But there are times when I’m not very productive. I sit on the couch eating cereal and drink tea. Watch the day turn into night. I need time to sit and mull, like a good cider. Not sad. Not depressed. Just need time to think about what I did the past few days. Many times while I’m at work I don’t have time to process or really take in the emotion or meaning of what I’m doing. It’s really easy to get in this mode of detaching from myself and my heart, especially when I know there is no place or time for it that night.
My XXyr-old patient slipping into a state of unconsciousness. The pressure in his brain too much. Sending him to the ICU. He passed away last night.
My X-month old patient crying because he’s hungry. But I have to leave him in there because the ultimate test we’re trying to figure out is how long it takes mom to wake up and meet his needs. This is what I have to find out to report to Family Services this morning. I give her 10 minutes of his wailing, she doesn’t wake. I detach from my disbelief at this. I pick him up, get him going on his Pedialyte.
My dying patient declining a blood transfusion she so badly needs. She’s done. She’s tired. She just wants to die.
Sometimes you just need to mull. Sneak back in to yourself and touch base with those emotions. If I don’t, I know they will creep up on me and explode in a tearful phone call to my mother. So I sit. Think. Mull. Let it soak in to the part of me that is all nurse. I take these emotions and let them shape me, make me better. Take the weight of it all and use it to make me sturdy, strong enough to stand up underneath it all.
4 comments:
Beautiful post Kels. I had no idea you were such an eloquent writer until you started blogging and I'm so glad you did. Keep mulling!
Oh Kelsy, the things you see! Love you sis.
So perfectly written Kels! Nursing is truly a work of heart :) And you have to have a big one to become one and you have the biggest of all! I love you Kels!
Mulling and musing make some really good blog fodder.
If you do not compile your nurse musing into a little book I will be VERY disappointed!
I feel like I understand your times of transition~ your mulling time. With all the traveling we do it seems like I live in two worlds. When I first come home I do much processing, pondering, percolating. I too have watched day turn into night without much checked off my to-do list-- or sometimes I have not even gotten to the list! I could slip into a guilty zone for lack of accomplishing stuff, but I have realized how much God speaks when I ponder. If what you write here is the product of sitting and mulling then you you make a mighty fine cider. :)
Keep the "ramblings of a new nurse" coming!
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