7/30 This week, I learned Deanna Troi sucks

Nurses General Nursing

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You guys watch ST:TNG? Man, I loved that show. Jean Luc was gonna save the galaxy. I'd totally vote Picard/Riker every single election. (This might actually happen this year.)

But Deanna.... She was my girl. Strong, sensitive, empathic. I was going to BE her when I grew up. I actively sought to connect with people, to know what their feelings were, what motivated them. To be honest, I already knew how to read people pretty well. My pre-teen self just enjoyed the imaginative fantasy.

As a Nurse, we tend to channel our inner Deanna Troi a little. Well, I do, at least. Especially around discharge, when thinking is adjusted to what's next for this person and their loved ones. What do they want? What are they burdened with?

What a crap week for this way of thinking to come back.

This week, I have learned....

1. Grandma is in LTC now and her Alzheimers has been declining rapidly. We all know how those first nights will be.

2. Grandpa is home alone, albeit busy right now, and he is refusing help.

3. My surgeon has me out until August 22.

4. My short-term disability company is currently refusing to extend my claim beyond Wednesday.

5. My employer has decided to terminate my benefits as of Wednesday.

6. Have you ever heard that rumor that short-term disability company long term disability companies will send out private investigators to monitor and photograph the movements of those people they think abuse claims? They do. This is actually a thing.

7. This ad inspires NO DESIRE WHATSOEVER to be a nurse. The intern/resident is treating someone like crap while the nurse next to him gives the "I want you now" eyes.

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8. After participating in facebook live chats and PMs with Zdogg since his 7 Years release, being berated by my mother in law for admitting patient suffering and tragedy destroys me a little, and THEN turning to a loved hospitalist that I am thankful to have in my life... It's painfully obvious that those of us, ALL of us, on the front lines of healthcare feel our hearts break time and time again, and yet, we can't admit it to our colleague. Our hands are not meant to be held. We go home to the hands and arms that hold us, knowing that some shifts really do isolate us. We are forced to be alone. I watch my colleagues take their SSRIs, benzos, norcos, whatever it takes to bring them back to a shift. No one hides it. And why should they? We all understand WHY. So why don't we talk about it?

9. Today I decided paying a babysitter is cheaper than paying bail. I mean, c'mon parents, AMIRITE?!

10. morte would rather ditch the spacebar than be decisive about a computer.

If anyone is interested in hosting next week, get in touch via PM.

What have you learned this week?

Remember, cheers, jeers and camaraderie are always loved and appreciated in the WILTW threads. Just try hard to stay close or on the nursing path so this thread stays here.

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No, those commercials on tv for profit nursing schools are a joke!

I will go back and read the full thread in a little bit but for now here's my contributions.

I have learned that:

The allnurses app I was hiding on my phone stopped working weeks ago. This explains my recent absence.

No matter how well you think an interview went, you can still be passed over.

Depression and anxiety can really knock you flat. Add on irritation of an old injury with a side order of judgemental doctor and well...I'd really love to find a nice big hole to hide in for a while.

oops. sent a blank post somehow?

My dad died this morning.

He was 87 and had Parkinson's and dementia.

In 1976, when I got a last-minute offer of admission to the Springfield School of Practical Nursing- he gave me the $650 to attend. (That covered tuition, books, uniforms and supplies.) He got to see me receive my DNP in May via video feed.

Much of what I am- I owe to him.

I'm so very sorry for your loss.

Is it really bigger on the inside or is that just a myth? :roflmao: QUOTE=ixchel;9136447]I'm putting my money on a tick being in there. Bug extraction should happen easily with a flush, except an attached tick. Damn, that sucks.

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My AN friends, our WILTW threads do have a process involved for who does the OPs. I am ALWAYS excited for someone else to host because we all see nursing from different viewpoints, especially across other specialties. The only time I've ever told someone they couldn't host is on a week when someone else had already asked/volunteered first. I, by no means, own these awesome creations and you guys keep them fresh!

What I do need, however, is to hear from you if you want to host a week. You HAVE to get in touch with me. There are admin preferences/requests for the threads, and there may be someone else who has indicated their desire to do it, meaning I'll need you to wait until the next one.

To smartassmommy, I did PM you back a couple of days ago. Please let me know if you're okay with delaying your OP by a week. I am so sorry, love!

I need to grab the link off the new week's thread, but I'll share it in a few minutes. I do embrace this new WILTW thread as I would any other. Anytime these random WILTWs turn up, usually the OP didn't realize we keep this organized and there is this awesome WILTW culture.

