
I am about to start the second week of my new job. I have renamed the yellow handled shears that have “PMMC ER” engraved on the side. I am officially no longer a trauma nurse. I do nothing but pass out drugs (mostly crushed in applesauce) and change dressings on month-old wounds that will never heal.
Six months ago, I would never have considered a job which is only that. Not a career-building, educational occupation. A job. I hate that the cliché “Having a baby changes everything” holds true, even for me. I only have to work eight-hour shifts, and can disappear to my car or the bathroom to pump milk without having to answer to anyone. By taking an Emergency Department job fresh out of school, I sort of skipped over the basic entry-level job that every nurse needs on their resume. The only good thing about this new position is that it fills this requirement.
I may not be learning something new daily, but I do get to have mindless conversations with the residents while I’m working, which actually keeps me quite entertained. I can often be found crushing an MS Contin, calcium pill, and dose of Neurontin together and stirring the powder into a protein shake with thickener. I spend 80% of my time at work standing in front of the med cart. The residents, no matter how confused, have discovered that the nurses are a captive audience, so they roll right up to the cart, park, and stay until a CNA rolls them to their room.
Typical conversation:
Demented Resident: I need to go upstairs and go to bed right now.
RN (me): If we went upstairs, we’d be on the roof. There’s only one story.
DR: That’s fine. I could look for my car from the roof. It’s been missing for a long time.
RN: What kind of car do you have? I could help you look.
DR: It’s a ’69 Plymouth.
RN: Okay, I’ll keep an eye out. (Begins crushing an Ativan into applesauce)
CNA: (heard in background, talking to a visitor) Head down this hall and make a left at the fish tank.
DR: I’d like to go fishing. Can you take me to the ship?
RN: It hasn’t docked yet.
DR: Okay. Will you put my books in my stateroom when it does?
RN: Sure. I have a bite of applesauce for you.
I really can’t complain. I’m making an obscene amount of money for less than half of the responsibility I had in the ER. As long as I keep my sanity, maybe some day I’ll go back to being a contributing member of society.