It seems almost taboo to ever mention a time when we as nurses don't love our job. This article sums up why it is more than acceptable to not always love it, yet still be grateful to be doing it. Nursing is hard, yet we continue to show up each day. It's not a typical 9-5 and it has it's challenges, but the rewards, however small, can be enough to keep us in the game. It's important to respect our need to vent to each other so we can continue to give our all to our patients. Nurses Announcements Archive Article
My friends and I often get asked why we want to talk about work when we're not there. My answer is usually because I'm a nurse. Now, traditionally I'm supposed to say it's because I love my job, and often times that's true; but what about the other times? There's an interesting culture among nurses that we have to love our jobs all of the time. It's the precursor to every story, every venting session and the default answer whenever someone asks "how do you like it?". The immediate response has to be "I love my job, (insert rest of sentence), but I still love it". I Know that even putting these words to paper will cause an outcry that maybe I should choose another career. Is that really fair though? For once I am going to be honest and tell you why I love being a nurse, but not all the time.
This is a cardinal rule of nursing hammered in our heads since school. This means that no matter how busy the night gets, no matter how many units need to be hung, doctors we call, or hands we hold there will be times when I'm only as good as my flowsheet.
I would love to. Truly. There are times I have left and cried to my friends because I felt like I wasn't able to live up to this. I remember a particular night having a patient use the bedpan because I just didn't have 4 people to help me get him up in the middle of the night. My mother would have wanted to cry and I know that and it killed me. Or, when I have patients who are in their 90s and want nothing more than a glass of water, not thickened to the point of being jello, but real water if that were my mother I'd let her have it. When it's your mother however I can't.
Times when I am sad that when I come into to work to take care of them that they're still there. Not because I don't wish they would get better, but because I know they won't and I want them to find peace. I don't wish to come into work and poke needles into their arms and turn them every which way unless I truly believe it will help them.
There are patients we cannot save. There are days where you will sit on my unit with your family, I will step out of the room, take one look at your face and my heart will break. I may offer you water and tissues but I cannot mend your heart. I may have spent 12, 24, or 36 hours in your family member's room. They may have become my grandma, my mom, my friend for the week and I know there's nothing we can do. I may have just done compressions moved as fast as I could to hang blood I may have silently prayed that this time I'd find their pulse, but I lost.
Not when it's coming from where it comes out of you and me, not when it's diverted into a bag, and especially not when it's vomited (yes that happens). If you want me to tell you I love cleaning it, I just can't. What I can tell you is that I love that I can tell you that it's okay everybody does it, that I can try to make you feel dignified when you want to feel mortified, that I can cheer for your bowel movement like you scored a goal. I love that I can get you to the point where we're both laughing about it and you feel better.
There are times that I would love to hear every story from the time you were a child until now. Truly, if there were a a certification in patient chatting I would sign up yesterday. I love getting to know you and what you've done in your life. Unfortunately, there are times I have to cut you off mid story to run to my other patient, to answer my zone phone..Oh zone phones that'll be number 4..., or to help another nurse. The worst part for me is that you may be thinking your stories aren't important or that you're not my priority. The truth is that nothing could be further from the truth. I think about you from the moment I get there until long after I'm home, and probably after you're home too.
We have a love hate relationship. Before I was a nurse I was a unit secretary and let me tell you I get zone phones, but man are they annoying. Half the time when they ring I'm in a contact room or doing a sterile procedure or mid conversation with a patient. What I do love is when I sneak one to a patient's ear because while they can barely remember where they are they want to call their wife or husband and hear their kids. I could listen to that all day.
I hate this part. Don't you? The truth is we all make mistakes. Unfortunately my mistakes can have big consequences. Life and death consequences. Nurses need coffee to think just like any other person shuffling to work. We need sleep. We need to not have real life happening at home. Nurses like you know this is not how life works. Sometimes we're tired, we're stressed, we get one second of distraction like anyone else and mistakes are made. Some people make typos in a big presentation. Some people leave their boss on speakerphone when they meant to hit mute. Us? we can have med errors. People can get hurt. People we work our butts off to protect and care for. These mistakes haunt us forever. Trust me. I've made mistakes before, that luckily were harmless, and I still think about them everyday. So nurses be kind to each other when this happens.
Is she getting confused? that sounds like a good thing... Give me a second. I love my patients so much that when they hurt my heart hurts. When they pass away I cry on the drive home. We call each other to say 'hey I heard" and talk to each other for hours. It's your family and when we are at work we will comfort you. We will cut locks of hair for you to remember them by and stay with you as long as we can, but when we leave we lost someone. I worry about them constantly. I come into work hoping their name is still in MAK but they've gone to the floor. I hope that they're extubated, I hope that their pain is relieved, I hope that if I ever see them again it's because they want show us how much better they are. I high five and hug them when they move an extremity they weren't able to move the last hour. I am PROUD of them.
I worked my butt off in nursing school. I fell in love with trauma nursing during clinical and I was hooked. I went to the Surgical/ Neuro Science ICU straight out of school and I couldn't get enough. I would stay late just because I didn't want to leave. I loved every second. I hate that I don't always feel like that anymore, but I think it's important to recognize that it's okay to feel that way. We work stressful jobs. We have hard days. What I know I do and always will love is that I have the opportunity to be your nurse. Every time I hold your hand when it hurts or you're scared or you're grieving I feel so lucky to be able to do my job. When you tell me you never thought you'd get this far I will choke out the words "I'm so happy you did" and I will feel so thankful to have been a part of that journey. Every family member hug I get, every patient smile, every handhold, every word of encouragement from my coworkers are the reasons I may not always love my job, but I'll keep coming back for more!