Sonofagun. Past it, in fact. As of early last month.
Didn't even notice in all the hubbub of normal life.
We are also damned near the last and only ER nursing blog that's not happygas and rah-rah pablum still in existence. Shrtstormtrooper, God love her, keeps plugging away on her blog, and more regularly, we confess, than we have on this one. But she sounds about ready to throw in the towel on the ER, and make a mental health move to something less soul-crushing. Time will tell.
We didn't realize ten years' time would get us the Sole Survivor crown in this endeavor, and as we said, we haven't been nearly as prolific or consistent dropping in over here as we have at our other endeavor.
Part of that is because after the first year or two, you've seen almost everything you're ever going to see in the ER, for 95% of patients. A sprained knee or appendicitis is exactly like every other one. (Thank heavens.)
The other 5% is unbelievably hilarious, jaw-droppingly horrific, or mind-bogglingly weird (sometimes all of the above).
But we've got, according to the Social Security Administration, probably another decade of shoveling coal down here in the boiler room before we can think about docking this battleship and getting off. And if we hit the Powerball tomorrow, while we love the job, and most of our co-workers, we'd leave skid marks out of the parking lot, and send the night shift a prepaid food truck every night for a month as a goodbye present, and never think about it again, unless writing a book or a script.
And sleep soundly every night, and walk around with a smile on my face every day afterwards.
But we took care of another...seventeen patients just last week, directly, and saved at least three of them from dying that day. And that part never gets old, no matter how tired we are of the drunks, addicts, and drug-seeking @$$holes who waste our time and effort, society's money, and their own lives.
So we're not going anywhere, anytime soon. Including online.
Just disappointed currently, because of having a preceptee/new grad for a couple of months, who was learning the gig ahead of schedule (95% her, and 5% us), and then was taken away and farmed out to good nurses and bad for the next two months, and is now struggling, hesitant, had her confidence shot, needing extra time in orientation training, and may possibly crash and burn, because manglement does what it does deaf and blindfolded, and can't figure out why they keep losing 90% of their new grad trainees, when they keep turning them over to nurses who couldn't teach their way out of a wet paper bag, let alone imbue a new grad with the skills to do this job. We could teach a motivated monkey to do it well, but we're not somebody's bestie, and thus not liable to get that opportunity again.
That absolutely and quite simply sucks.
And it's unethical, unlawful, and sadly against hospital policy to take the guilty jackholes into the supply room and do some one-on-one wall-to-wall counselling, to teach them the error of their ways.
That's a notable pity as well.
Because I like my job, and I'd like to download some wee quantity of what I know and learned in the last nearly thirty years doing it, before it's too late. But I don't love that enough to ride that concern right over the cliff.
And the Flying @$$holes always self-select for more Flying @$$holes, and can't figure out why better quality people always end up leaving, or not getting on their team in the first place.
Said every staff member at every hospital since Florence Nightingale was a new grad.
At any rate, since noticing the recently passed blogiversary, we are entitled to a party and some cake. And many happy returns of the day.
Best wishes to all who drop by here, and a commendation to those who continue to fight the good fight, in the professions and careers that matter, to the highest extent humanly possible in this lifetime.
What do you do at work? I save lives.
You too? Pretty effing awesome resume, right there.
Many happy returns on the blogiversary! I can't believe I'm one of the last few standing, although at this moment it feels like I've been soundly beaten into the ground, repeatedly, and am barely pulling myself back to my feet. I'm sad to hear about the preceptee saga. When training new grads, we don't need to be a friend or a bubbly personality there to prop someone up. We need to facilitate critical thinking, time management, medication knowledge, and nursing skills. If you can't do those, you'll kill someone. There will be time to be friends later, but knowledge comes first. Or, at least, it should.
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