I Made It

One of my earliest memories as a child was my mother telling me that I was prettier than my sister because I had the sweetest of smiles. I believed I was really very charming and I could say that my personality was oozing with confidence back then because I was the only one in my kindergarten class with a white and intact set of milk teeth. As years went by, I slowly became the timid, introvert pupil in our school. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I got so self-conscious while growing up because my perfect smile was replaced by large, corn kernel-looking discolored teeth! Ah, I thought, I had to do something to reverse whatever curse was cast upon my teeth. I dreamed of becoming a dentist.

After many years, still holding on to my dream of earning a degree in dentistry, I motivated myself to survive high school so I can go to the city for college. Little did I know at that time, that my plan was very different from the one that I was made to fulfill.

That summer after high school graduation, when my 80-year old grandma arrived from abroad (where she lived for over 15 years with my aunt), was the turning point. She was frail and obviously need a great deal of nursing care. She had a number of diseases along with different complications like hypertension, dysarthria (related to a previous stroke), and obstructive sleep apnea. My mom, being the youngest among her siblings, was tasked to care for her. I saw how challenging her responsibilities were and I admired how graceful and systematic she performed each and every bed bath and diaper change knowing that she didn't even have any caregiving training at all! All was purely done as to how she has done it to us when we were little. With my gestures of trying to offer help, mom would say, "grandma needs you to hold her on the other side of the bed so she won't fall, and you are to share her happy memories of how you've been while she's away" thus, was my role: to keep grandma safe, happy, and alert. Never did I notice that as I admire my mom do her morning routines with grandma, I was being inspired to be like her when it will be my turn to take care of her in the future. Suddenly, I seemed to have forgotten how yellow my teeth are and how such a flaw made me feel about myself; I seemed to no longer care if my sister is prettier; nor even if I could still I dream of flashing a perfect white smile to the cutest guy in a campus. I just knew right then that no matter how I look, I got to be the best nurse my mom, grandma, and my family would ever have in their whole lives. (I even have had a silly thought that if I'm going to wear a white nurse's uniform, perhaps my face would glow under the light, and so my teeth would be whiter in the mirror). Come 1997, with the help of my supportive parents and very proud grandma, I took the road less taken (during the time when employment rate in the Philippines among qualified nurses was at the abyss).

How could I be in this course? Why did I enjoy attending the nursing101 class of miss t (for terrorist)? Perhaps, I thought, I was really born to become a nurse, it was just because I got so overwhelmed with frustrations about my imperfections and that I was so selfish not to notice life's clues. After deciding that I wanted to pursue nursing, I realized I was on the right path. My determination to love and finish nursing education peaked when I got to experience my first normal spontaneous delivery assist. I knew as soon as I hand-over that newborn to his teary-eyed father by the door that this is my calling.

As I pursued nursing, I discovered that all the learning in fundamentals would only have meaning as they are applied in practice. As I became a registered nurse, I discovered that those learning are meaningless if the heart is empty and if it is only the brain that dictates what I should do. As I became a staff nurse in an adult care section of a tertiary hospital, I discovered that every learning experience is a speck of sand that gets into an oyster that will soon become a lustrous sphere of pearl. Every encounter with different clients and their families are grains of sand, and will just remain as such if I won't be able to pick something good and worthwhile out of every encounter while doing what is expected of me.

Now, as I struggle through post-graduate study, I discovered that the great personalities behind the profession of nursing still speak of what they taught to our foremothers long before I become a nurse. They are not meant to be silenced under piles of nursing textbooks in college. As I use the nursing process, as I preserve the dignity of my profession, as I accept my limitations as a nurse while honoring the expertise of other allied health professionals, as I respect the dignity of my patients, as the thirst for education lingers in me, and as nursing becomes part of who I am, I believe I am doing my best to live by the teachings of these great theorists to whom I owe my pride as a nurse from. And even should mold and termites consume all the pages of their works in those books, their legacy lives on in each and every nurse who considers nursing as a selfless giving of oneself, a vocation.

Grandma died a year before I finished college, but I was able to apply what I learned from school and be of significant help to my mother especially in taking turns during weekends when grandma was slowly slipping from life to death. She died peacefully and without decubitus ulcers.

While I was preparing for hospital duty, already in my white clinical uniform, mom looked on in the mirror and said to me that she was no longer afraid to grow old and get weak because she has a daughter who will later be in-charge for her and dad. I got even more inspired to go on.

