GoddessTink
Experienced
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2013
- Posts
- 97
Nursing is the toughest job you'll ever love. I'm not at the bedside anymore but I'm still active in care of the patients and very active in family and patient education.
That said, I've never had my emotions get too involved. When I first started as a nurse aide in ER I did...then I had a fiancé die in a car accident. Suddenly I was on the other side of the bed and got it. I gained a different empathy and my sympathy changed. I have had very few patients that I've cried over, and usually it's the family I cry with. I know the feelings they are going to experience, the grief they are going to have. But I leave it at the hospital. My mom and a wise old nurse taught me that. "You can't save everyone and you can't take them home. You make their suffering a little less while you're with them". That was always my aim.
That said, I've never had my emotions get too involved. When I first started as a nurse aide in ER I did...then I had a fiancé die in a car accident. Suddenly I was on the other side of the bed and got it. I gained a different empathy and my sympathy changed. I have had very few patients that I've cried over, and usually it's the family I cry with. I know the feelings they are going to experience, the grief they are going to have. But I leave it at the hospital. My mom and a wise old nurse taught me that. "You can't save everyone and you can't take them home. You make their suffering a little less while you're with them". That was always my aim.