New Thing Nurse

Let us help with your new thing.

  • Home
  • About
    • Who is the New Thing Nurse?
    • NEW THING NURSE
    • WellGan Consulting
    • DISCLAIMERS
  • TEMPLATES
  • Services
    • NURSING STUDENTS & NEW GRADS
    • EXPERIENCED NURSES
    • NURSE PRACTITIONERS
    • WORKSHOPS & EVENTS
    • FAQ: HAVE A QUESTION? READ THIS
    • REVIEWS
  • ADVOCACY
  • BLOG
  • RESOURCES
    • FAVORITES
    • PPE CARE PACKAGE PROJECT
    • MENTAL HEALTH
    • VIOLENCE AGAINST HEALTHCARE WORKERS
  • CONTACT
IMG_0189.PNG

The light in the dark of 2020

December 11, 2020 by Sarah Wells in advocacy, Corona Conversations, future nurse, inspiration, mental health, New Thing Nurse, nurse, nurse wellness, nursing

I have failed so many times this year.

I have failed to get out of bed on days where my body wouldn’t listen to me.

I have failed to be open with my family, friends, colleagues, and clients when the despair was too great to function.

I have failed to be as present as I could have been during this most unprecedented time – historical mostly due to failures in leadership, process, and procedure that have cost our country 289,000 deaths and counting as of the writing of this post.

But most of the time, I am able to do so much – get up, work, smile, speak, write, advocate, care, support, listen, live, be – and each action is a success that must be celebrated.  

These are the days that will define my life.

I was a high school student during 9/11, graduated college in 2008 during the Great Recession, and worked as an emergency and radiology nurse during disasters, epidemics, and the worst days in the lives of so many of my patients. But this pandemic, this year, these moments – these will be what I tell future generations about.

And while I will speak to them about working through PPE and supply shortages, not knowing what to do when others needed it most, shouting reassurances to patients through masks and goggles, managing the public misinformation, and drowning in cleaning supplies at work yet not being able to find basic hygiene products at home, there are other more important moments that I will share first and most frequently.

I will tell the future generations of nurses and other healthcare workers about the fear of others, fear of an unknown, and a fear of bringing an evil home that could harm or kill my loved ones. I will tell them about the loneliness – missing my family, my friends, and not knowing when it will be safe to be around them again. I will tell them about the isolation – not just the feeling of being alone but also the physical distance between people – eating lunches outside, not in the break room with my coworkers. About edging away from others because of the unease of being around people without a mask. And the feeling of fear that was not always of others, but of myself, not knowing if I was unwittingly passing on a novel evil to others.

I will tell them about the crushing weight of shame when I called out of work as an essential frontliner, not for COVID-19, but for anxiety and sadness that I could not get under control, no matter how much mindfulness, self-care, and therapy I sought out. I will tell them about the days when I couldn’t move without my husband physically hauling me out of bed and into clothes to get even the most basic things done.

I will tell them that even in the darkest, loneliest moments that I was still me.

I was still a nurse. And I was no less of a nurse because of my struggles. Every time I took a stronger dose of my SSRI - I was a nurse.  Every call to my therapist, appointment with a psychiatrist, and day I stayed in bed and streamed 12 hours of TV in an attempt at harm reduction – I was a nurse. I was nursing myself. I was nursing my mind and my brain chemistry. I was nursing chronic conditions called anxiety and depression that were exacerbated by the most unprecedented year in medical history.

And I never did it alone. I had my husband, my amazing partner in all things, who cared for me every day. I had my family and friends, IRL and online, who helped support me during my best and worst moments. I had my incredible nurse community – because we are a community that can withstand all things – who checked in, sent me packages, emails, texts, DMs, messages, and the most hilariously inappropriate memes to make me smile on days when I thought the world was ending. I will tell them that my nursing and healthcare people came together to support me because that’s what we do when the shit hits the fan – we roll up our sleeves and figure out how to fix it.

I want to tell everyone going into healthcare in the future that you are never alone.

