Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Anniversary

As of May 3, Chris and I will have hit the 1 year mark in our marriage. We weren't going to do any super special, but I've been pretty busy lately with work and moving and triathlon stuff, and I appreciate and love him so much, that it just seemed like the perfect time to let him know...

So I've a few surprises up my sleeve...he knows they are there, but he doesn't know what they are:-) Keeping secrets is definitely not my forte, so the next 10 days is doing to be tough b/c I'll want to let the cat out of the bag SO BAD. But I'll hold on, and after all is said and done, I'll fill everyone in on what went down.

If you are a praying person, please pray that everything will go as planned and that Chris will know what a great guy he is and that I'm super blessed to be his wife. Also pray that we don't get a divorce during our move to a new house the next few days b/c its so stressful and last time we moved stuff we fought the whole time. Finally, pray that the next 50 years will be as great as this last one.

More details to come after May 3!

Sunday, April 19, 2009

my job

When people find out that I work as a nurse in Labor and Delivery, I usually get two pretty standard reactions. Girls say something like, "Oh wow, that's got to be amazing." Guys say something like, "Ew, gross, I don't want any details."

I also get to hear a lot of people's birth stories, like how long they pushed, how bad it hurt, how incredible epidurals are, how big their baby was, and how hard or easy the following few days were. I think that being a nurse offers people some level of comfort in their candidness. Often, before saying something really gross or personal, they begin with, "Well, this might be too much information, but you're a nurse, so you're used to it." Then they proceed to describe their placenta, their episiotomy, their hemorrhoids, and their subsequent need for Colace. I totally thrive on these conversations. Ya'll are talking my language!

With all that said, I also get asked, "Well, what exactly do you do?" So I'll take a second to tell you, in limited detail, what my job consists of.

First and foremost, I am a labor nurse. I admit patients, put in their IVs, give them any meds or fluids they might need, watch their vital signs (blood pressure, temp, heart rate), monitor their contraction rate and strength, monitor baby's heart rate, stay with them through an epidural placement if that's what they choose, offer labor support, keep them breathing and in control when it hurts so bad, coach them through pushing, call the docs when delivery is immanent, and watch them closely after they deliver.

I am also a baby nurse, which means that I take care of the baby right after its born--making sure baby is breathing and stable, suctioning all the gunk out of the lungs, weighing baby, doing footprints, and wrapping baby up for mommy and daddy. That's one of my favorite things--to take a new baby to his or her parents for the first time. Pretty cool moment.

Then there's the OR...whenever my patient has to have a C-Section, I work as a circulating nurse in the OR, meaning I document everything that is happening, get the patient prepared for surgery, keep an eye on things, and get anything that the MDs or Scrub Techs might need for the surgery. Love the OR.

After the OR, I become a PACU nurse, which means I watch the patient as she recovers from the C-Section. There, I mostly monitor vital signs and do pain management, which is usually morphine, because it works. I also help mommy and baby bond despite a little harder road to delivery.

I'm just learning how to be a triage nurse, which means that I help the MDs figure out who needs to stay on our unit and who needs to go home. This mostly involves asking patients lots of questions and monitoring them for a little while. Triage gets exciting when a patient comes in and tries to deliver in the hallway or at the front desk. Then we have to move pretty quick. Or really quick. This usually only happens when someone has had more than one baby. We keep a pretty close eye/hand on moms who have had more than 3.

Eventually, I will be able to be a scrub nurse, which means I get to scrub in the OR and hand the MDs their instruments for C-Sections. Some people say its great, others say its terrifying. Either way, at least I'll be learning something.

So that's pretty much my job...go team va-jay-jay. I have lots of amazing patients, and some pretty difficult ones too. Regardless, I get to see babies born just about every shift, and it never fails to blow my mind to see a new, little life. God is good...

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

moving day

Well friends, a lot has happened since last I wrote. Sometimes life gets the best of me and drains all those creative juices I need to write. However, four good days off from work has set me right again. Now to catch you up on what's happening.

The biggest news is that we are moving. Yes, we are moving. After a year in our apartment, we are ready for something new. Something a little bigger, that doesn't share a wall with anyone, that has a yard for herbs and veggies, that doesn't roast us in the summer and freeze us in the winter. Thankfully, after much searching, we found something just about right.

Its a little house about a mile from where we live now, in a neighborhood I don't know that much about except that its still close to all of our favorite things, like 9th Street, Broad Street, Tobacco District, Tobacco Trail, and of course, West Club Blvd.

This house was built in the 1950s, has three bedrooms, a den, dining room, 1.5 baths, a kitchen, laundry, and best of all, a porch, deck, and fireplace. Boy oh boy oh boy. We are very excited about our new home and can't wait to have everything over there.

I am much less excited about GETTING everything over there. Moving just about tops my list of things I hate most, probably second only to Dengue Fever or crashing my bike head first into a moving car, then being cussed out by the driver who failed to yield. Jerk. Anyway, moving will be a task, but Lord willing, we will have some good, strong help and get the job done real quick. If you would like to help us out, just let me know :-) We pay with pizza.

Other things that are happening...work, work, work, church, church, church, tri, tri, tri. I'll have to update about those things later. Its all good and steady and exhausting and fabulous.