I will
never forget my first night on the unit as a labor & delivery nurse.
I will be honest, I was terrified. It wasn’t a job I
took because I wanted it; it was a job I took because I needed a job. Even
though I had been a nurse for almost three years, I didn’t know much about labor
and delivery. I knew enough to be scared. I knew that it was a high risk area
and that things could go so very wrong in the blink of an eye. I didn’t like
losing an element of control…there’s only so much you can do to try and fix a
baby while it is still inside its momma. I would have felt much more
comfortable back in the NICU where I could actually touch the baby!
Fear and
apprehension aside, a small part of me was excited to learn something new. I
was curious as to what my new role would look like.
I had seen
deliveries a few times before. As a nursing student I got to see a few, and
then on a few occasions as a nursery nurse I got called to labor & delivery
to assist with the baby immediately after birth. But none of that resembled
anything close to my experience my first day on L&D.
It was a
night shift in late March, and my work started at 6 pm. The patient I assumed
care of had been admitted earlier in the day after her water broke. She had
been laboring for several hours, and decided to get an epidural shortly after I
got on shift. The amount of support I needed to provide to my patient during
labor was minimal after that…we allowed her to rest and my preceptor began
teaching me things I would need to know. Around 10 pm, my preceptor and I went
to do a cervical exam to see how much progress our patient had made. She was
dilated to 10 cm (which we term “complete,” meaning the cervix has completely
dilated to allow the baby to pass through the birth canal). After the exam, I
felt my adrenals kicking in. This woman would be having her baby soon. And I
was going to get to be a part of the whole thing.
When it was
time to start pushing, I stood on one side of the patient’s bed as her husband
stood on the other. Together, we supported my patient’s legs as my preceptor
coached her through pushing. I offered words of encouragement and support as we
continued, and soon became overwhelmed with gratitude and humility for the
opportunity to participate in such an event. The moment this child would be
born would be a moment that would forever change the course of the future. As I
watched this momma give everything she had to bring this child into the world,
I choked up a little on the inside. There I stood, in the same position as many
women throughout the history of the world, as they assisted other women in
their villages and communities with childbirth. For thousands of years they had
done exactly as I was doing on that night, and I felt the strength, unity and
power that comes with that kind of sisterhood. The gravity of that moment was
not lost on me.
A year
later, I am still a little in awe that I get to be a part of this every week as
my job. I get paid to help women have
babies. I get to help coach them through labor, answer their questions, and
eventually assist in bringing their baby into this world. I get to help them
feed their baby and answer their questions about their baby’s health. I get to
teach them about all of the changes that their body is going through and what
to expect in the postpartum period. I get to be an advocate, encourager and
friend. This is my job. And I couldn’t
be more grateful for it, even on the hard days.
I find
great joy in helping a woman through her labor or c-section, and helping her
and her partner fully experience (as far as they wish it) this process at a
time that is so uniquely theirs. It is a job that is all about encouragement.
Of course,
it isn’t always easy. Despite
all of the advances that we have in modern medicine, there is a significant level
of “uncontrollable-ness” in regards to conception, pregnancy, and delivery. Not
everyone gets to have a baby when they want to, and not everyone gets to have a
baby. Not everyone has a healthy pregnancy and delivery, and not everyone gets
a healthy baby.
Those are
the tougher moments of my job…knowing what to say and what not to say as a
mother comes in to deliver a baby that has passed while still in her womb.
Knowing how to comfort a father as his wife is whisked away for an emergency
c-section in which the outcome for both wife and child is unknown. Knowing how
to tell new parents “your baby is struggling a little bit” as the baby is
transferred to intensive care. Knowing how to be there for your patient and
continue the necessary care after the physician delivers a terrifying diagnosis
or any kind of bad news.
This is
what I signed up for.
The good and the bad.
And to be a
good nurse through all of it. To not have my emotions compromise what needs to
be done.
As a nurse I juggle between mourning with those
that mourn, comforting those who stand in need of comfort - and then again find
joy and excitement in the next moment to celebrate with those who are in a
season of joy. It is sometimes particularly difficult for me to
change composure like that only in the time it takes to walk from one
room to the next. I never know what I'm going to walk into when I go to work,
and it would be easier to just turn all the emotion off. But I'm still human,
and how can I not feel joy at the birth of a baby or feel sorrow during some
sort of loss? Being a "professional" in these instances doesn't make
me immune to those traits that come with being a living soul. Nursing for me
stands at the precipice of human emotion, and it is the pinnacle of my humanity.
If
anything, working in labor & delivery has taught me that life keeps on moving anyway, no matter
the struggle. A minute, an hour may feel like eternity – but it always passes. And
even when it feels like you can’t take it any longer, I promise you that you
can. Just one more minute. You can do anything for 60 seconds. And even if you
have to take it one minute at a time, that minute will eventually pass. You
were born to handle this, and you are stronger and more capable than you know.
Keep pushing forward, don’t give up, and life will keep on moving.
Sarah, I'm so glad you blog! I love reading your thoughts. This post is amazing. Your passion and love for your work is beautiful. Love you!!
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