My Strong Medicine

The adventures of a male nurse navigating through life, staying fit, surviving the journey.

Thank You Thursday…

Posted by Sean on December 8, 2011

Oooops.

Yeah, I dropped the ball. In fact I dropped the ball and jinxed myself. The last time I talked about Thank You Thursday was on Thanksgiving! I was proud that I had kept up with the idea and posted a thank you every week for almost 2 months.

Then I did my ‘thank you’s’ for Thanksgiving. That was my last blog post on Thank You Thursday.

I missed an entire week. I’d love to give some great excuse. Yeah, of course I’ve been busy. Yeah, work, school, clinicals are all bottle necking this past week and next. Finals next week, along with the wonderful procrastinating gene I have when it comes to holiday shopping.

So yeah. been busy. But, I still could have squeaked in a post.

Sorry folks. I am a ‘fly by the seat of my pants’ blogger. Always have been, always will be. I think I’ve made numerous attempts over the years to do a ‘scheduled’ post each week, or even each month. I do great coming out the gate, but then sooner or later I fail. It’s just the kind of blogger I am. I can’t schedule my posts. I’ve never thought of my blogging as structured like that.

Oh, don’t get me wrong! I’m still very Thankful each week. Damn Thankful! I just can’t seem to throw up a blog post each week enumerating them.

Happy Holidays folks!

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A day to remember

Posted by Sean on December 7, 2011

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via
Rare, Unseen Photos: Aftermath of Pearl Harbor Pictures – Yahoo! News

A humbling day of remembrance.

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If I Won Free Plane Tickets

Posted by Sean on December 7, 2011

We would be taking a long flight to beautiful beaches.

Hawaii Coastline

My beautiful wife and I would take the vacation we've talking about for years.

Powered by Plinky

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The REAL truth about all Coffee

Posted by Sean on December 6, 2011

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Jus’ sayin’.

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YOUR LIFE: Your words, your dreams, and your thoughts

Posted by Sean on December 5, 2011

Your words, your dreams, and your thoughts have the power to create conditions in your life. What you speak about, you can bring about.

  • If you keep saying you can’t stand your job, you might lose your job.
  • If you keep saying you can’t stand your body, your body can become sick.
  • If you keep saying you can’t stand your car, your car could be stolen or just stop operating.
  • If you keep saying you’re always broke, guess what? You’ll always be broke.
  • If you keep saying you can’t trust a man or trust a woman, you will always find someone in your life to hurt and betray you.
  • If you keep saying you can’t find a job, you will remain unemployed.
  • If you keep saying you can’t find someone to love you or believe in you, our very thoughts will attract more experiences to confirm your beliefs.

Turn your thoughts and conversations around to be more positive and power packed with faith, hope, love and action. Don’t be afraid to believe that you can have what you want and deserve. Watch your “Thoughts,” they become words; Watch your “Words,” they become actions; Watch your “Actions,” they become habits; Watch your “Habits,” they become character; Watch your “Character”, for it becomes your “Destiny” So…….To prevent any obstacles……. GET OUT OF YOUR OWN WAY! Enjoy every minute you live!!

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Sometimes the hardest thing to do is get out of your own way. Life is not to be lived in a passive aggressive manner. Live it, love it, and earn it. You’ll be thankful you did.

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A hypnotic that awakens the comatose??

Posted by Sean on December 3, 2011

Wayne jumped out of bed and raced down to the driveway, where he knelt over his son’s limp frame and tried frantically to elicit a breath or a heartbeat. As he pumped Chris’s chest and scooped out the vomit that had collected in his mouth, Judy ran to the kitchen and steadied herself long enough to call for an ambulance.

Chris was 26. He had not been well. An A.T.V. accident the previous August left him with debilitating back pain that physical therapy did nothing to alleviate. His doctor had recently prescribed Oxycontin. His parents learned later that he had taken too much.

By the time the ambulance arrived, Chris’s heart had been still for at least 15 minutes. It took the paramedics another 15 to get it pumping again; even then, doctors had little hope he would survive. Brain cells begin dying off just five minutes after blood stops delivering oxygen. After 30 minutes, there is likely to be more dead tissue than living.

Nonetheless, the emergency-room staff members at the local hospital did their best. They hooked Chris up to a tangle of tubes and machines and injected him with drugs to stabilize his heart rate. Wayne and Judy watched helplessly from the hallway. After four hours, a doctor finally summoned them to a secluded corridor.

Chris was in a coma, the doctor said, and in all likelihood had suffered severe, irreversible brain damage. He was breathing only with the help of a ventilator and would probably have a series of heart attacks in the night.

“First they asked us to let them pull the plug,” Judy recalled one recent afternoon, as we sat in the living room of the Coxes’ house in a Memphis suburb. “Then they tried getting us to sign a do-not-resuscitate order.” Without one, the doctor explained, hospital staff would be forced to revive Chris each time he started slipping away, which could mean cracking his ribs and shocking him with electricity. Even if they managed to keep his body alive, what was left of his brain would surely die in the days ahead.

Wayne and Judy refused to sign. “This is not some dog we’re talking about putting down,” Wayne shouted. “This is our son.” Chris still lived with his parents. He was a good kid, a joker, but bashful, especially around girls. He liked playing basketball and fishing in the pond near his house. He was planning to take over the family repo business when Wayne retired in a few years. Before the A.T.V. accident, he’d never given them much trouble at all. He deserved every chance the hospital could give him.

