Seeing how much the world accepts that it’s impossible to move on after watching CPR really makes me think about how we (medical professionals, especially those who work in Emergency departments) are expected to just move on immediately after a code.
not having to post online every time you purchase something is an accomplishment of its own. i can’t believe the amount of bragging i see online these days.
@LisaRemillard you’re a bad ass. This video makes me jealous! You held it together, too!
Nellis AFB Fun in the Sky https://t.co/Os07nacwH4 via @YouTube
Blame it on the nurses 🧐🙄 Nothing like a morning cup of gaslighting. We won’t question the steady increase in upper administrative payouts tho. . .
https://t.co/8wcfY2U2Bz
Hours before wheels-up time and @Delta cancels our entire int flight; assigns a new flight hours later; and changes our assigned seats from comfort+ to a middle seat in economy next to the bathroom opposite rows of each other. . . Ticket = same price. #dot#AmexBusiness
If you are in this place of burnout, please try and be patient with yourself. I’ve been there.
You’ll know you’re starting to heal when your interests and ambitions start to return and you start begin thinking beyond your immediate survival.
//The End//
We all have the capacity to be intellectually curious, and to juggle multiple interests at once.
We all deserve to lead complete lives where survival isn’t the main focus.
It will make you believe that your glass is perpetually and therefore inherently empty and that you’ll never have the space, time, or capacity to contribute to anything other than your own empty cup.
It will make this empty cup your starting place, and your only focus.
Burnout will have you focused on only your immediate needs and survival, and cause you to forget that you are a whole human being with a broad range of interests.