Monday 24 September 2018

The final chapters...


Day 17 your 5 favourite blogs
I don’t read many blogs, so I don’t think I have 5 but I will come back to this one in a bit



Day 18 a photo of you



This is me in my first uniform in my first year of my training in 1997

Day 19 what’s your favourite nursing topic
Nursing in criminal Justice/ Prison Nursing massive topic very underrated and misunderstood.

Day 20 what 6 things make you happy
My Westie Billy
The seaside
My niece and nephew
Penguins
Laughing at nursing jokes no one else understands
Being a nurse in the NHS

Day 21 your favourite thing about being a nurse
There are so many, I think the variety of the profession is wonderful, I have worked in prison hospice care acute medical and surgery and general practice but all as a nurse.
I like the variety no two days are the same, and the fact that a patient or relative can gain comfort from something you do that may seem insignificant. I make a difference to people’s lives every day that’s my favourite thing.

Day 22 5 things you do on every shift
Have at least four cans of Pepsi max
Travel more distance to and from the medicine stock cupboard than any marathon runner
Loose a pen
Find a pen
Forget one of my many computer passwords


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When God Created Nurses

When the Lord made Nurses He was into his sixth day of overtime.

An angel appeared and said, "You're doing a lot of fiddling around on this one." And the Lord said, "Have you read the specs on this order? A nurse has to be able to help an injured person, breathe life into a dying person, and give comfort to a family that has lost their only child and not wrinkle their uniform. They have to be able to lift 3 times their own weight, work 12 to 16 hours straight without missing a detail, console a grieving mother as they are doing CPR on a baby they know will never breathe again. They have to be in top mental condition at all times, running on too-little sleep, black coffee and half-eaten meals. And they have to have six pairs of hands.

The angel shook her head slowly and said, "Six pairs of hands...no way!" "It's not the hands that are causing me problems," said the Lord, "It's the two pairs of eyes a nurse has to have." "That's on the standard model?" asked the angel. The Lord nodded.

"One pair that does quick glances while making note of any physical changes, And another pair of eyes that can look reassuringly at a bleeding patient and say, "You'll be all right ma'am" when they know it isn't so."

"Lord," said the angel, touching his sleeve, "rest and work on this tomorrow." "I can't," said the Lord, "I already have a model that can talk to a 250 pound grieving family member whose child has been hit by a drunk driver...who, by the way, is laying in the next room uninjured, and feed a family of five on a nurse's paycheck."

The angel circled the model of the nurse very slowly, "Can it think?" she asked. "You bet," said the Lord. "It can tell you the symptoms of 100 illnesses; recite drug calculations in its sleep; intubate, defibrillate, medicate, and continue CPR nonstop until help arrives...and still it keeps its sense of humor. This nurse also has phenomenal personal control. They can deal with a multi-victim trauma, coax a frightened elderly person to unlock their door, comfort a murder victim's family, and then read in the daily paper how nurses are insensitive and uncaring and are only doing a job." Finally, the angel bent over and ran her finger across the cheek of the nurse.

"There's a leak," she pronounced. "I told you that you were trying to put too much into this model." "That's not a leak," said the Lord, "It's a tear." "What's the tear for?" asked the angel. "It's for bottled-up emotions, for patients they've tried in vain to save, for commitment to the hope that they will make a difference in a person's chance to survive, for life." "You're a genius," said the angel.

The Lord looked somber. "I didn't put it there," He said.