Caring for others when your own personal world is falling apart is hard to do. Professionalism in all that we do may be out of reach when our hearts are breaking for something going on at home. "Suck it up" is easier said than done - at least in my experience. Here is how this nurse learned to keep on keeping on, in spite of my own personal home life crisis.
I had the weekend off, the first in a long time. My husband and I decided to ignore the world (the kids at their friends' homes for sleep overs) and binge on movies. Leaving my phone in the kitchen where we had made our dinner, we escaped to the back room with our dinner, drinks, and several movies. It wasn't until almost midnight when we returned to the kitchen to clean up our mess, and I noticed my phone was blinking. I had many missed phone calls and text messages. I dialed my sister-in-law - the last one to call - and the first words out of her mouth were, "Dad had a stroke."
Unfortunately, due to the fact that I had been drinking, and the fact that my parents live four hours away, I had to wait until morning to "rush" to his bedside. Finding my brothers and their wives waiting for me at the hospital, I pushed into his room and found my mom holding his hand. Of course, when mom saw me, she started crying all over again.
And there in the bed looking fragile and pale, lay my hero - my WWII Navy Vet who drove U-boats; my dad who once knelt down cradling my tear stained face and asked me, after my first fight in grade school, if I won; my counselor who listened to me cry when life didn't treat me "right". Fragile. Pale. He turned his head ever so slightly and held his hand out to me - the youngest and only daughter. I grabbed his hand and the strength and reserve that had kept me going until now rushed out in sobs.
This is not the first time, nor the last, that I have had to run to the hospital to see a family member with a medical emergency. Nor will it be the last time I have had to put aside my own personal angst in order to do my job.
How do we as nurses put aside our lives in order to care for those patients who are scared, frightened, anxious, and in pain? Do our own personal experiences make us better nurses? How do we go about providing care and assurance to our patients and their families without burdening them with ours?
As nurses, we focus on caring for the needs of others. We are taught in nursing school to show empathy and compassion, have professional boundaries (not discuss our personal lives and problems with our patients), and act in a professional manner at all times. So - HOW do we DO it???
I have found that I have to compartmentalize my life. When I walk in through the doors at work, my home life is no longer the compartment I am working in, that door is closed until I walk out of those doors at the end of the day. Likewise, when I walk out the doors at work, that is exactly where work stays - all of the drama, heartaches, craziness -inside those walls and I, after years of working on it, do not bring that home to my family.
I will say that is not always easy. For instance, one time I found out some particularly devastating news about a family member who was making choices that were destructive and shattering to my family. Knowing there is nothing that I could do about the situation, I had to return to work the next day, but my heart was breaking as I felt the weight of the world crushing me. Try as I might, I was losing my battle at work with keeping my tears in check - often ducking into the break room to take a deep breath, say a prayer, and wipe my face. I managed to do my job, but I didn't feel very effective. I decided to ask my charge nurse for a break and I called our hospital chaplain (who I adore and trust). She came immediately and listened to me have a mini-breakdown. After about 10 minutes of crying and blubbering, I felt better. I wiped away the tears for the last time, and went out stronger and more determined than ever to serve my patients. Once again, I was able to compartmentalize.
"Sucking it up" is not always easy. However, we are professionals. Our patients are the ones in crisis, and when we are at work, we MUST make them our number one priority. If we have a problem making it through the shift - do whatever it takes to make it right. From asking your manager/director for a few minutes to talk so you can vent, to possibly taking the day off if you absolutely cannot function in the professional capacity. We all need a personal day - and there is nothing wrong with that. If we - as a professional nurse - absolutely cannot do your job safely and keep your patient your number one priority - you probably should not be at work!
Nurses are a committed, tough, resilient, caring, loyal bunch - and we are able to cope with any number of situations. However, when it comes to a crisis in our own lives, it can sometimes throw us for a loop. Learning how to cope with our "stuff" is vital. Sometimes at work, I feel like that old poster of a duck on the water - all cool and collected above surface - but paddling like hell below the surface. I don't particularly think there is anything wrong with that. I am determined to provide every skill and all of my attention to my patient, and treat them exactly how I would have my family member treated in the same situation.
I have stuff to deal with, like every nurse out there. We all have a story to tell, a crisis to crawl through, and a hell we may be living in, at any given time in our career. Are we able to hide that under the surface in order to be professional? Do we know how to cope, or what strategies are available to us, to keep us from cracking under pressure?
Figuring out your strategy now can be crucial for future reference. You need to have a pool of information to draw upon so that one day, God forbid, you should have to go through trial by fire and have to provide care to a patient when you yourself feel like you could just curl up in a ball and cry. If you are a nurse who already has had to deal with a situation of tucking away your personal life in order to deal with your patient's crisis, please share your strategies!