You have generations of us - nurses, doctors, nursing assistants, techs, phlebotomists, imaging technologists, respiratory therapists, social workers, therapists of all varieties, and all the other medical roles that make up our incredible healthcare team – who have had those dark days, been in those paralyzing moments, and gotten through to the other side. We are here for you to lean on, get guidance, and receive all the wealth of our collective experiences. We are also here to represent those who have not made it. We know how impossible the work is, yet we continue to do it. Through the hardest moments, we are there to care for others, keeping them alive and comforted, making them better. 

But know that you will have dark, challenging moments too. And often those moments will be in your car, on the way home, or at 0400 when you are unsuccessfully trying to sleep. You will be replaying things in your mind, wondering what you could have done differently, or thinking about how all of it doesn’t matter anyways. You may despair. You may want to give up. And it’s OK. I want you to know that I have despaired. I have wanted to give up.

But I haven’t, and you shouldn’t either.

I have seen the dark, and yet I eventually got up out of bed again. I showered, grabbed coffee, and put my scrubs back on. I got my PPE. I grabbed food and my nurse bag and went to work. I put on my mask and goggles. I cared for others because that’s what I do because I am a nurse.

 When I tell others about 2020, I want to make sure they know all the parts.

And I want to make sure that no matter what year it is, the dark moments have happened and will happen again, but despite the darkness, there is so much light to be had. I show up every shift for the light. I am here to help you see it too.

Sarah @ New Thing Nurse

Click Here for Mental Health Resources

About the Author - Sarah K. Wells, MSN, RN, CEN, CNL is an educator, speaker, blogger and owner of New Thing Nurse, a professional and academic coaching company for the nursing world. New Thing Nurse is organized to provide support and guidance to aspiring nurses, newly graduated nurses, and veteran RNs looking to make a change in their life. 

Whether it’s a new school, new job or new idea,

New Thing Nurse wants to help with your new thing!


Have a new thing? Check out our services.

Help New Thing Nurse get PPE to the frontlines!
Screen+Shot+2020-12-11+at+11.57.47+AM.jpg

Need a holiday gift idea? Check out the NTN Shop!
EffingEssentialMockupLongSleeve.jpg
#covid19 cases are surging. 🦠 Everyone can help slow the spread by wearing a #mask CORRECTLY. 😷 Thank you to the @cdcgov for making this visual which shows how NOT to wear a mask & the correct way to do so. 👏🏽 As far as I’ve seen in the
#nurses are here to take care of everyone. #happypride ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🖤🤍🤎
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&b
🌟 GIVEAWAY 🌟 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I’ll be giving away TWO #effingessential t
🚨 You can be fired for what you post on #socialmedia as a #healthcare worker 🚨 •
This is 💯 true & is happening every day. Let me do a quick breakdown on how & why: 🖊 When you are hired at a #healthcare facility of almost any size, yo
What could go wrong? #wearamask #covid19 #nursehumor.
#healthcare is the ultimate team sport & #cnas are the backbone of it. Today is the end of #cnaweek, but know that each of you - #cna, #nursingassistant, #patientcaretech, #patientcareassistant & all your other titles - are what makes success
Have an upcoming #interview? @newthingnurse can help with that.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Wearing a #mask means you #love your #family & #friends & want to prevent them from being sick, that you love your community & want it to stay #strong, that you #love your country & want it to be able to safely get to our new normal,
December 11, 2020 /Sarah Wells
2020, MENTAL HEALTH, nurse mental health, mental health, MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS, depression, anxiety, sad, sadness, panic attack, nurse, nurseing, nursing, nurses, nurse tribe, nurse life, COVID-19, covid, coronavirus, novel coronavirus, hope, inspiration, registered nurse, registered nurses, COVID19, CORONA VIRUS, NOVEL CORONA VIRUS, VIRUS, NURSE, NURSE LIFE, NURSING, NURSE LEADER, NURSES, NURSING STUDENT, NURSING SCHOOL, REGISTERED NURSE, RN, NURSE PRACTITIONER, NP, ADN, BSN, MSN, DNP, CRNA, RNS, PRENURSING, FUTURE NURSE, PRENURSING MAJOR, PRENURSING LIFE, TRAVEL NURSE, TRAVEL, NURSE GRIND, DONATE, ADVOCATE, TEAM, I LOVE NURSES, CNA, COLLEGE, HOSPITAL, HOSPITAL LIFE, SCRUB, SCRUBS, SCRUB LIFE, DOCTOR, MEDICAL, MEDICINE, PANDEMIC, THANKSGIVING, HOLIDAYS, HOLIDAY, RISK, PUBLIC HEALTH, STRONGER TOGETHER, GATHER, GATHERING, CELEBRATING, BE SAFE, VIRTUAL HOLIDAYS, VIRTUAL, REMOTE, EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT, EMERGENCY ROOM, EMERGENCY, EMERGENCY NURSE, ED, ED NURSE, SURGE, HELP, HELP US, HELP YOU, BE KIND, WEAR A MAS, MASK, MASKS, STAY HOME, CREATIVE, FAMILY, LOVED ONES, FRIENDS, help, help you, support
advocacy, Corona Conversations, future nurse, inspiration, mental health, New Thing Nurse, nurse, nurse wellness, nursing
1 Comment
IMG_9334.PNG

