2/27 What I learned this week: crying on the job feels so much better when they're happy t

Nurses General Nursing

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Story time! With mood music. [emoji5]️

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I count myself blessed to have been raised largely in part by my grandparents. My grandfather, a newly-minted 80-year old, conservative, successful man, taught me there is pride in self-sufficiency, and honor in good qualities such as honesty and humility. You earned what you have, and you certainly never asked for help, as that would admit weakness, or even worse, failure.

Society has changed a lot in the U.S. as we've adopted new ideas of what weakness and honor should mean. I don't think the ideas of Grandpa's values are obsolete, though my own values have evolved as society has. In fact, as much as I'm able, I still stick to those things that I know he placed in this heart of mine. I also think having the experience of being raised by his generation (as opposed to my mom's, which in the strictest of technical terms, is actually my own, if we go by years born) has helped me communicate and advocate for the patients of his demographic (whom I quietly refer to in my mind as "Men of a Certain Age") a little better than I would otherwise.

We have a frequent flyer on my unit. He is also a Man of a Certain Age (let's call him MOCA, or Moca). I first met him shortly after I was licensed. By then, he'd already experienced an event that severely impaired his ability to communicate. He was extremely frustrated with this, as anyone would be, but he was making it work.

The next time we met, not a huge amount of time later, Moca had had an emergent, but not overly complicated surgical procedure that included getting a prosthetic. Recovery was short, life resumed.

Until, it didn't. Moca started getting sick. Just sick. That's it. Fevers. Really high fevers. Multiple admissions. Decline in overall condition. Nervous system responses to the high fevers. Tremors, altered mental status, failure to thrive, profound weakness. He was just so sick, over and over, but no answers pointing at what was causing it.

The toll this took on Moca emotionally was profound. He'd deteriorated to a point that communication was impossible, and he needed someone to feed him. On one of my last shifts with him, I saw we were sending Moca a clear liquid diet. Clear liquids for a man with debilitating tremors. I watched this man's pride and dignity leave him. He traded health for a bedpan, full meals for broth spilled down the front of him.

I fought hard for him to be advanced to finger foods. I saw Moca brighten up. It wasn't a massive brightening up, but it was successful. The Man of a Certain Age, who was robbed of all independence by his brain and body, could do this ONE THING for himself.

So, Moca sunk into a deep despair. He let go completely. He gave up. The sadness in his eyes, as he cried over something so simple as putting the broth in a cup with a lid instead, stayed in my mind and my heart. I'd never seen such sadness, such defeat.

On the last admission, Moca had imaging that might be the key to it all - some vegetation was spotted on his prosthetic. Finally! A year of this back and fourth, a year of his life, a year of the loss of things that give Men of a Certain Age their spark. Gone.

The last time I saw him, he was on an EMS stretcher to get the infection removed surgically. He said to me, "I know I'm going to die on the table." He didn't say it with fear. He said it with despair because he actually, 100% believed it. Getting on that stretcher, in his mind, EMS might as well have been hitching a ride to his funeral. All pride gone. All honor lost. Just a man robbed of the things that he'd taken for granted. His eyes showed the depth of loss and humiliation he felt.

I've waited. He'd been there enough that if he died, I know it would have been talked about. There was no word. Months passed.

As I wrapped up my charting my last shift, I heard him. His speech pattern is unmistakable given the injury he had affecting his speech. After I wrapped up the last details of charting, I went to see him.

When he saw me, his eyes welled up. I hugged him fiercely, and like a couple of old fools, we sobbed happy tears as he told me how recent months have been. Never in my life had I seen despair run so deeply, and here he was, back again, but BETTER. Not only did he look better, but his speech improved exponentially, and all other assaults that had been suffered by his nervous system was reversed. GONE! He's better! He's LIVING his life!

This week, I learned that a nurse can cry happy tears on the ride home from work. What a beautiful joy! I'd go through months of horrible shifts just to experience that joy again! Victory!

I remembered why I became a nurse.

It's rare we get to know the end of the story. But this time, I got to. [emoji173]️

I love being a nurse!

You guys learn anything good?

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.
Yea, Chaos, I didn't want to "like" your post. :(

It's ok. I know it was a "like" in support.

Specializes in critical care.