New South Wales Nursing Association cites 10 things nurses should do in stressful situations. I think these tips are important enough to share and some can be used when our own life makes it hard to work:
Try to:
On the day my world seem to fall apart when I grabbed my father's hand after his stroke, I probably would have wanted to scream if his nurse came in and started telling me about her problems. Instead, she was professional and caring. She calmly provided information and made us all feel like my dad was getting the best care. She was an amazing nurse. I don't know if she had any issues in her own life, but if she did, she kept them to herself. She made my dad her number one priority. I appreciated that.
Reference
NSW Nurses' Association. (2006). Stress management for nurses. Retrieved from: https://www.health.nsw.gov.au/nursing/Publications/stress-mngt.pdf
Great article! It reflects how I feel about not bringing our personal lives to work. Sometimes things get real bad in our lives and we need to talk to friends and vent. However, we must leave it at the door for our patient's sake and for our care not to suffer. Well written and badly needed in our narcissistic society. Thank you!
This is a great article and I can truly relate to leaving the baggage at the door. I know that if I have a lot going on in my personal life that I am still able to function at work, something about walking in that hospital door re-focuses me. I remember talking with one of our end of life educators and she talked to us about taking a deep breath and leaving everything outside the room before entering it, and I try my best to make that my practice and I think my patient relationships/interactions benefit from it.
However, im wondering if you have any thoughts on dealing with the AT WORK stressors (ie: your patient in bed 1 is dumping, bed 2 has 9/10 chest pain, and bed 3 has sbp of 190 and is waiting to go to OR and they want YOU in the room now.) Certainly teamwork has a lot to do with getting through the day as a nurse, but any tips on keeping your head on straight when days like these hit hard?
However, im wondering if you have any thoughts on dealing with the AT WORK stressors (ie: your patient in bed 1 is dumping, bed 2 has 9/10 chest pain, and bed 3 has sbp of 190 and is waiting to go to OR and they want YOU in the room now.) Certainly teamwork has a lot to do with getting through the day as a nurse, but any tips on keeping your head on straight when days like these hit hard?
WOW, that would leave me super stressed out, that is for sure!
If your scenario were my actual day, I would definitely stick with my patient who is fixing to code. I would ask my teammate to get the pain meds for 9/10 pain and to watch him closely (anxiety vs MI?), and the SBP of 190 - get another RN to send him to the OR! So, that is my perfect world of having enough help! If I have a patient who is actually crashing, I will not leave their side until they are gone to ICU or I have the MD at his side.
On a side note, if this is an actual every day occurence for you, I would worry about keeping my license and the hospital not caring about how many critical patients you are working with! I know of one particular hospital that buries their nurses under 8-9 patients per shift, with a heavy workload for each patient. There is no way (that I can see) that care can be safely provided to those patients, and I would be afraid of something bad happening to one but I am unable to care for them because I am stuck in with another critical patient, and then there goes my license! I hope that is not what is happening to you!!
What tips do all of you other fantastic juggling nurses have?
OMG, I am a man and I could never get away with a "suck it up buttercup" attitude. I cannot tell you how many times I have had to cover for a woman who was crying in the breakroom for 30 minutes because she was 'angry". And oh how the women gather round.
I got fired once from a job because I was so angry I had to leave the floor for 30 minutes ( I handed over). I was justified and did the right thing by taking a time out.
Telling anyone to suck anything up is just horizontal violence and ignorance.
I SO appreciated this article...not only do I relate but it comes at just the right time (when I feel like all I'm doing is "sucking it up" in public and melting down in private!). I wish I could share this with some of my non-nursing friends who just don't understand what my job takes out of me (I'm not even in a hospital, but I work with special-needs children, many of whom are also in foster care or have CPS involvement and high medical needs).
I understand that some are offended by the phrasing of "suck it up" (although I personally kind of think--at least for myself--that's how pulling myself together after one of those meltdown cries in the bathroom kind of physically manifests....As if I'm sucking in all of my emotions and tears and anger and sadness and stowing them deep in my stomach to pull out later when I get home....maybe that's where the phrase comes from?) Phrasing aside, I think we can all agree that our own "stuff" can make it hard to do our job sometimes, and that it is hard to leave our own lives at the door....which I think this article expressed/explained VERY eloquently. And I thank the OP for that.
OMG, I am a man and I could never get away with a "suck it up buttercup" attitude. I cannot tell you how many times I have had to cover for a woman who was crying in the breakroom for 30 minutes because she was 'angry". And oh how the women gather round.I got fired once from a job because I was so angry I had to leave the floor for 30 minutes ( I handed over). I was justified and did the right thing by taking a time out.
Telling anyone to suck anything up is just horizontal violence and ignorance.
Not sure where anyone thought this article was about anyone telling anyone else to suck it up...if you read the intro: "Suck it up" is easier said than done - at least in my experience. Here is how this nurse learned to keep on keeping on, in spite of my own personal home life crisis.
Read it the way it was written....maybe you will recant the horizontal violence and ignorance statement....
tnbutterfly - Mary, BSN
83 Articles; 5,923 Posts
The OP clarified that these were words that were said to her or that she said to herself....not to anyone else including a co-worker or a patient.