
Warriors Are Not

(I posted this 18th May 2019. Wow! What a change the world has seen since then! Warriors are never a more needed commodity than they are now. And will be for a few years more.
Since I wrote this Ode there have been a great many more step up to don the mantle of Warrior. The world has far more hope for their examples so it is fitting I repost it.)
Here’s an acknowledgement to the warriors I know, interestingly enough. most of them women Mary Szental, Sheryl Pyers, Dyan Thomson, Irene Kondostanos, Karen Hadley, Elaine Wilhelm, Stephanie Messenger, Jeffrey Smith, Robert F Kennedy Jnr, Del Bigtree and Rohn Walker as well as the team at Moms Across America are the ones who come instantly to mind but there are many more who don’t…
Ode to the Warriors of the Light
May your strength attain new highs,
May your courage only grow,
May your wisdom ever rise,
May peace each night you know.
May the strategies you devise,
Permit others to hear your truth,
May your message cut through the lies,
To restore sanity and sooth.
May others spread your word,
So the pace of progress grows,
‘Til many like voices are heard,
In song, speech, poem and prose.
Until combined efforts free the many,
From invisible chains with which they’re bound,
‘Til we’ve a land of honey and plenty,
Where peace and love and harmony abound.
by Tom Grimshaw
Simple Ideas

Adam Savage walks through two spectacular examples of profound scientific discoveries that came from simple, creative ideas anyone could have thought of.
https://www.flixxy.com/how-simple-observations-lead-to-great-scientific-discoveries.htm
US Bill Of Rights

Print this out and give to your young ones, then maybe someday…
Understand Your Enemy

Drug companies are NOT your ally in health! They make money when you are sick. They do not have a vested interest in curing anything.
These ARE War Crimes

Walking

Never Stop Questioning Authority

Rely on your own observation and knowingness rather than ‘authorities’.
Passing Trays
A day in the life!
Thanks Karen Hardy and Whitney Koenig!
Yesterday I overheard a nursing student snark, “Yeah, this is why I’m in nursing school – so I can pass trays.”
And if I hadn’t been up to my eyeballs in other things to do for my patients, I would have stopped and said: You’ve already missed the point entirely. I’m not sure why you DO think you’re here. If you hope to be a good nurse (or coworker, or person with a heart), you’re going to spend the majority of your working life doing things you SO mistakenly think are beneath you. You are going to pass trays with a smile – excitement even, when your patient finally gets to try clear liquids. You will even open the milk and butter the toast and cut the meat. You will feed full-grown adults from those trays, bite by tedious, hard-to-swallow bite. You will, at times, get your own vital signs or glucoscans, empty Foley bags and bedside commodes without thinking twice. You will reposition the same person, move the same three pillows, 27 times in one shift because they can’t get comfortable. You will not only help bathe patients, but wash and dry between the toes they can’t reach. Lotion and apply deodorant. Scratch backs. Nystatin powder skin folds. Comb hair. Carefully brush teeth and dentures. Shave an old man’s wrinkled face.
Because these things make them feel more human again. You will NOT delegate every “code brown,” and you will handle them with a mix of grace and humor so as not to humiliate someone who already feels quite small. You will change ostomy appliances and redress infected and necrotic wounds and smell smells that stay with you, and you will work hard not to show how disgusted you may feel because you will remember that this person can’t walk away from what you have only to face for a few moments. You will fetch ice and tissues and an extra blanket and hunt down an applesauce when you know you don’t have time to. You will listen sincerely to your patient vent when you know you don’t have time to. You will hug a family member, hear them out, encourage them, bring them coffee the way they like it, answer what you may feel are “stupid” questions – twice even – when you don’t have time to.
You won’t always eat when you’re hungry or pee when you need to because there’s usually something more important to do. You’ll be aggravated by Q2 narcotic pushes, but keenly aware that the person who requires them is far more put upon. You will navigate unbelievably messy family dramas, and you will be griped at for things you have no control over, and be talked down to, and you will remain calm and respectful (even though you’ll surely say what you really felt to your coworkers later), because you will try your best to stay mindful of the fact that while this is your everyday, it’s this patient or family’s high-stress situation, a potential tragedy in the making.
Many days you won’t feel like doing any of these things, but you’ll shelve your own feelings and do them the best you can anyway.
HIPAA will prevent you from telling friends, family, and Facebook what your work is really like. They’ll guess based off what ridiculousness Gray’s Anatomy and the like make of it, and you’ll just have to haha at the poop and puke jokes. But your coworkers will get it, the way this work of nursing fills and breaks, fills and breaks your heart. Fellow nurses, doctors, NPs and PAs, CNAs and PCAs, unit clerks, phlebotomists, respiratory therapists, physical and occupational therapists, speech therapists, transport, radiology, telemetry, pharmacy techs, lab, even dietary and housekeeping — it’s a team sport.
And you’re not set above the rest as captain. You will see you need each other, not just to complete the obvious tasks but to laugh and cry and laugh again about these things only someone else who’s really been there can understand. You will see clearly that critical thinking about and careful delivery of medications are only part of the very necessary care you must provide. Blood gushing adrenaline-pumping code blue ribs breaking beneath your CPR hands moments are also part, but they’re not what it’s all about.
The “little” stuff is rarely small. It’s heavy and you can’t carry it by yourself.
So yes, little nursling, you are here to pass trays.
Indoctrination Camps

