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.

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

I GOT THE SCHOLARSHIP!!

:dncgbby:

Just wanted to take a minute to thank everyone for all the positive feedback and genuine support. You guys are wonderful!

I really need to come around more often. I am so overwhelmed with school, work and some very stressful stuff in my personal life. I know exactly where burnout comes from. And I don't want it.

Thanks again for the boost. I needed it. And I promise to pay it forward.

:nuke:

I GOT THE SCHOLARSHIP!!

:dncgbby:

Just wanted to take a minute to thank everyone for all the positive feedback and genuine support. You guys are wonderful!

I really need to come around more often. I am so overwhelmed with school, work and some very stressful stuff in my personal life. I know exactly where burnout comes from. And I don't want it.

Thanks again for the boost. I needed it. And I promise to pay it forward.

:nuke:

:yeah::yeah::yeah:Yeah!!!!! That is great.... Good for you!!!!!!! Go get Um...:nurse::redbeathe:nurse:

Just finished seven nights in a row in the ER due to a scheduling glitch and wrapped it up with a four hour micro class this morning. Last night started out awful - I overslept for the first time since transferring to the ER and was more than an hour late for work. Had hoped to work as clerk or triage tech but was assigned to the regular tech job - which I love but which leaves little downtime and I really, really needed to finish my pathogen cards for class today. Plus I was totally worn out and when physical exhaustion sets in for me, I am at real risk of falling because of my stupid post-GBS foot drop.

:(

But then.....all of the ER nurses as well as the respiratory therapist on duty told me to sit down and study and to rest. It was a fairly slow night, and they answered the call lights, did the UAs and the blood draws and hemocults and vital signs and most everything else considered a tech job throughout the early morning hours. I tried to get up a few times because I felt like a total schmuck for not helping out as patients came in, but they lovingly, and firmly, told me they had my back and they were there for me.

Reason #81,277 that nurses have my deepest admiration and appreciation.

Have a great shift, everyone.

:)

NURSES Rock, ( and RT ect's )... This brings a tear to my eye and makes me proud to be a nurse!!!:nurse::redbeathe:nurse:

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

My job in the ER and my first round of nursing school clinicals have only strengthened my love for taking care of patients and increased my respect for the incredible dedication all of you show out there in the trenches. Please don't give up on what we do. No matter how bad the beaurocrats and beancounters treat us, making a difference in a human life is - and always will be - worthwhile. Beyond worthwhile.

If you don't believe me, just wait until you find yourself - or someone you love - laying between those siderails.

Thank you. Again. Because I know not a one of you is properly thanked on a regular basis like you should be.

:nurse:

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

Wow. Hard to believe it's been more than two years since I first wandered in here with my heart on my e-sleeve!

I am so proud to say that, long and strange as my trip has been since then, I have not given up the course. Or my belief that you are all still heroes.

One more semester + blood, sweat, tears + keeping the faith and remembering to stay humble = Me as RN. Aka hero in training.

: )

Specializes in Med/Surg, DSU, Ortho, Onc, Psych.

Thank you so much for posting this.

I found nursing to be a thankless task, but sometimes the patients can't say thank you as they may be like you, paralysed, or they have had a stroke or they end up dying. Really taking good care of people is the hardest thing in the world, anyone can argue that point I don't care - it is laborious, heart wrenching, (I find dementia patients so sad to look after), & physically exhausting; you go home and cry some nights & worry about whether your patients are OK after you have left. I used to hate it when my patients would die without me not having said goodbye to them; that is hard.

How awful you went through this! You will definitely be a better nurse for it, though no-one would wish this on anyone.

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

T-minus two weeks and a stray day or two. Final semester evaluations and exams coming up.

Pass or fail, I wanted to drop by and say that I am more thankful for nurses and all you do than ever.

Please go to work today or tonight or tomorrow or whenever with a smile. On your face and in your heart.

You make such a difference.

:)

Congratulations on following through with your plan to become a nurse. We need more like you.

Thanks for reminding us why we do what we do. Your perspective and your appreciation mean a lot. :up:

Specializes in Med/Surg/Ortho/HH/Radiology-Now Retired.

Best wishes with the exams, Shari!

Pass or fail those nursing exams ... you are already a success!

My continued support, encouragement and very best wishes for the future! :)

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