Nursing… The Calling
Posted by: admin in Deanna, RN, For Student Nurses, Nursing StoriesThe calling. It’s like waking up in the morning and it’s a really nice sunny day. You know you need to study, or do your laundry or something else…but… you just HAVE to go outside. When you have a cast on and it itches, you’ll do anything to scratch that itch. It’s like that.I won’t lie to you, sometimes it’s hard. Sure it is. You have to do stuff that’s really gross, or you have to hold it in when you want to puke. You have to find the words to make people feel at ease and safe. There are easy moments that are good. Maybe not so much the adrenaline rush that comes with the hard stuff, but it’s what helps you to keep coming back each day, knowing that sometimes it might not be so hard. The good times, the special moments. That’s what makes it easy to get up each morning and go back. You just never know when you’ll get a diamond in a pile of dust. You never know when the magic is going to start, that connection or whatever it is. Something…a look, a feeling, or just a hand on someone’s shoulder. When you experience that, when those magical moments happen, you just know it…that’s the pull. It’s that itch you have to scratch, that sunny day you have to experience. The calling to be a nurse.
Tags: for nursing students, nurse calling, nurses, Nursing students, patients
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April 20th, 2008 at 8:49 pm
Hi Caitlin! Wow do I remember being in your shoes!
I think that probably the best thing would be to take an NCLEX review class—many hospitals offer them to their GN’s. There are many to choose from.
I took my exam about 2 months after graduating from school and after completing a 6-week review class.
Are you starting on nights? If its possible, you might want to see if you can work some days at first, just to get into the rhythm of working in the hospital and so you can get an idea of the job.
Also, set aside time to study and do practice NCLEX questions. I did about 3000 questions in the several months leading up to my exam, and I think it helped a lot. Remember to read the rationales behind the answers because it will help you as you learn what NCLEX is asking for.
Good luck and enjoy the new career!
April 15th, 2008 at 2:17 pm
I’m not sure if this is going to be posted or not, but hopefully it does because i’m looking for a lot of feedback! My name is Caitlin and I graduate in 5 weeks with my Bachelor’s in Nursing. I start work on a medical-surgical floor working nights exactly 10 days after i graduate, which I’m ecstatic about! I was just wondering if everyone could just give me some good tips on how to be a working nurse and trying to study for my boards. I am so nervous to take my boards and am looking for any tips or ANYTHING you want to share for that matter! I just found this site while looking for nursing scrubs and think it’s awesome! Thanks