbless..ö

Thank you so much for sharing your amazing journey. =) I loved when you described that jolt of joy when a patient thanks you for your care.