I'm really not complaining. I hope it doesn't sound like it. It
was a humbling experience to realize how necessary our jobs are, especially
because people don't stop getting sick or needing help just because the weather
gets bad. It was just tiring and somewhat unexpected. While everyone else was
off and staying at home, I was still working and let's not forget...getting
paid at least to sleep at the hospital! We had some co-worker bonding
time and it was nice to know that in a stressful situation that my co-workers
pitched in to help out and supported one another to get through the long
hours. I know many people had it much
worse, but I can only write about my experience and what happened.
Overall work has been
great and every day I am learning something new. I’ve hung blood, given an enema, drawn
cultures and labs off a central line and have even removed a central line from a
patient. Besides the technical stuff I’ve
also developed some nice relationships with patients and their families and almost
cried at the bedside when a tube had to be stuck down one of my patient’s
noses. OK, maybe crying is exaggerating, but I really did have tears in my
eyes! Haha. He took in like a champ
though. While I feel like I live at work
sometimes, I love having a job that I am happy to go to every day and can’t
imagine doing anything else. Unless of
course this job was in Israel, but that’s a topic for another discussion J