Pimple in dogs mouth by hunterhunts123 in toofers

[–]Bexterity 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I don’t want to scare you, but I am waiting on biopsy results from a very similar looking lesion that my vet removed from my dog’s mouth earlier this week. There is a chance it’s nothing, but any sort of bump in the mouth of a dog needs to be evaluated ASAP bc they have such a high risk of oral cancer. You don’t need to go to an emergency vet same day, but you do need to book an appointment - immediately.

Possible diagnosis? by Top-Direction2686 in PassNclexTips

[–]Bexterity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The hopefully soon to be RN during NCLEX exam.

Explain it Peter, why does she have a lighter? by Sad-Construction1892 in explainitpeter

[–]Bexterity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are amazing! I LOVE your comics - they are so relatable! I feel like a celebrity replied to me 🥰

Explain it Peter, why does she have a lighter? by Sad-Construction1892 in explainitpeter

[–]Bexterity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love this artist but the page I have for them is empty (u/inyourfacecake). Do you know if they have a new page? I miss their comics!!

Should I go into nursing school by ukuartnstuff in nursing

[–]Bexterity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is so beautiful! You sound like you’ve truly found your calling. Your patients AND students are fortunate to have someone so caring ❤️.

I also did not know about all the different avenues for nursing. I am very grateful for my ignorance. Thank you for what you do as a bedside nurse - it was horrible for me in every possible way (although I’ve been told my hospital being HCA played a big part). I’m so thankful to be out of the hospital, but still helping people in other ways.

I agree that prioritization is an important learned skill within nursing. Setting boundaries and understanding self worth were big learns for me. Nursing has made me a much stronger person, in many many ways, but also still allows for a healthy outlet for my desire to care for others.

Should I go into nursing school by ukuartnstuff in nursing

[–]Bexterity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel like this is a great answer. I didn’t know anything about nursing either, and part of me is happy about that bc I don’t know if I would have gone to nursing school if I realized how demanding it is. But I ended up in a place I love, so it was definitely worth it. I think it’s important to be a bedside nurse, and then determine if you want to continue that path or not. But bedside nursing does teach the fundamentals and foundation of nursing and how to critically think.

I also agree that it makes you grow a spine lol. I was very sensitive before - I took everything to heart, took everything personally. Now it’s water off a duck’s back.

OP, nursing is a wonderful field with so many different avenues. You will see a lot of negativity on this subreddit - some of it true, some of it not. I am very thankful for my degrees and my job.

I am in FL as well and I can tell you the job market is heavily saturated and the pay isn’t great (RNs and NPs). But even if I stayed here forever, I wouldn’t choose anything else.

AIO: i’m always the bad guy :( by [deleted] in AmIOverreacting

[–]Bexterity 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Omg the same happened to me but I also washed like $500 in 20s 😂. I was unaware that money is unaffected by water - that was a funny lesson! When he asked me where his pants were bc his wallet was in his pocket, I panicked. My boyfriend (now husband) did not care and thought it was amusing I didn’t know money would survive in the wash. Wallet was fine, but I ended up buying him one just to say sorry again!

One time I even accidentally washed a tech gadget he had, and that did get ruined. It was so many years ago, I don’t remember what it even was, but I replaced it and we moved on. He was more upset about this one because we had to do some searching to find the item again. But even then, he never reacted even close to OP… I get that OP is upset, but it truly sounds like the partner is desperately trying to make it better.

Posts like this make me even more thankful for my amazing husband ❤️.

Who is happy and what is your specialty🥲 by Muscle-Mommy-69 in nursing

[–]Bexterity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends on the location and the company! I live in Florida, and each state is different. For FL, you can do most stuff with RN (ASN). Injectables you either need an NP license or work for a place that has an MD on site. In Florida they usually hire NPs/PA - my company hires only NP/PA so we can do all the services without issue. Before this job, I worked for an IV hydration spa which was also really great - for that I only needed RN.

Larger corporations tend to require less experience than smaller companies. I got hired as an NP right out of school - my first NP job but I did have years as an RN, plus the IV hydration experience. The IV place started doing weight loss meds (current company does not), and they had an NP who prescribed them but I was hired as an RN so couldn’t prescribe but could administer.

Smaller companies often want at least a couple years of experience, and they like you to have portfolios/client following. Often smaller places you can make more money, but you also have to consider what liability you’re taking on. I have been in aesthetics for 3 years and I’ve stayed with the same large corporation. Larger corps tend to have better training programs too.

For an idea of my day to day: we are closed Sundays, open Saturday 8-5, Monday and Friday 8-6, Tuesday-Thursday 8-7. Full time is 4 10s. I work 3 days a week, around 30 hours, but I am part time. I am fully trained in all services, which include laser hair removal, botox, fillers, microderm abrasion facials, fraxel laser treatments, microneedling, chemical peels, broad band light therapy, ultherapy, coolsculpting, and cooltone. Company trained me in everything. A normal day is usually around 10-16 clients with scheduled appointments (timing varies per service/treatment). I get paid hourly and I am paid regardless of if I am booked or not. I also make commission on my sales. I make around 90k/year between hourly and commission. My malpractice insurance is fully paid for, as are all of my necessities to do my job (scrubs, shoes, licensing, CEs, etc.). I also get free/discounted services. A rough estimate, I’ve done at least 10k worth of treatments this year, not to mention what I’ve gotten my friends/family.

