Blog

  • Favorite Gratis Activity

    Jenna at That Wife issues a monthly food, photography, and lifestyle challenge. April’s lifestyle challenge is to participate in your favorite free activity and document it. I haven’t done one of these challenges before, but I decided this would be a good one to start with.

    Today I had absolutely nothing planned, the weather was lovely, and I decided it would be a perfect day to do one of my favorite things: ride my bike. My new year’s resolution was to enter a bike race, and in order to do that I’ve got to actually ride my bike. I haven’t been doing much of it lately because I’m busy and stuff and blah blah blah. But I rode today! My shoulders and legs will be sore tomorrow, but no pain no gain, right?

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    My view of the trail

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    Just a picture of my bike because I love it.

    So there you go. I rode my bike! Really exciting, right?

  • It’s The Small Stuff

    For the last week I’ve been house- and pet-sitting for a family in our church. Although there were a few good things about staying at their house (it’s closer to the park and ride, they have a really awesome TV, and there was an actual TABLE at which to eat my meals), mostly I just REALLY missed my husband, my dogs, and my bed. The dogs I was watching are approximately 100 pounds each, and neeeeeedy. The first night I was there, they woke me up no less than five times for one reason or another. 

    Anyway, I came back home last night and it was wonderful to sleep in my own amazing bed (which in my family we refer to as the Great White Biscuit), with my own amazing husband, and my own amazing dogs who actually left me alone the entire night. I love to travel, but I also love to come home. It just makes me happy.

    The downside to being away is that I’m out of the food at home that I like to eat. No milk, cereal, or anything to pack for lunch. I made do at breakfast with a couple of frozen waffles and just figured that I’d grab something at the cafeteria for lunch. But when I got to work, we were told that lunch was being provided for us today because we didn’t have a single patient fall for the entire month of March! (Our unit has one of the highest rates of patient falls, so they’re trying everything they can to fix that. Including bribery, apparently.)

    (The ironic thing is that a patient fell last night. So there goes April’s lunch.)

    This free food makes me inordinately happy. I don’t like spending money on cafeteria food; it isn’t bad, but it’s nothing special, either. And I don’t like to leave the unit if I can help it because I like to be available to my patients. So yay! Free lunch!

    Also, someone brought these to work, and they make me happy too:

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    Beautiful tulips make the conference room much more inviting!

  • A Clean Slate

    I’ve obviously changed the look of things around here, and the reason is that my old design was entirely outdated. For one thing, I was sick of looking at the picture of myself in the header. Also, it said “engagement edition 2008” when I’ve been married for six months now. And finally, the look of the site didn’t really reflect my preferences anymore.

    So my brother is working on a new design (which I love), but since he does have a real job I am not his top priority. I don’t know why not, but try as I may I could not get him to change his mind. Anyway, instead of bugging him to death, I just decided to mix things up myself until he has the time to finish the redesign. Right now it’s pretty boring, but I’m working on it. I’m anything but a web design master, so bear with me.

  • The Future Revisited

    When I first went to college, like every kid I was faced with the premature decision of what to do with my life. I was never someone who always knew what I wanted to be when I grew up. I changed my mind a thousand times: from photographer, to singer, to physical therapist, to philosopher, to athletic trainer, to minister. In the end I got a degree that trained me to be a youth pastor, which I didn’t want to be, and another one that trained me how to think but didn’t leave me a lot of (read: ANY) job opportunities. I guess I followed through with it because I enjoyed the classes and the professors, and like most adolescents the future wasn’t something I seriously considered.

    It wasn’t until getting a random job through a friend working in medical records at a cancer clinic that I was faced with the nursing profession. After two months, it hit me that hey! I might like to be a nurse, and you know what? I’d probably be good at it. It would be a place where my analytical mind could safely collide with my ministry background and compassionate nature. This “temporary” job turned into two years of full-time work while attending more classes at night, followed by two years of nursing school, and my parents weren’t paying for it this time. When I graduated last May and passed boards, I felt like I could conquer the world, as long as I could stay out of school for more than a few months.

    Nursing has been everything and nothing like I expected it to be. It’s tough, it’s exhilarating, it’s incredibly draining, it’s incredibly fulfilling. I’m slowly mastering all the skills like I knew I would, but still haven’t quite mastered the feeling of when a patient I’ve grown attached to slips away. I expected the stress and to some extent the politics of the workplace, but I wasn’t prepared to face coworkers who clearly don’t like their jobs and are decidedly lacking in compassion for difficult patients. I just don’t see how anyone can do this for a single day without love, and a feeling of compulsion. As in, I MUST do this, it is what I’m meant for.