And as for my teeth, well, they remained discolored but I was able to take care of them that for over 20 years, I still have a complete set of teeth. I do not mind grinning with these yellow teeth for if I should have been a dentist, I wouldn't have realized how wonderful it is to become a nurse and I wouldn't be this privileged of touching and making a difference in the lives of my clients. Besides, in no time I can afford to have my teeth bleached (with state-of-the-art technology), it will just really take some time. I know my worth as a person, as a nurse, isn't in my smile but in the smiles of my ailing patients who are pleased that I have become a blessing for them.

This has been my personal journey and how I made it through.

This is my calling.

For every inspiration you've experienced to bring your life to your moment, you have now inspired others. We need more nurses in this world, like you, who are heart-driven and compassionate by nature.

1 Votes
Specializes in psychiatric, UR analyst, fraud, DME,MedB.
cys02195 said:
This article of your life and family are perfect and brings back memories of my struggles in nursing school. It is very rewarding when you finally accomplish something that you have worked so hard for. Congratulations on your success and sorry about your grandmother. I also lost my mom in May 2009. She too was not present when I received my RN degree but I know she would have been very proud.

Thank you for your story.

Lots of deserving kudos to you ladies. The story is warm and feels good like sitting by the fireplace sipping a hot spicy apple cider or a steaming cup of chocolate ! Congratulations for your endeavors and sacrifices and therefore success in wherever where you want to be in this profession! ❤️

1 Votes

This is realy inspiring to me. My husband has been gone for almost three weeks for basic training in the Coast Guard and i won't be able to go and see him because his graduation is the the Friday before my comprehensive final. And I am in my first year of my ADN degree and it is tough. But if you can do it then so can the rest of us if we believe that it is was we are supposed to do!

1 Votes

tatara,

I have gotten back up and have asked to be placed back on the list for clinicals fall 2010. I am gona do this and I thank you for your encouragement..

wasanursingstudent will be a successful nursing student...

Thankyou!:yeah:

1 Votes

Thank you for sharing a part of your life~

?

1 Votes
Specializes in Medical/Communicable Ward.

you have such a wonderful life story. thank you for the inspiration and for sharing.

1 Votes

Great Story!

1 Votes

Thanks for posting!!! I enjoyed reading it.

1 Votes

After reading message after message of nurses complaining this is really refreshing to read. Thanks.

1 Votes

Thank you so much for your post dated October, 2009, about your experience in nursing school. I too was in a nursing program, an accelerated two-year RN program, and dropped one month prior to completing third semester due to being psychologically and physically exhausted not to mention having gained thirty pounds from stress eating (ha, ha, the instructors warned us at the beginning of the program this could happen).

In the meantime, I was fortunate to be accepted in an Occupational Therapy Assistant program and have now successfully completed two of four semesters. On January 6th, I am scheduled to take a competency exam to return to the RN program in third semester; however, it has been one year since dropping the RN program and reviewing the information is quite overwhelming. I keep telling myself take it one section at a time. However, the truth is, I don't know if I can do it. The fear of defeat. Yikes. And then on top of the material, I have the reality of facing our program's instructors which mirror drill sargeants in the U.S. Marine Corp. Is this normal behavior for most nursing instructors? Anyway, I just finished reading the article on allnurses.com about what it takes to be a nursing educator and it stated, "Sensitivity to others' needs: A successful teacher is empathetic, compassionate, and genuinely caring.

Enjoy interacting with students: Take the time to smile, laugh, and savor the magic moments of teaching!" Unfortunately, that has not been my experience with nursing instructors at my college, and I do not know if I feel like dealing with their rude, unencouraging behaviors anymore. Whine, whine, whine, I know . . . I guess I either want to fulfill my dream of becoming a peds oncology RN or I don't. The choice is mine.

Best wishes to you with your studies, and thanks everyone for letting me vent a little ?

Happy Holidays to all! ❤️

1 Votes
one of my earliest memories as a child was my mother telling me that i was prettier than my sister because i had the sweetest of smiles. i believed i was really very charming and i could say that my personality was oozing with confidence back then, because i was the only one in my kindergarten class with white and intact set of milk teeth. as years went by, i slowly became the timid, introvert pupil in our school. i got so self-conscious while growing up because my perfect smile was replaced by large, corn kernel-looking discolored teeth! ah, i thought, i had to do something to reverse whatever curse was casted upon my teeth. i dreamed of becoming a dentist.

after many years, still holding on to my dream of earning a degree in dentistry, i motivated myself to survive high school so i can go to the city for college. little did i know at that time, that my plan was very different from the one that i was made to fulfill.

