I will always carry you in my heart, I am so proud of each you!
This evening, it is an honor to sit amongst a group of people who are not only
nurses, but also educators, a group of men and women who epitomize the values
of nursing and education: Perseverance, generosity, humor, dedication...and here is the big
one, compassion. And the list of qualities we share could go on and on. But I
think, the energy of this class and the charisma is almost tangible as this
evening we celebrate your completion of the nurse assistant program and the
grand accumulation of a knowledge you never imagined just two years ago.
Aaliyah, you always had confidence and you
took to nursing like you have been doing this your whole life. Remember the frail elderly lady who hurt
every time you touched her, and how she fell in love with you and you were the
only one who could help her to the bathroom?
Today you are a CNA
Natavia,
Remember your first day in clinical when you forgot your watch? I really wanted to hug you and tell you it
was ok, and it broke my heart to see your tears, but I had to let you fail
because I knew you would learn a valuable lesson. That we learn far more from our failures than we ever do from our successes. Today you are a CNA.
AhLexus, I don’t think you ever quite got used
to me standing over your shoulder and goodness knows I made your hands shake, but
today you can say with pride, I did it.
You were so determined to succeed. And today you are a CNA.
Brooke, I was worried about your tender
stomach. I didn’t think you would ever
master peri-care and bedbaths due to the odors. I really didn't think you could keep up physically with the demands of the job but you surprised me
and today you are a CNA.
Diamond, it broke my heart when you failed BP
check offs the first and second time, but I had to demand perfection and couldn’t be soft
on you, because I knew what it would take to succeed in a very unforgiving profession where nothing less than your A game will do.
You were one of the few who could handle giving a bath to that lovely
patient whose only word was NO!!! And today you are CNA.
Lauren, you always looked like you were half
asleep and never did I know if you heard anything that I said. You told me I threw you to the wolves the
first day of clinical. I seem to recall
that I only asked you make all the beds on the hall, feed two patients, and take
maybe four sets of VS tops. By the end of
clinical you were managing an entire group of patients by yourself. And today you are CNA.
To my Salemtowne clinical group, you are still
remembered as the most prepared, the best bedmakers, the best bath givers. They even remarked during my clinical
rotation this semester, that they wished you were back. And today you are all CNAs.
It’s not easy to think of something original to say to a group of enthusiastic future health care professionals. After digging deep into my heart—hoping to channel Florence Nightingale—I decided to share my impressions of what patients thank us for when they say “Thank you, nurse.” Over the years, I’ve noticed that the predominant theme of those thank-you cards we get from patients is gratitude for the little things we do for them—answering the call light promptly, speaking compassionately, giving them something to drink, placing the phone by their ear when they’re unable to, holding their hand, bringing them a newspaper, and (my personal favorite) trimming their nails and washing their hands. (I did so much of that I could have been accused of illegally practicing podiatry or cosmetology!) I heard a patient say, “Thanks, nurse. That enema was really fabulous!” But many patients recall, even years later, the time you washed their hair. You will never forget the patient you watch give birth, the first patient you watch die and probably if you are a lot like me, you never forget anyone you watch die. I know I don’t.
It’s not easy to think of something original to say to a group of enthusiastic future health care professionals. After digging deep into my heart—hoping to channel Florence Nightingale—I decided to share my impressions of what patients thank us for when they say “Thank you, nurse.” Over the years, I’ve noticed that the predominant theme of those thank-you cards we get from patients is gratitude for the little things we do for them—answering the call light promptly, speaking compassionately, giving them something to drink, placing the phone by their ear when they’re unable to, holding their hand, bringing them a newspaper, and (my personal favorite) trimming their nails and washing their hands. (I did so much of that I could have been accused of illegally practicing podiatry or cosmetology!) I heard a patient say, “Thanks, nurse. That enema was really fabulous!” But many patients recall, even years later, the time you washed their hair. You will never forget the patient you watch give birth, the first patient you watch die and probably if you are a lot like me, you never forget anyone you watch die. I know I don’t.
Recently,
when I reread Florence Nightingale’s Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What
It Is Not, I realized she was writing about similar little things.
Referring to keeping the bedside spotless and other housekeeping issues, she
admonished, “If a nurse declines to do these kinds of things ‘because it is not
her business,’ I should say that nursing was not her calling.” These little,
seemingly menial gestures may not get us nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
But as with peacemakers, what nurses and nursing assistants do moves and
soothes the human heart and spirit. The enchanting (though not entirely
mysterious) thing is that as we strive to bring about positive changes in our
patients, we’re transformed ourselves. I’m certainly not the same
“nurse-person” I was at my pinning ceremony 29 years ago.
Today,
health care professionals walk a delicate line between tradition and
technology, computer skills and compassionate service.
To
my new colleagues, I’d like to stress
that whatever field of nursing you pursue, don’t forget to do the little
things, share your knowledge with all, and invoke Florence Nightingale—the
founder of modern nursing for our modern times.
Congratulations,
graduates, and welcome to a healing profession. You are certified nursing
assistants. Whatever you may do from here, wherever you may go I hope that
you never forget that this is what you help to do. This is your greatest power,
your greatest gift. You will reach into the hearts and minds of the sick and
their families and you will plant two very important seeds, hope and love, and
the fruit of these is healing.
I
think our job is a sacred one. I think that the art of healing is a privilege.
It is one filled with love and with compassion. Treat your patients with this
love and compassion. You can feel it right in your gut here. Let it guide every
encounter with them. If you do this often enough your job will take on an
entirely new meaning for you. Your words, your touch, your presence will heal.
Welcome, again, to a healing profession.