Our unit secretary left in happy tears after sharing a moment with the patient in the OP today. [emoji173]️ It's contagious!

Specializes in ICU.

I just about had tears myself on my overtime shifts yesterday (not happy ones), and I have a whole new respect for one of the intensivists I work with. He stated he was going to be squirting some epi in the sink if the family, who weren't even present, decided to keep this frail very elderly woman who was so neglected you could see plenty of exposed bone through her numerous pressure ulcers, and who had been coded six times already, a full code. Not that epi pushes would have done anything - the woman was running an epi drip way above limits already, but still. This is the first time I've seen any of the intensivists at this job walk that fine gray line. He said he had to do what he needed to do to be able to live with himself. I got to see the person and not the physician.

Family finally made her a DNR about fifteen minutes before she passed so we didn't have to go down that road, thankfully. I helped clean her up. On top of everything else, she had what looked like age spots all over her face until you took a wash cloth to them - they were just large chunks of dead skin that peeled away easily with no attachment to the layers below. I would wager it had been months since anyone did anything as simple as scrub her face with a warm wash cloth.

Of course the family finally came in and did the arbitrary crocodile tears to look like they cared after she had passed, and they just might have - their Social Security check just died, after all. Really wanted to ask them where those tears were when the patient was alive and literally rotting to death in their house. It is getting more and more difficult to put on the appearance of sympathy for these monsters that abuse their family members to death. One of these days I'm going to end up being ugly to someone and get fired.

I am just totally disgusted with other human beings at this point. I think I'd be happy going to live in a cave and never interacting with anyone in person ever again, except maybe the pizza guy. I like pizza guys - they provide me with food.

This past week was my last week in L&D Clinicals. That went by entirely way too fast.

* I learned that I am not as disappointed as I thought I would be at not seeing a lady partsl birth (2 sections, NICU, 2 days in PP).

* I really really really like OB. I mean I knew that already but this clinical section totally reinforced that this is where I belong.:yes:

* That the nurses really do appreciate having students who show interest and take initiative. After spending a few hours with my co-assigned nurse my instructor asked me how things were going, because she could be a little rough. I was really surprised, because my co-assigned nurse actually seemed to really like me, and we were working very well together!

* My daughter is turning 5 in a month. I am not prepared to register her for kindergarten. I cannot believe in a few months we will be doing homework together!!! :angrybird3:

* Did I mention I am really sad to be leaving L&D? I can't believe I have to wait a whole other year to go back!!! At least time will fly by until then. Le sigh.

Specializes in Mental Health, Gerontology, Palliative.

What I've learned

- Vengeful managers might be trying everything to get me fired, but when I resign it seems to have truly knocked them off their axis.

- Good test of when same manager is running scared is that they offer to pay me out for my notice plus holiday pay, but only if I promise to not go to mediation.

- Work place stress is highly underestimated. It wasnt till i had to stop working last week that I realised how much of a bloody basket case I had become.

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.

I'm starting to wonder if I should report the family of my PDN case to CPS.

I'm starting to wonder if I should report the family of my PDN case to CPS.

😫😡😢😲😖

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.
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I wish I could tell everyone what is going down.

Specializes in ICU.
Did I mention I am really sad to be leaving L&D? I can't believe I have to wait a whole other year to go back!!! At least time will fly by until then. Le sigh.

The hospital doesn't have a summer internship program, does it? ;)

Specializes in kids.
I wish I could tell everyone what is going down.

If you are that concerned then maybe that is what you need to do...follow your gut. You are a mandated reporter, let the system do the investigation.

Specializes in M/S, LTC, Corrections, PDN & drug rehab.
If you are that concerned then maybe that is what you need to do...follow your gut. You are a mandated reporter, let the system do the investigation.

I think I will. I'm tired of nothing being done.

Specializes in Family Medicine, Tele/Cardiac, Camp.

I learned that somewhere along my growing up I was taught to rock the boat and question the status quo. It bothers a lot of people and has gotten me in trouble more than once, despite my politeness, diplomacy, and neutrality.

But it affords me a great deal of self-protection in situations that may be bad for me. As if my subconscious is looking out for me before I'm fully able to size up a situation.

And it can also make me a leader, innovator, and harbinger of change. And sometimes an organization really needs that. Even if they can't see it yet.

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