Cookie Thursday 8/12/2021

Since I am on vacation there are no cookies or otherwise to be made in the kitchen.

This is the story of the real impetus behind Cookie Thursday is a Thing.

I was in the midst of remodeling my kitchen.

I was keeping my oven.

I love my oven.

But the rest was torn up and in the midst of our long, long, long rennovation.

Everything that could go wrong had.

The kitchen designers lost our number and paperwork that we were interested.

Two month delay.

The kitchen designers did not put in the correct order.

1 month delay.

One of the cabinets was not delivered with the rest.

1 month delay.

The countertop we ordered was out of stock because the cabinets took too long.

I was not going to settle for a different countertop.

6 week delay. I cooked in a half built kitchen on the remodeling sink I asked for and thank goodness we had that.

11 weeks the kitchen was completely torn up.

I had an island, and a stove, no counter tops, half a functional sink.

Finally, finally, they templated the countertops and installed them.

I was so fed up by this time I asked for, and got, the company to pay for installation of the backsplash.

This entire saga was from February of that year when we expressed interest to September when the cabinets went in to November when it was finally completed.

I was so happy.

I was talking in the lounge at work about all the things I would like to bake after the kitchen was finally completed.

All the bread, all the cookies.

And someone said they had never had a home baked cookie.

I was flabbergasted.

Never had a home baked cookie.

I proposed weekly home made cookies for the department.

To be called Cookie Thursday is a Thing.

There were lots of volunteers in January.

For two months.

All the other volunteers started dropping out.

In April I was the sole baker.

And Cookie Thursday is a Thing, which had been my baby.

Was mine alone.

This was six and a half years ago.

Now no one in the department can claim they’d never had homemade cookies.

Are you frightened yet?

I have been on vacation since last Friday.

I was supposed to be at AORN.

Which was cancelled/taken virtual on Friday.

I did the three days of virtual conference.

I had someone say that they saw my poster.

This made me happy.

I absolutely kept all the days I had off.

This will help alleviate pressure off my PTO balance.

When I took a week off in April I complained about how bored I was.

Nope, not going to whine about how bored I am now.

I am reading reports and watching the case and death count go up.

ICUs are full.

Hospitals are full.

Hospitals can’t get workers.

Do I feel guilty that I am on vacation, taking care of all that I did not do all of last year?

Yep.

Do I still do the instrument tracking report daily for my manager?

Why not, it only takes me 5 minutes.

While I am there do I take a look at the hospital beds in the system that have covid patients in them?

Yep.

I’m not even there and I can tell it is exploding in my area.

This does not bode well.

Do I go places without my mask?

No.

I never stopped wearing a mask.

One thing I did stop giving a fuck about is saving starker news stories to my covid Pinterest page.

Because of course I have one of those.

And I hope people who are do not believe in covid or are unvaccinated for whatever reason are reading them.

Happy birthday, dear dispatches

Happy birthday, dear dispatches.

I hope you don’t mind that I am calling you by that nickname.

Should I be more formal?

And say happy birthday, dear dispatches from the evening shift?

You are 4 years old today.

Yes, I know it took me a long time to settle into posting three times a week, at least.

And yes, I do cheat with Thursdays.

But, hey.

You have been my agony aunt and my stress relief all in one.

Regardless of what the topic is.

I would not have gone through this last 18 months without you.

No, serious, thank you.

The only presents I have for you are my goals for the next year.

I will continue to post at least three times a week, varying the posts as I do.

I will write a grant proposal and tell you all about it.

I will write another abstract proposal since AORN got moved virtual, again.

I will present one of my posters at a conference.

I will apply for a PhD program.

I will write my alma mater about a program bringing periop 101 to their senior students that was announced Sunday.

I will explore writing articles, either for AORN or others.

There is so much to do.

Let us get started!

Post-it note 8/8/21- Forgiveness

Today’s note is simple: how do we, as the vaccinated, begin to forgive the unvaccinated.

I know, that in their heads, all their reasons for remaining unvaccinated are clear.

Those are the more sane of the unvaccinated.

And it all boils down to I am afraid.

And fear is not to be made fun of.

Fear needs a guiding hand and reassurance.

It is the others; the politically poisoned ones that are the worst.

I hear it over and over.

They are regurgitating what they have been told on their political network.

