My biggest challenge is fighting for nurses to be who they want to be as “nurses”. I don’t have a degree … I do have 30 years of experience, and this has been a battle to develop as I want to develop, not as my manager feels I should. The pressure to grow through academia is immense, but does not suit all nurses. Some of the best nurses are those who learned from their history, patients and work, those who can reflect and support nurses from their own experience, not through a textbook. I learned from observing good and bad managers; you cannot teach a nurse to be a “good” listener, empathetic, to comfort and support, to effectively break bad news.
I have been redeployed to the COVID-19 frontline. In my hospital, most redeployed nurses were from sexual health and HIV. One is working there full time, some flourished, and some despised every shift. I was in the middle: scared but skilled. I see a similarity to what we do now in HIV. We had to adapt the way we worked with HIV over the years.
The world is a strange, alien place. I have half an eye on making sure that my patients are supported and safe and the other on my emails, awaiting redeployment. It is quieter now, but there is still the fear that long days and nights in critical care are around the corner. I feel that I need more balance. My flat is on the market and I’m looking for a place nearer the coast to enjoy my days off more. I still feel unmotivated, distracted and anxious.