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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Happy Halloween 2011

 Are you ready for another SPOOKY Halloween?  I know I am!  I baked up a batch of peanut butter cookies (Yum!) and my honey came over for some pumpkin carving.  We turned on the hilarious Sean of the Dead and then continued on with the more frightening classic Halloween.
I made the spooky-cute tree and he made a classic jack-o-lantern.  I like how he looks kind of goofy  :)

The pumpkin seeds were boiled in salted water, dried, mixed with garlic butter and a little olive oil, and baked for 45 mins.  Then we sprinkled them with some salt and munched away to our hearts content.

I wish you all a very delightful and happy Halloween!

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Weeks 6 & 7 of Nursing School (2nd Year)

The last two weeks have been a blur.  There was a massive 52 page paper to hand in, a skill testing presentation, and a slew of exams.  The exams continue on this week, in addition to a group presentation.  It's a lot of work!

Switching to Maternity
My social life has dwindled down and my poor sweetheart is neglected (tsk-tsk), but there was a teensy break this weekend.  We are switching over from the surgical rotation to the maternity rotation so there was no clinical this week.  This week I will be in the maternity ward - oh, I am so excited!

At first I was terrified.  "Oh no!" I thought, "I am going to drop a baby on it's head FOR SURE!"  The parents will relay to the child with sad eyes about how the student nurse, Marie, had slippery hands and dropped him right on his noggin.  He'll probably sustain brain damage, and sue me for every non-penny I have.

But, little by little, I began to anticipate being able to see these little squirming bundles of fat and cuteness.  Babies are the best!  Of course, I'm a little biased right now because I saw my friend's baby this weekend and he's an exceptionally awesome baby  :)

The Best of Surgery
Still, I will miss working in surgery.  It has been a very good experience.  I had a really good teacher that taught me a lot, and I was fortunate to work with many nurses that took time out to show me procedures and other cool things.  I also got to try out lots of new skills, such as removing staples on surgical wounds, hanging IV bags, taking out a urinary catheter, giving injections, flushing IV saline locks, and changing wound dressings. It has been neat!

The patients have been a lot more mobile and active than last semester (geriatrics), and it has been exciting to see them get well and to go home.  If you ever get hospitalized, remember to try and start moving as soon as you can safely do so.  It keeps your blood moving around so that you don't get blood clots and bed sores, and you'll heal faster!  You'll also suffer less complications like the dreaded constipation.

One patient said to me in awe, "Why are all these people lying around in bed?  They need to GET UP and start walking!  They'll never get better by lying around like that!"  That patient was an inspiration, and she got better a lot faster than my textbook estimated.  I was proud of her!

Well, I better get back to my studying.

I hope you have a great week!
  My Nursing School Diary

Sunday, October 16, 2011

The Pumpkin Hunt








It was a beautiful day to go pumpkin hunting today.  The weather was cool, the leaves are starting to change colour, and it was sunny.  My sweetie and I stopped by the local Farmer's Market to look at all the yummy baked goods and fresh produce.  There were some amazing pumpkins available!  The kind that look like something out of a Halloween cartoon - the odd shaped, Tim Burtonesque variety.

Unfortunately, they cost about $10 for a big one, so we had to pass.  Instead, we picked up a fresh bag of kettle corn, still warm and sticking in clumps.  It was so good!

At the grocery store, we found plenty of big pumpkins for a reasonable price.  I spent forever looking for odd shaped ones only to finally settle upon a very nicely shaped regular pumpkin.  I showed it to Poggles, but he seemed a bit bothered by it.  He refused to come to the take-out window to get his food.

Maybe the pumpkin is HAUNTED???

(More likely, it just smells funny...  :P  Have a great day!)

Saturday, October 15, 2011

The Take-Out Window









Poggles gets hand-fed every day.  Yesterday he discovered "the take-out window".

The side of his cage has a sliding door and I opened it for business.  If he comes to the take out window and clambers up, he can take a piece of food to go!

He usually eats the small pieces right there in front of me (with great relish!), but he takes the bigger pieces of food to-go.  They are too scary to eat at the take out window so he takes them under his wheel to eat in secret.

Silly Poggles!

My Study Buddy

 Here's a picture of my little study buddy.  He usually sleeps with his bum to me so that I can't see him, but he made an exception on this day.  I think he looks so cute with those pink little legs to the side.
He woke up after a few clicks, but he just settled back down and snoozed away.  My sweetie says that I have been less stressed out this term and he attributes it to Poggles.  I guess it's hard to frown TOO much when I look up from the books and see this serene little sleeper.

