“Science must be robust, but there is also a lot of interpersonal and kind of ethics of things,” she said. “As you progress with what you know, there is a greater responsibility, and I like that you could go to many, many different facets of them.”
Her primary goal at the start of her career was to create connections with others while they still have fun, and while her career changed over the years, from public to private to everything in between, she started investigating how things are done, where they could improve and what role they could play in promoting change.
“You could serve many ways, from many different angles and still have the most important core value that gives you meaning and goal at the end of the day, while you live and reflect that you do in practice,” she said. “Being a nurse follows where I am going, whether it is in a community building or a school building.”
Leaning to lifelong learning and off-the-clock hours
Like other professions, nurses have their hours that they work and the times that they can clock and go home. That said, it is not the same for many nurses, because it is part of himself in the office of the nurse’s office, is not always easy.
“I am a football mother, a hockey mother, a skating mother, you name it,” said Victoria. “Even if I travel, I can turn it off for a second? I am on vacation, and there is always something. You know, you go to a church and you faint someone. You can’t just eliminate it, and I think it is essential for who I am and what we do as nurses, which really take care of other people.”
#Living #nurse #giving #passion #resilience #connection