To gather or not to gather, that is the question.

November 21, 2020 by Sarah Wells in Corona Conversations, emergency nursing, family, gratitude, holidays, New Thing Nurse, nurse, nurse advocacy, public health

Thinking about getting a small group together for Thanksgiving this year?

Many are, but is it worth the risk? And what is the risk?

COVID-19 is raging across America.

The United States is facing another huge surge in COVID-19 cases across the country. As a nation, we have hit new highs of cases per day, hospitalizations and have now surpassed 250,000 deaths from COVID-19.

What does this mean for me?

COVID-19 is basically everywhere. People have been testing positive at a progressively higher rate across the country since September. When more people have the virus, it spreads faster and faster because more people have it to give to others.

And when more people have it, more people wind up in the hospital. In many states, hospitals are FULL meaning they have no beds or no staff to take care of you if you have a medical emergency.

Read that again - MANY HOSPITALS DO NOT HAVE SPACE OR STAFF TO TAKE CARE OF YOU.

That means medical staff have to start making choices about who gets care and who does not. This happened in some states already this year, but this round may be worse. Earlier this year, hospitals were at max capacity in some states but other states were able to help out by taking patient transfers or sending medical workers to help ease staffing shortages. Now, everyone is facing a mounting surge of COVID-19 patients. There are fewer and fewer hospitals with beds available to take any transfers. And no one has staff to send. No help may be coming.

What does this have to do with Thanksgiving?

Thanksgiving is a holiday where families and friends traditionally gather together to eat and visit. This is an especially enticing idea as so many of us have been isolated from our loved ones, and everyone is desperate for a feeling of normalcy in this most not-normal year.

And what I hear from healthcare workers is an even greater desire for something normal. We are carrying huge burdens in our professional and personal lives. That burden is now threatening days that are so special to our family and friends. We are used to working on the holidays but not having our work cancel the holidays for everyone.

However, gathering this year is riskier than you may think. With the rates of COVID-19 so high across the country, the possibility of being able to safely get together, even in small numbers, without someone in that group having COVID-19 is small.

Now you may be asking how I know that. That’s a great question! I know that thanks to the good people at Georgia Tech who have created a website called the “COVID-19 Event Risk Assessment Planning Tool” where you can assess the risk level of attending an event, given the event size and location.

Screen Shot 2020-11-21 at 8.41.40 AM.png

I don’t care what Georgia Tech says. I WANT TO GATHER!

As a University of Georgia alumna, I completely understand where you’re coming from (sorry GT). However Georgia Tech isn’t the only group trying to show the risk of gathering for Thanksgiving and other upcoming holidays.

The Centers for the Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has on their website - “…the safest way to celebrate Thanksgiving is to celebrate at home with the people you live with.”

Screen Shot 2020-11-21 at 8.45.39 AM.png

The CDC goes on to break down the risk of holiday activities:

Lower Risk Activities

  • Having a small dinner with only people who live in your household

  • Preparing traditional family recipes for family and neighbors, especially those at higher risk of severe illness from COVID-19, and delivering them in a way that doesn’t involve contact with others

  • Having a virtual dinner and sharing recipes with friends and family

  • Shopping online rather than in person on the day after Thanksgiving or the next Monday

  • Watching sports events, parades, and movies from home

Moderate Risk Activities

  • Having a small outdoor dinner with family and friends who live in your community (Lower your risk by following CDC’s recommendations on hosting gatherings or cook-outs.)

