Thank you....all of you

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I posted this story in an unrelated thread earlier. I really want to say this directly to each of you who puts your heart and soul into taking care of your patients, especially if you are feeling burned out, used up, worn down, cynical or frustrated in general at work.

Thank you. From the bottom of my heart. What you do matters. In most cases, your efforts matter far more than you'll ever know because few people bother to tell you how important what you do is.

I am speaking from personal experience on the other side of the bedrails here. In April of 2000, I was hit by a very sudden and very acute case of Guillain-Barre Syndrome. Less than 24 hours from the first signs of numbness in my hands and feet, I was paralyzed completely and lying in an ICU bed with a ventilator at the ready next to me. I couldn't move anything below my neck for the first eight weeks. I escaped the vent, but had Q2 breathing treatments around the clock for nearly six weeks. I experienced patient care up close and personal in the ER, the ICU (two weeks), med-surge floor (four weeks) and skilled nursing/inpatient rehab (eight weeks).

I cannot begin to describe the impact that every person - and the attitude they brought with them - who came through my hospital door, whether they were a doctor, a nurse, a tech/CNA, RT, PT, OT, housekeeping, whatever, had on my mental and emotional well-being, which then impacted my will to recover physically.

I was 30 years old. With a ten-month old baby I couldn't hug or even hold. I was a very independent and busy person with a great nonprofit job and a lot of community involvement - and all of a sudden I couldn't do a damn thing for myself.

I wasn't a difficult patient. I never wanted to inconvenience anyone, so I rarely called the nurses station (which I had to do by blowing on a straw-like attachment to the bed, since I couldn't move my arms). That said, I couldn't feed myself. I couldn't turn in bed. When my period came, I couldn't clean myself up. Hell, the first couple of months, I had no idea when my bowels moved. The nurses and techs/CNAs who were gracious about cleaning me up will never be forgotten. Neither will those who rolled their eyes, made faces, muttered nasty comments under their breath. There but for the grace of God go them....I had no idea I would wake up paralyzed one day. None of us do.

The Golden Rule ought to be taped to the front of every patient chart and tacked to every breakroom bulletin board and recited at every staff meeting at every hospital in the world, as far as I'm concerned.

I laid in bed and cried tears of relief and gratitude after a traveling nurse with a three hour drive home ahead of her stayed an extra hour one night and bathed me from head to toe and washed my hair after I had gathered three weeks worth of motionless summer sweat on a sheetless air mattress. There are no words to describe how much her kindness meant to me. I decided that night that I wanted to be a nurse and I promised myself that I would never make a genuinely sick or hurt patient feel bad about needing assistance.

Tomorrow will mark eight years since I was hospitalized with GBS and the start of a very long battle back to the land of the living. This September, I finally start nursing school. I've been a hospital tech for going on two years now and - while my sense of empathy is definitely tested from time to time, I'm happy to say that I still feel deep compassion for the patients I care for. And I want to tell every one of you who still feels that compassion and finds the strength to smile and show empathy to your patients - especially the difficult ones - that you are wonderful, and you are appreciated.

:)

The positive patient survey and the proactive bit of praise from management are both on the endangered species list where most of us work. I don't know if my ramblings here will give anyone a lift, but I know I speak for a lot of patients who regret not saying thank you to those who helped them through some of the roughest times of their lives.

I absolutely LOVE reading stories like this.........the triumph from despair that leads to a kind soul joining our ranks. The absolute best nurses come from those who have experiences like yours, because you know what it's like to be a patient. Congratulations on your acceptance to nursing school, and hugs to you.

Specializes in Peds (previous psyc/SA briefly).

That was a BEAUTIFUL post. Thanks for reminding me, I seriously needed it. I think those of us that have been the patient have a unique perspective, don't we? I wish you all the best in the world with nursing and life.

Specializes in Med/Surge, Private Duty Peds.

:yeah::yeah:Thanks you so much for sharing your wonderful story! It really brightened my day.

you will make an excellent nurse and best of luck to you as you enter nursing school!:D

Thank you over and over again for this sincere, heartfelt story. You are right, often the generic, one size fits all hospital thank you's don't mean a whole lot. Your story inspires me and helps remind me the impact I can have!

Specializes in ED, ICU, PSYCH, PP, CEN.

You made me cry. In a happy, beautiful way. Thanks and welcome to the wonderful world of nursing. We need you.

Specializes in ER/ICU, CCL, EP.

That story will send me dancing back to the ICU tomorrow. Thanks for caring enough to post it. Good Luck in nursing school

Specializes in PCT - ER, Ortho, Neuro, Med-Surg.
That story will send me dancing back to the ICU tomorrow. Thanks for caring enough to post it. Good Luck in nursing school

I am so glad I posted here - all of the responses have been so warm and welcoming and heartfelt. I haven't had time to do more than scan the thread - I hope to be back online later tonight and to do a better job of thanking you individually for your kind words. For now, I just want everyone to know that your replies here have been just as uplifting for me as many of you have said my OP was for you.

:yeah:

I am also glad I stumbled across this community and I look forward to spending more time here. I can tell that this is a place where people really support each other and listen and share.

Nurses have the privilege of helping and lifting up those in need every single shift they work. Now that I've gotten my old flat foot in the door of the nursing world, I understand how truly stressful and demoralizing it can be at times. I'm happy I was able to share a bit of my story here and remind everyone that no matter how bad it gets, those on the receiving end of our care never forget us and our efforts on their behalf.

:)

Lord have mercy!! Thank you JESUS!!! GOOD LUCK!!

Specializes in PCT - ER, Ortho, Neuro, Med-Surg.

Giving this one more kick for those going back into the fray tonight or tomorrow morning.

Thank you for doing all the thankless things you do every shift you work.

:yeah:

Thank you for your story and best of luck with nursing school.

I am a nursing student myself and find these personal stories uplifting and encouraging on the hard days (like today has been), your story reminded me yet again why I am putting in all this hard work and just how important it is to remember that when I finally get to work as a nurse that each patient is an individual and that sometimes simple things make a big difference.

Specializes in PCT - ER, Ortho, Neuro, Med-Surg.
Thank you for your story and best of luck with nursing school.

I am a nursing student myself and find these personal stories uplifting and encouraging on the hard days (like today has been), your story reminded me yet again why I am putting in all this hard work and just how important it is to remember that when I finally get to work as a nurse that each patient is an individual and that sometimes simple things make a big difference.

Thank you, bassandtea!

:cheers:

Specializes in PCT - ER, Ortho, Neuro, Med-Surg.

Just a brief post script to my story here....I was so encouraged by the responses so many of you posted to this thread that I decided to take a risk and use my original post as the essay required for a nursing school scholarship application I turned in last week. I was tasked with summing up 39 years of life, including milestones I've reached, accomplishments I've made, challenges I've faced, qualifications I have, characteristics I possess and a myriad of other things in a single page of double-spaced type.

I didn't even know where to begin. How in the world could I articulate the adventure that life has been for me in so many ways in so few words?

In the end, I put "An Open Letter to Nurses Everywhere" on what I posted here in my OP, signed it and turned it in. It wasn't exactly the format or the outline requested, but I felt in my gut that nothing would give those reading my application any better understanding of me and who I am and why I want to be a nurse than my story as a patient.

I was called 24 hours later to schedule my interview with the scholarship application review committee!

:)

Once again, nurses made a real difference in my life.

Thanks to you all.

Shari

+ Add a Comment