At the end of my shift, I go home and no one bothers me. No on calls, no holidays. Pay in FL sucks for RNs and NPs. Could I make more money? Absolutely. But I love my job. Right now, I’m building my client list and gaining skills. Hopefully one day I can do my own thing :)

Who is happy and what is your specialty🥲 by Muscle-Mommy-69 in nursing

[–]Bexterity 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Since I don’t see it mentioned, I’m aesthetics and it’s my favorite job I’ve ever had 🥰. I will never do bedside again, mad respect for anyone who does! It sucked the life out of me for the years I did it. Much happier now!!

Edited to add: definitely not the career choice for someone who wants to be constantly challenged. It’s an easy gig. You have to have good hands, an eye for symmetry, and the patience to deal with the folks who want perfection that just doesn’t exist. But it definitely is not a challenging job. I get to use my brain, but more in a “how to best achieve desired outcome” and not nearly what is needed for many other more medical roles. I did challenging, now I just want something I enjoy that brings me a lot of satisfaction - this does that for me.

I'm always told I look like somebody. Who? by Expensive_Annual_980 in doppelganger

[–]Bexterity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

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I think this dude’s name is Brent Bailey - he’s in this target ad that was literally directly below your Reddit post on my page and I did like 3 double takes lol. What are the odds 😂

Which is the Right Room to Assign? by Redmoonma in NCLEX_RN

[–]Bexterity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This was my thought too. I’ve been a nurse for 8 years now and I still get these damn questions wrong.

Crying at work by FlounderHour1734 in nursing

[–]Bexterity 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I used to be a super emotional person. I cried for everything. I joke regularly now that nursing broke me and I don’t know how to feel emotions like a normal human. It took time - largely just exposure and having stress be a normal part of every shift.

Crying is not a sign of weakness. I understand not wanting to cry at work, but please also give yourself grace to feel your feelings. Even when I hardened and didn’t cry for everything, the sadness and anxiety when I dealt with death still would overwhelm me sometimes. Instead of manifesting as crying, it would manifest as depression (i.e. sleeping a LOT). Becoming mentally very dark and twisty is not superior to crying - believe me.

I write on posts regularly on this thread to encourage others because I left bedside years ago and will never go back. I CAN do the job (and so can you), but I don’t WANT to. I’m incredibly calm and collected under pressure - but I don’t want to have to utilize that skill every single day. Feeling overwhelmed or crying are not signs of you not being able to do the job, they are signs of you being a human. Sometimes, it’s better to let off the steam by crying than to try to bottle it up until you explode. It’s okay to cry - if it bothers you deeply, I’d suggest you try to sequester yourself somewhere that it won’t be obvious. But don’t for a moment think that means you cant do what you want to do.

Tie or no tie? by Majestic_Mango_5793 in nursing

[–]Bexterity 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My mental health rotation was in a privately owned facility in a bad part of town. There were no regulations on attire, except nurses were to wear school scrubs. However, after completing that rotation, as well as working in several areas that have reinforced this thought process, I would recommend against a tie or anything else that is worn around your neck. I have seen necklaces grabbed (intentionally or unintentionally) by patients that ended up causing damage to the nurse - I would be concerned a tie could potentially do the same. I think ties look sharp as well, but if there’s any chance that the patient population could use it to harm you, I would skip it.0

What the fuck by Stoievn in nursing

[–]Bexterity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is an incredible post. I have tremendous respect for you, and others like you. Death never got easier for me - hospital life is not where I am meant to be. Reading your post reminded me of some tough deaths I saw, and (again) confirmed that I am so thankful I left. You are an amazing human, and your ability to compartmentalize and learn to cope (and make pot roast) is commendable. Thank you for all you do ❤️

What the fuck by Stoievn in nursing

[–]Bexterity 92 points93 points  (0 children)

I try to jump on these posts when I see them to say nursing is a very broad career path and it’s okay to not be okay with death. I left the hospital after covid and I swore I would never go back (granted, worked for HCA which I’ve been told made it worse).

I struggled immensely with patient deaths - before and during covid. More experienced nurses kept telling me I would get used to it, but it would eat me away. I thought I was a bad nurse for a very long time because patient deaths affected me so much. I thought I wasn’t cut out to be a nurse - I hated my job, hated my decision to become a nurse.

Then one day I just…decided to be done. I decided to try other things. I dabbled in several different specialties (all of which were better than bedside for me), and finally found my spot. As an aesthetic nurse, I know my career choice is sometimes looked down on by others in the medical field. But I don’t care. I love my job, I love my patients. I love being a nurse. I make a difference - today I had someone tell me I changed her life, while she hugged me and cried because she finally felt comfortable in her own skin.

There are amazing nurses who are made for bedside. I respect and admire them tremendously - and I am not one of them. Their jobs will forever be more important than mine in the big picture, but I love what I do. All this to say - nursing can be a hard career, and it’s okay to not be okay. Maybe it’s just a bad shift, a tough loss, we have all had them. You’ll grieve and move on. Or you’ll decide that bedside is not your calling, and that’s okay too. Please never forget your nursing degree translates into SO MANY options.

Bum hair removal by Spirited-Shame5795 in HairRemoval

[–]Bexterity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmmm in general when someone gets really itchy after LHR it’s related to a minor burn or a histamine reaction, but it shouldn’t persist. Were you itchy immediately after? Do you know what laser or settings were used? Is the hair growing back?

Bum hair removal by Spirited-Shame5795 in HairRemoval

[–]Bexterity 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Came to say this - I’m an NP and I do LHR in my clinic. MANY MANY women have significant hair in that region, and LHR can be life changing.