  • Visiting pumpkin patches or orchards where people use hand sanitizer before touching pumpkins or picking apples, wearing masks is encouraged or enforced, and people are able to maintain social distancing

  • Attending a small outdoor sports events with safety precautions in place

Higher Risk Activities

Avoid these higher risk activities to help prevent the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19:

  • Going shopping in crowded stores just before, on, or after Thanksgiving

  • Participating or being a spectator at a crowded race

  • Attending crowded parades

  • Attending large indoor gatherings with people from outside of your household

  • Using alcohol or drugs that may alter judgment and make it more difficult to practice COVID-19 safety measures.

Try to get creative!

This year won’t be like the past, but there is an opportunity to make it memorable for fun reasons. Try to get creative with how you are going to connect with the family and friends that you may not be able to see IRL. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has a great blog (who knew?) that put out a recent post with some fun ways to celebrate Thanksgiving remotely this year:

Send Gifts. Although COVID-19 has changed our lives in many ways, sending cards or gifts remains a relatively easy way to let loved ones know that you’re thinking of them. Who wouldn’t want to receive some home-baked goodies, a basket of fresh fruit, or a festive wreath? If you enjoy knitting, candle making, or other ways of crafting gifts for the holidays, now’s the time to start planning for Thanksgiving through the New Year.

Make Videos. When I’m visiting family, there is often music involved—with guitar, piano, and maybe some singing. But, this year, I’ll have to be content with video recording a few songs and sending them to others by text or email. Come to think of it, the kids and the grandkids might enjoy these songs just as much—or even more—if they can watch them at a time and place that works best for them. (On the other hand, some of them might roll their eyes and decide not to open that video file!) If you don’t play a guitar or like to sing, you can still make your own holiday-themed videos. Maybe share a dance routine, a demonstration of athletic skill, or even some stand-up comedy. The key is to have fun and let your imagination run free.

Share a Meal Remotely. Most of our end-of-the-year holidays involve the family sitting around a table overflowing with delicious food. With all of the videoconferencing platforms now available, it is easy to set aside a block of time to share a meal and good conversation remotely with friends and family members, whether they live nearby or across the country. Rather than one cook slaving over a hot stove or a certain person monopolizing the dinner table conversation, everyone gets a chance to cook and share their stories via their smartphone, tablet, or laptop. You can compare your culinary creations, swap recipes, and try to remember to leave room for dessert. If you have a tradition of playing games or giving thanks for your many blessings, you can still do many of these activities remotely.

Take an After-Dinner Walk. Due to the physical demands and psychological impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s been difficult for many of us to stay physically active. The key is making exercise a daily priority, and the holidays are no different. After your holiday meal, go on a virtual group walk through your respective neighborhoods to work off the food. Thanks to your smartphone’s camera, you can share your time outdoors and all of the interesting sights along the way. (Yes, the new playground in the local park looks fantastic, and the neighbors really did just paint their house purple!)

If you do gather, be safe.

I know some of you will read this and then gather with your loved ones anyways. If you do, please be safe and follow the CDC guidelines and consider these recommendations from the NIH Blog for safe gatherings:

Stay Safe. If you plan to go ahead and join a holiday gathering in person, it’s important to remain vigilant, even when interacting with dear friends and loved ones. The greatest risk for spread of COVID-19 right now is these family gatherings. Remember there are risks associated with travel and with interacting with people who’ve not been tested for the coronavirus prior to the event, especially if they reside in a COVID hot spot—which is almost everywhere these days. Try to keep any family gatherings brief and relatively small, about five people or less. If the weather permits, hold the get-together outdoors.

To protect yourself and your loved ones, both now and over the holidays, please follow these 3 W’s:

  • Wear a mask when you are out in public and when you are indoors with people who are not part of your immediate household. The only exception is while eating or drinking!

  • Watch your distance, staying at least 6 feet away from people who are not part of your immediate household.

  • Wash your hands thoroughly and frequently.

I don’t have all the answers, but as a nurse I would say do not gather. As a person, I understand if you do but please do it safely.

As an Emergency Department nurse for 10 years, I want you not to gather this holiday season. I will be spending Thanksgiving with my favorite non-family people - my ED co-workers at work in the emergency department. We want to be able to help you if you need it, so please consider not gathering if you can so that we can gather safely next year without the risk of COVID-19.