that summer after high school graduation, when my 80-year old grandma arrived from abroad (where she lived for over 15 years with my aunt), was the turning point. she was frail and obviously needing a great deal of nursing care. she had a number of diseases along with different complications like hypertension, dysarthria (related to a previous stroke), and obstructive sleep apnea. my mom, being the youngest among her siblings, was tasked to care for her. i saw how challenging her responsibilities were and i admired how graceful and systematic she performed each and every bed bath and diaper change knowing that she didn't even have any care-giving training at all! all was purely done as how she have done it to us when we were little. with my gestures of trying to offer help, mom would say, "grandma needs you to hold her on the other side of the bed so she won't fall, and you are to share her happy memories of how you've been while she's away" thus, was my role: to keep grandma safe, happy, and alert. never did i notice that as i admire my mom do her morning routines with grandma, i was being inspired to be like her when it will be my turn to take care of her in the future. suddenly, i seemed to have forgotten how yellow my teeth are and how such a flaw made me feel about myself; i seemed to no longer care if my sister is prettier; nor even if i could still i dream of flashing a perfect white smile to the cutest guy in campus. i just knew right then that no matter how i look, i got to be the best nurse my mom, grandma, and my family would ever have in their whole lives. (i even have had a silly thought that if i'm going to wear a white nurse's uniform, perhaps my face would glow under the light, and so my teeth would be whiter in the mirror). come 1997, with the help of my supportive parents and very proud grandma, i took the road less taken (during the time when employment rate in the philippines among qualified nurses was at the abyss).

how could i be in this course? why did i enjoy attending the nursing101 class of miss t (for terrorist)? perhaps, i thought, i was really born to become a nurse, it was just because i got so overwhelmed with frustrations about my imperfections and that i was so selfish not to notice life's clues. after deciding that i wanted to pursue nursing, i realized i was on the right path. my determination to love and finish nursing education peaked when i got to experience my first normal spontaneous delivery assist. i knew as soon as i hand-over that newborn to his teary-eyed father by the door that this is my calling.

as i pursued nursing, i discovered that all the learning in fundamentals would only have meaning as they are applied in practice. as i became a registered nurse, i discovered that those learning are meaningless if the heart is empty and if it is only the brain that dictates what i should do. as i became a staff nurse in an adult care section of a tertiary hospital, i discovered that every learning experience is a speck of sand that gets into an oyster that will soon become a lustrous sphere of pearl. every encounter with different clients and their families are grains of sand, and will just remain as such if i won't be able to pick something good and worthwhile out of every encounter while doing what is expected of me.

now, as i struggle through post-graduate study, i discovered that the great personalities behind the profession of nursing still speak of what they taught to our foremothers long before i become a nurse. they are not meant to be silenced under piles of nursing textbooks in college. as i use the nursing process, as i preserve the dignity of my profession, as i accept my limitations as a nurse while honoring the expertise of other allied health professionals, as i respect the dignity of my patients, as the thirst for education lingers in me, and as nursing becomes part of who i am, i believe i am doing my best to live by the teachings of these great theorists to whom i owe my pride as a nurse from. and even should molds and termites consume all the pages of their works in those books, their legacy lives on in each and every nurse who considers nursing as a selfless giving of one self, a vocation.

grandma died a year before i finished college, but i was able to apply what i learned from school and be of significant help to my mother especially in taking turns during weekends when grandma was slowly slipping from life to death. she died peacefully and without decubitus ulcers.

while i was preparing for hospital duty, already in my white clinical uniform, mom looked on in the mirror and said to me that she was no longer afraid to grow old and get weak because she has a daughter who will later be in-charge for her and dad. i got even more inspired to go on.

and as for my teeth, well, they remained discolored but i was able to take care of them that for over 20 years, i still have a complete set of teeth. i do not mind grinning with these yellow teeth for if i should have been a dentist, i wouldn't have realized how wonderful it is to become a nurse and i wouldn't be this privileged of touching and making a difference in the lives of my clients. besides, in no time i can afford to have my teeth bleached (with state-of-the-art technology), it will just really take some time. i know my worth as a person , as a nurse, isn't in my smile but in the smiles of my ailing patients who are pleased that i have become a blessing for them.

this has been my personal journey and how i made it through.

this is my calling.

i am in tears reading this. i feel the same way about nursing. you have really touched me with thos post

Specializes in LTC, Med Acute, Management, QA.

Thank you for the post, it was so inspiring, and it reminds me of why I need to continue pursuing my dream.