This is my life philosophy. Above love, above friends, above family, above care for myself. It may be unwise to value learning so highly above all else, but I can’t help it. I have an insatiable curiosity about nearly everything. It lessens for matters of pop culture and many hobbies, but that doesn’t mean I am uninterested.
Learning fights ignorance. Learning helps you develop as a person and helps develop your culture. Scientific advancements, ethical advancement, philosophical advancements… The more we learn, the more this becomes possible.
The best advice I can give anyone is to never stop asking questions. However, learning has to be a balance of asking and believing. If you believe nothing, you will learn nothing. Questioning others is an important concept, but if you disbelieve everything they say, then what is the point of questioning?
As a future physician, I hope all my patients ask questions; not only to me, but to others. I hope they ask questions to friends and family, textbooks, the internet… Doctors are not all-knowing and most of them realize they never will be. Take an interest in your own education.
Read the newspaper. Read wikipedia. Watch documentaries. Write a research paper.
Never stop asking questions.
Never stop learning.

This is my life philosophy. Above love, above friends, above family, above care for myself. It may be unwise to value learning so highly above all else, but I can’t help it. I have an insatiable curiosity about nearly everything. It lessens for matters of pop culture and many hobbies, but that doesn’t mean I am uninterested.

Learning fights ignorance. Learning helps you develop as a person and helps develop your culture. Scientific advancements, ethical advancement, philosophical advancements… The more we learn, the more this becomes possible.

The best advice I can give anyone is to never stop asking questions. However, learning has to be a balance of asking and believing. If you believe nothing, you will learn nothing. Questioning others is an important concept, but if you disbelieve everything they say, then what is the point of questioning?

As a future physician, I hope all my patients ask questions; not only to me, but to others. I hope they ask questions to friends and family, textbooks, the internet… Doctors are not all-knowing and most of them realize they never will be. Take an interest in your own education.

Read the newspaper. Read wikipedia. Watch documentaries. Write a research paper.

Never stop asking questions.

Never stop learning.

Never look down on anybody unless you’re helping them up.

Decided to tag this with ‘nursing’ because we see people at their worst and it’s important to always be in the mindset of helping others.

(Source: prettyrosedale, via nocturnalnurse)

"Every day, pick one patient that you saw in clinic a couple days before, and call the patient personally “just to check on how you’re doing.” Don’t pick a complicated patient, or a patient that’s going to talk your ear off on the phone. Just choose someone who you were able to help easily and skillfully. After that short phone call, you will recognize how you made a difference in that person’s life; meanwhile, the patient will hang up the phone feeling that they have the best doctor in the world!"

— A professor in my residency program, talking about how to keep from becoming a “jaded” doctor. (via cranquis)

Job offer, ahoy!

That interview I had the other day turned out to be a success as they offered me the job yesterday. Employment!

I will be a medication technician at an assisted living facility working graveyard shift Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Well, there goes any partying I was planning to do this summer, haha. I’ve never worked graveyard so I’m a bit nervous about adjusting my sleep schedule… nothing a little caffeine can’t fix, right? The job will be enough to support myself during school, I think [and maybe save up enough money to visit Thailand or England?]. Anyway, I think it will be a good experience, but I’m open to any advice regarding working at strange hours.

I’m excited because I’ve had some days off of school due to in-service and today is the first day back to A&P III lecture. Renal system, huzzah!

In Nutrition, I’m scheduled to give a presentation on Vitamin B12 [cobalamin] mid-May. Should be fun.

Busy, busy. When will summer get here?

thenightnurse:

(Or: “How To Make your Shift Less Shitty”)

Ahh, the smell of fresh clostridium difficile in the morning. Contact precautions with no hand gel allowed, needing a new chux every five minutes, and being elbow deep in poop… I think the only thing worse than having a patient with c.diff is…

Oh wow, definitely equipment that everyone wants to function correctly. Thanks for the tips!