    I have a mentor at work, which, by the way, is something I’ve always wanted. She is a 64-year-old woman named Pat who has been a nurse for 41 years. As far as nursing goes, she’s everything I want to be. Not only is she wise, she sees each patient as a person and within a day knows his/her life story. She adopted me and is slowly teaching me everything she knows. I like having her around because she boosts my ego by saying things like, “You are the best new nurse I’ve ever worked with in all my years,” and says it to the doctors and patients, too.

    Over the weekend Pat told me that I need to become a nurse practitioner. I immediately protested: “That’s too much responsibility!”

    “No, not for your level of intelligence. You could be a doctor if you wanted to.”

    “I already have too many student loans!”

    “NP’s make three times the amount you make now, you could take classes online, and Methodist does tuition reimbursement. You can’t stop here, you’re too smart.”

    “But I’m sick of school…”

    My replies became more feeble as the conversation went on. I told her I would think about it, which is more than I would have done for anyone else. She caught me at an opportune time, because in May we do annual employee evaluations. To prepare for that, there are SO many things we have to do (no, really, you have NO idea all of the things we have to do), but one of them is to prepare a list of our goals. So far I had thought of two: become oncology certified, and be a preceptor for new nurses. The preceptor thing was thrust upon me already, so I’m down to one tangible goal. Statements like “be the best nurse I can be” won’t cut it.

    Should I do it? I don’t know. I haven’t really looked into it yet. Eventually I’ll get around to doing the research, followed by the inevitable pro/con list, and then I’ll ignore the list and go whichever way my instinct carries me. I’ve heard a lot of Christians struggle with answering the question “what is God’s will for my life?” But I know what God’s will is. He told us: love God and love others. I can do that no matter what profession I’m in.

    Maybe I’ll work my way up the ranks and become a manager. Maybe I’ll have babies and transfer to a clinic where I don’t have to work weekends. Maybe I’ll get certified in pain management and work at a hospice. Maybe I’ll grit my teeth and stay here, literally getting my hands dirty, and become a mentor to someone else down the line like Pat is to me. Maybe I’ll go back to school and become a nurse practitioner. Whatever I end up doing, I know it’ll be right. And hopefully, I’ll learn to better do God’s will along the way.

  • Reading and Reflection

    My brother-in-law Scott recently created his own book database which I have had the pleasure of reading. I, too, keep a record of all the books I’ve read, but I do it at Goodreads because I’m not as smart as he is; I can’t create a website on my own. But he WAS  the valedictorian of our high school class, so I don’t expect anything less.

    Anyway, Scott’s database is much more thorough than mine is, and he writes a synopsis and critique of each book whereas I just give a rating and occasionally write a short review. One of the books Scott has written about is Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis. This is the first of a sci-fi trilogy which I read and enjoyed. It is sort of an allegory about a man, Ransom, who visits other planets. Scott writes about one encounter Ransom has with the species on this new planet. Allow me to quote him:

    “Ransom has an interesting conversation with Hyoi at one point about memory in regards to sexual experience. The hrossa only have sex for procreation, so Ransom asks if they miss the fact that it happens so infrequently. Hyoi, however, claims that it is only by remembering something for years that the experience of that thing truly becomes complete. Clearly this is a very Catholic idea, but at heart it is very appealing. After all, I often find myself jumping from one new experience to the next (be it books, games, or life in general) rather than reflecting and contemplating what I have experienced in the past. In fact, this book database effort is an example of me realizing that and attempting in some way to deal with it. My hope is that, in time, my past experience with a book will become richer as I reflect upon it with greater wisdom and maturity.”

    When I read that, I realized that I am the exact same way, especially with books. There are so many I want to read, so the very minute I finish one I pick up the next. Immediately, the impact of the last book is lost. Only a very few books do I re-read. The book club I’ve been in for over three years is helpful in that it gives me a chance to discuss the books we’ve chosen, but by the time we have our meetings it’s usually been weeks since I’ve read the book and have forgotten a lot of it.

    I would love to write about books the way Scott is attempting to. I just don’t know if I can commit that amount of time to it. And what about the rest of my life? Do I ever take time to reflect? Well, sometimes. In the morning when I’m driving to work I make it a point not to listen to music, and I talk to myself instead. This blog forces me to think about my life in order to write about it coherently.

    For Lent, which I never wrote about because my website was down when it started, I decided to slow down. I wouldn’t take on any new commitments, I would spend more time with my husband and my family, I would drive the speed limit, and every morning I would write in a prayer journal. For the most part I’ve done these things, and although I want them to be part of my lifestyle from now on, I’m not sure if they’re going to stick – except for the spending time with family part. That one’s easy, although my parents may protest otherwise.

    I guess I’m just thinking about thinking. I want all my experiences to be full and complete. I’d love to hear your thoughts. How do you read books? Do you take any intentional time to reflect on your life?