Have a nice day  :)

Monday, October 10, 2011

"Poggle-Poggle!"

Happy Thanksgiving!  It was a very good day today.  I got some homework done and then I spent some quality time with good ol' Poggles.  

He's usually very, very grumpy when I clean his house, but he was in a surprisingly accommodating mood today.  It was time to grab the camera!!!
He started off as his usual, skittish self except that he didn't turn his back to me.  He was watching me.  I think he wanted food.  This is the fortunate side effect of hand-feeding your hedgehog.  When he wants food, he'll pay attention to you! 
I led him on a path to his pouch and hid a piece of food inside.  He usually doesn't want to go into a new, clean pouch, but I've mastered the trick of rubbing his old pouch against the outside and opening of his new pouch.  He sniffs the pouch opening very carefully, and then he walks inside.  
I make it extra easy for him to know that there's a piece of food inside by dragging the food in a path along the floor into his house.  I'm pretty sure it leaves a scent trail for him.  He has a very good sense of smell.
Well, once Poggles got inside of his pouch and ate his snack.  He just sat at the entrance.  It was a perfect photo op.  
He has never liked the camera much so I was very surprised at how he just put up with me.  The camera was right in his face and he didn't seem to care.  Very odd...  Hey, but I'm not complaining!  I am very thankful.

I hope you had lots of turkey, stuffing, and other good things with your family and friends today.

Cheers  :)

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Weeks 4 & 5 of Nursing School (2nd Year)

"It's not a real patient!" I woke up saying yesterday afternoon. I had just had a terrible dream where my patient had died for a very long time and somehow I had never noticed.  This was a result of a grueling week of exams and papers, and two clinical days where nothing seemed to go right.

Things Go Wrong
Granted, they weren't my patients, but anytime something bad happens to a patient I start to worry that something bad will happen to one of mine.  In clinical this week, one patient stopped breathing, one patient's condition suddenly deteriorated to the point where they had to assign the student nurse to a different patient because the condition was too critical for a student nurse to manage, and one patient was delirious and pulled out all of the tubings and IV.  It was a student nurse's worst nightmare.

You can rest easy knowing that none of these things happened as a result of anything that the student nurse's did wrong.  We literally walked onto the surgical floor, went to check on our assigned patients, and ran out calling for help.  Sometimes bad things happen on a surgical ward because patients have complications from the surgery, different tests, and medications.  Luckily, this was our first experience with this since starting in surgery, so I guess it's not that common.

Needless to say, I was running at maximum adrenaline levels.  I was in constant fear that I was going to do something wrong.  Unfortunately for me, this was also the day that my teacher assigned us two patients instead of one.  She also wanted to give us some more complicated cases.  *groan*

After running around like a chicken with its head cut off, I came home, showered, and collapsed into bed.  I was out in seconds.

Such is the life of a nursing student in second year.  There are always too many assignments to do, too little time to sleep, too many exams that coincide with other projects, and waaaaay too much that we don't know yet.  In clinical, we are constantly flipping through our textbooks to look up different conditions, reviewing how to do something, what certain medications are for, etc.  It's hectic.

Sweet Patients
Of course, not all is bad.  I still get nice moments with clients.  I was in the middle of rushing off to do something yesterday when one of my clients started calling, "Nurse!  Nurse!"  I rushed over to see what was wrong.  Instead of reporting something frightful, he flashed me a big grin and said, "Nurse, you are doing a great job!  I can see you are very busy today, but I know you are going to be a great nurse one day." *sigh of relief from the nursing student*

When I told him at the end of my shift that I was going home now, he exclaimed, "What am I going to do when you're gone?  I am going to MISS you!"  Lol, I'm going to miss you too, lovely client. My Nursing School Diary

Saturday, October 1, 2011

We Hate Homework

I don't know how it happened, but it's already time for the first round of exams.  I am feeling grumpy about so much homework and studying, and Poggles is grumpy about it too.  Well, he's mostly grumpy because he's my homework buddy.

He's forced to sit in his pouch sleeping and sniffing the air while I toil away.  He even has to tolerate getting fed intermittently.  Poor guy... What a hard life.

Meanwhile, I'm looking up drug names like Dimenhydrinate, Ipratropium, and Saccharomyces Boulardii.  Who comes up with these?!?

Okay, back to the grind.  Nose to the wheel, nose to the wheel...

Have a good weekend  :)
My Nursing School Diary