The heart attacks never came. Four days later, Chris woke up.

It was not the awakening of Hollywood movies in which the patient comes to, just as he was, speaking full sentences and completely mobile. Three years later, Chris still cannot talk. Although he breathes on his own, his lungs battle a steady barrage of infections; a feeding tube provides all his sustenance, and his muscles have contracted into short, twisted knots. He can move only the slightest bit — his fingers and eyelids twitch, but his arms and legs remain mostly immobile — and his neck is not quite strong enough to hold up his head, which leans against a crescent-shaped support around his wheelchair headrest.

Still, Wayne and Judy say that his cognition is improving. On good days, they say, he can respond to basic commands — blink his eyes for yes, wiggle his finger for no, give a thumbs up when asked. Doctors agree that Chris has progressed beyond a vegetative state, to a hazy realm known as minimal consciousness. What that means — what it says about his experience of the world around him or his prospects for further recovery — is something they are still trying to figure out.

Jeneen Interlandi lives in New Jersey and writes frequently about science and medicine.

Editor: Vera Titunik

This is full of “what the…….?”

Interesting.

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I took the plunge into the MAC world!!!

Posted by Sean on December 2, 2011

So this happened this past week:

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I finally bit the bullet and decided to go to the (MAC)dark side. I’ve been using my iPhone for the better part of the year, and I can’t stop talking about how great it is. I’ve been having building frustrations over my PC and all the bazilion Windows annoyances that come along with it.

I knew sooner or later I’d be trying a MAC, and what better time than during the holidays to take advantage of the discounts right?

I’ve now been slowly dabbling with this new MacBook Air and well…..

I’m freaking hooooooooked.

Wholly cow. Talk about a jump. I mean MAC is stomping on PC the way iPhone is stomping on Blackberry. Everything is better, everything.

And of course in good ole MAC-Steve Jobs -may-rest-in-peace-style, it’s packaged so pretty and is pleasent to look at. The UI is wicked and it’s beyond user-friendly.

I now have to start batting down those damn MS Office walls and start venturing out beyond the great divide. I’m slowly transitioning to Google Docs and all things in the ‘cloud’ with Google storage, so we’ll see how it goes.

I’m not convinced I need MS Office for MAC just yet. Besides, this MAC is for travel and mostly for ‘at school’ use. Although I’m already finding myself wanting to use the MB Air more than my trecherous PC.

Is that bad?

P.S. The intuitive touch pad is DA BOMB on this MB Air.

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The TRUTH about the NBA lockout

Posted by Sean on December 2, 2011

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Anyone disagree??

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The flu season can make a nurse act crazy

Posted by Sean on November 30, 2011

 

8 crazy things nurses do during flu season

As nurses, we get very comfortable with our obsessive compulsive behaviors.

During the flu season our OCD-like nature gets ramped up simply because of the obvious – more people are sick.

Whether it’s from a new strain of the influenza virus or maybe the idea of people refusing (or plain neglecting) to get the vaccine, here are ways to take some extra precautions to ensure we don’t get the flu….

1. Pay with credit or debit

Can you imagine the filth and germs hanging out on that paper money… or those coins? We all took microbiology. We know what can hang on!

2. Avoid mass transit transportation

Everything from the subway, bus transit, planes, etc. (Please refer to “taking the stairs”) Who wants to be huddled up next to someone with a snotty, runny nose? You have nowhere to go!

3. Take the stairs

Elevators are a no-no. What if someone sneezes!! Seriously?!

4. Personal stash of disinfectant wipes

Who knows when you may need to use a public telephone, a public computer, or worse yet… have to pull open the door to exit a public bathroom instead of pushing the door!

5. Wear long sleeves everywhere

For that one time you use a public bathroom and you have to pull the door instead of push the door to exit. Need I remind you that not everyone washes their hands after they’re finished? (Oh, you know I’m right.)

6. Avoid salad bars and buffet meals (including family ones)

Some people forget how the food is actually made and prepared. Yes, those employed by a business establishment wears gloves. They are required by law, but what about your family? Or your friend’s football party??

7. Refuse and/or deny any requests to borrow your cell phone

I’m pretty sure you can figure out why.

8. And of course, this is a given: We wash our hands. And then we wash them again. And again. And again.

What do you do to avoid the flu?!

Another post from over at Scrubs. Crazy is as crazy does…. right? LOL

8 crazy things nurses do during flu season | Scrubs – The Leading Lifestyle Nursing Magazine Featuring Inspirational and Informational Nursing Articles

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My Interview Part 2

Posted by Sean on November 30, 2011

As I posted earlier, Kim (from Emergiblog) over at Masters in Nursing interviewed me. Here is part 2:

Keep your eye on the prize.

That’s what I told myself during my marathon BSN program.

But there is no prize unless you start the process.

In part 2 of my discussion on graduate nursing education with blogger and Nurse Practitioner student Sean Dent, we talked about the difference between graduate and undergraduate education.

How does grad school differ from undergraduate education?

Be sure to follow the link and read the original post…

Talking MSN: Desire and Discipline | Masters in Nursing Blog

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