I'll gather up my own lessons over the weekend and add them to the thread. :)

BTW, with the random WILTWs popping up, it's made me realize that committing to an actual OP day officially. Since the thread is "what I learned THIS week", I like Saturday because for the OP, it WOULD be something to share at the end of the week. I know nurses don't actually have an "end of the week", but perhaps the end of the calendar week will do. :)

A lot of people have talked about jumping ship because the website & mobile site are unwieldy. If I do so, it will be because I am tired of everyone slinging acid. "Someone has already posted that so you shouldn't have started your own post." The search system here is ridiculous and is likely to bring threads that are years old at the top of the search results. Regulars are telling new users (and anyone, really) that we ought to be combing the archives before daring to share a thought.

Some people are trolling, sure, but there are also simple misunderstandings where the knee-jerk reaction has been to mock the person, attack their reading comprehension/ability to think normally as well as other uncalled for venomous personal insults.

"This is a public forum so don't post unless you're going to accept every kind of reply," blah blah blah (say the same types who jump into a thread just to say "already been said"). I know full well that people can be cruel on the Internet; that doesn't mean it's ok or that bad behavior should be tolerated.

WILTW is my favorite part of AN, but it's also very difficult to find because of said search issues. It was (mostly) a friendly place and it had/has lots of great clinical tidbits as well as people sharing bits of their personal lives. I kind of instinctively realized that it was a semi-formal thing and would not start a thread on my own without checking with ixchel... but... I sure hope people didn't run out and thrash a random OP for daring to share what they've learned this week.

Specializes in Critical Care.

I learned my co workers tease me about being booshie for a reason. Here I stand at the check out line with my cart filled with wine, cheese, fruit paste, and Mediterranean marinated beets. This is where so much of my money goes! D:

Specializes in Critical care.

I learned it's awkward to stop and get a bite to eat after a shift that ended crappy (after working 4 of the past 5 days) and hear the person at the table behind you say to their companion "she was my nurse in the hospital". I just pretended like I didn't hear and minded my own business. I quickly ate then left to make my 45 minute drive home. It also made me happy I don't work closer to home and that I don't have to worry about that happening often (although I know since I was in my uniform I was easier to recognize).

Has this happened to anyone else? If so, how do/did you respond?

Specializes in critical care.
I learned it's awkward to stop and get a bite to eat after a shift that ended crappy (after working 4 of the past 5 days) and hear the person at the table behind you say to their companion "she was my nurse in the hospital". I just pretended like I didn't hear and minded my own business. I quickly ate then left to make my 45 minute drive home. It also made me happy I don't work closer to home and that I don't have to worry about that happening often (although I know since I was in my uniform I was easier to recognize).

Has this happened to anyone else? If so, how do/did you respond?

I work far away to avoid the awkwardness as well. It's rare I see anyone, but when I do, for some reason it's always the really terrible people who I would shield my children from. I hide to avoid contact. (Boy do I wish I were just kidding.) My spouse has a bad job for these moments as well.

Specializes in Cardiothoracic, Peds CVICU.

I learned that just because a patient is a nurse does not mean they will be nice and understanding when the team refuses to order IV Benadryl. Being a new grad has been one of the toughest things I've ever done

Specializes in critical care.
I learned that just because a patient is a nurse does not mean they will be nice and understanding when the team refuses to order IV Benadryl. Being a new grad has been one of the toughest things I've ever done

First, YOU ARE A WARRIOR!!!!! This first year will damn near destroy you. And just when you think you really can't deal with the frustration of it anymore, you will have an "a-ha!!!!!" moment that you will know is tiny and ALMOST meaningless, but it is YOUR a-ha! You EARNED that sucker! It is YOURS, and NO ONE will ever take that from you.

You will start to notice these moments happen more and more, until you suddenly realize they've started to blend in with a normal day. THE DAY YOU NOTICE THIS WILL BE GLORIOUS!!!!!!! And, what's better than that??? You'll know you're gonna be alright. YOU WILL KNOW THIS! (Because it's true, silly!)

Now, go change that damn screenname. You're not lame. You're a brand new nurse. No lame person could ever accomplish all that you have.

Specializes in critical care.

I realized the link never posted. :mad:

No one will ever convince me desktop is better.

Here is the 8/5 WILTW -

https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-discussion/wiltw-8-5-1063634.html

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