As a person, I have not seen my family in a year. They live in the Southeast while I live in California. I am a nurse during a pandemic. It has not been in the cards to travel safely this year to see them.

For the holidays, I am going to be flying home to see family. However I am taking a huge amount of time off to do so as safely as possible. I will be flying to Georgia and quarantining for 2 weeks with planned COVID-19 testing for me and the husband, then seeing family in small groups outside with masks on and at least six feet apart when possible with so much hand washing and sanitizing that my skin is already raw thinking about it. I am staying in a separate space, a rental that we have for the entire time we are there plus a rented car. Then upon the return, I will be quarantining for 2 weeks at home.

(I am incredibly lucky to have the flexibility and resources to be able to make this complicated trek. I know that this is not realistic for most.)

This is an impossible time, and we are having to make impossible decisions. Please just know that every decision you make will have repercussions that you must be ready to face if and when they come.

Be well and be safe.

Sarah @ New Thing Nurse


About the Author - Sarah K. Wells, MSN, RN, CEN, CNL is an educator, speaker, blogger and owner of New Thing Nurse, a professional and academic coaching company for the nursing world. New Thing Nurse is organized to provide support and guidance to aspiring nurses, newly graduated nurses, and veteran RNs looking to make a change in their life. 

Whether it’s a new school, new job or new idea,

New Thing Nurse wants to help with your new thing!


Need COVID-19 Resources? Click here!
Need PPE? Click here!
Want to donate to a good cause? Click here!

Have a new thing? Check out our services!

#covid19 cases are surging. 🦠 Everyone can help slow the spread by wearing a #mask CORRECTLY. 😷 Thank you to the @cdcgov for making this visual which shows how NOT to wear a mask & the correct way to do so. 👏🏽 As far as I’ve seen in the
#nurses are here to take care of everyone. #happypride ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🖤🤍🤎
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&b
🌟 GIVEAWAY 🌟 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I’ll be giving away TWO #effingessential t
🚨 You can be fired for what you post on #socialmedia as a #healthcare worker 🚨 •
This is 💯 true & is happening every day. Let me do a quick breakdown on how & why: 🖊 When you are hired at a #healthcare facility of almost any size, yo
What could go wrong? #wearamask #covid19 #nursehumor.
#healthcare is the ultimate team sport & #cnas are the backbone of it. Today is the end of #cnaweek, but know that each of you - #cna, #nursingassistant, #patientcaretech, #patientcareassistant & all your other titles - are what makes success
Have an upcoming #interview? @newthingnurse can help with that.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Wearing a #mask means you #love your #family & #friends & want to prevent them from being sick, that you love your community & want it to stay #strong, that you #love your country & want it to be able to safely get to our new normal,
November 21, 2020 /Sarah Wells
COVID19, CORONA VIRUS, COVID-19, NOVEL CORONA VIRUS, VIRUS, NURSE, NURSE LIFE, NURSING, NURSE LEADER, NURSES, NURSING STUDENT, NURSING SCHOOL, REGISTERED NURSE, RN, NURSE PRACTITIONER, NP, ADN, BSN, MSN, DNP, CRNA, RNS, PRENURSING, FUTURE NURSE, PRENURSING MAJOR, PRENURSING LIFE, TRAVEL NURSE, TRAVEL, NURSE GRIND, DONATE, ADVOCATE, TEAM, I LOVE NURSES, CNA, COLLEGE, HOSPITAL, HOSPITAL LIFE, SCRUB, SCRUBS, SCRUB LIFE, DOCTOR, MEDICAL, MEDICINE, PANDEMIC, Thanksgiving, Holidays, Holiday, Risk, public health, stronger together, gather, gathering, celebrating, be safe, virtual holidays, virtual, remote, emergency department, emergency room, emergency, emergency nurse, ed, ED nurse, medicine, hospital, surge, help, help us, help you, be kind, wear a mas, mask, masks, stay home, creative, family, loved ones, friends, friendsgiving
Corona Conversations, emergency nursing, family, gratitude, holidays, New Thing Nurse, nurse, nurse advocacy, public health
Comment

Powered by Squarespace