I am hearing some of the same talking points that I had only read about from coworkers.

The vaccine isn’t FDA approved.

But it is.

Emergency approval is still approved.

Full approval needs study and time after vaccination to ensure it is still safe.

Full approval has been sought and is pending with the Moderna and the Pfizer vaccines.

I trust my immune system.

That’s nice is the only thing I can think about that.

In reality, Covid-19 doesn’t care about your political bent, or your immune system.

To Covid-19 you are only a means to survival.

And if you happen to die.

There are millions more unvaccinated where you came from.

Forgiveness of those who are afraid, ignorant, or defiant in the face of a deadly threat is a high bar.

And right now, I am failing in reaching it.

The question remains: how do we, the vaccinated, forgive the unvaccinated?

Hell if I know.

I know I said the same thing about where the pixie dust to fly comes from.

I still don’t know.

um, no thank you

Yesterday I got invited to a back to school event at the hospital.

In the middle of a surge.

Where other hospital events were cancelled.

Because of the pandemic.

With unmasked children and healthcare workers alike.

I am supposed to be out of town at the convention.

I know that some of the people knew I was still in town.

Only three people asked me if I was going to attend the event.

Back to school is one of my favorite events.

I buy school supplies all year long so that my husband and I can donate them.

I buy backpacks cheap and store them at the end of every back to school season.

We do not have children.

I want to support the children and the school nurses who need it.

But I will not attend a back to school event in the middle of a surge with the county fully vaccination rate is 51%!

Not only no, but hell no.

The department managed to fill 20 backpacks.

And three large totes of supplies when the backpacks ran out.

Those will have to serve in my stead.

Clinical ladder update/turn in

Finished with my clinical ladder packet.

Of course, I had it mostly finished on July 5.

This was I get to turn it in.

And wait for it to be reviewed.

Wait 4-6 weeks.

And then get my bonus.

The clinical ladder is a big deal.

It is how bedside nurses can engage with the hospitals and their departments to earn a bonus.

The bonus is different at every rung on the ladder.

There are 3, 4, or 5.

Each ladder requires more points to attain.

I’ve never met a project I said no to so I have a lot of points.

To reach 3, there are 18 points required.

To reach 4, there are 27 points required.

To reach 5, there are 38 points required.

These points can be garnered for different things.

Certifications, degrees, hospital committees, shared governance.

There are three sections and points must be gathered from 2 of them.

I have points from all.

I have more than 38.

But, then, you all knew I was crazy, right?

Cookie Thursday 8/5/2021

No heat month continues with mazza.

What is mazza?

I do not have any idea where it came from.

I do not have any idea what nationality it is.

I do know it is delicious.

August is the time of the very ripe tomatoes that taste amazing.

Mazza is the best of summer.

It is very ripe tomatoes, preferably homegrown.

A little bit of olive oil.

A lot of garlic.

Salt to taste.

Process in the food processor.

Serve with bread cubes.

Divine.

It is even better the next day.

Providing there is any left.

And makes amazing soup.

I’m not sleeping, are you?

I have noticed a trend.

Up go the covid cases, down goes my sleep hours.

It is not necessarily all due to work hours.

It is more the dread of what tomorrow will bring.

For instance, take this week.

Monday, I had no meetings or pressing needs for the day.

I was up at 0622.

I asked myself why.

Yesterday I had to be up at 0645 to get myself together enough to join a zoom call at 0700.

I woke up at 0620.

Lay in bed and then silenced my alarm at 0637.

This morning was going to be a sleep in morning.

Up at 0621.

I asked myself why.

According to my sleep chart that I keep so that I can monitor how much I sleep, I went through some of the same behaviors in April of last year.

When the state was in quarantine.

I’m pretty sure it is related.

Tomorrow I have to be up at 0700 again.

Wonder how long my brain will let me sleep.

0630 would be a treat.

lambda, lambda, lambda

Lambda is the newest, baddest, more likely to kill us all Covid variant.

With the delta variant some vaccinated people get sick.

That is out of 4% that the vaccine doesn’t cover.

But you don’t get AS sick.

And then lambda busts in the door.

And laughs at the vaccines.

And is resistant to the vaccines.

Or as my husband puts it, ‘Delta is the forward team to take out some of the unvaccinated population.

And lambda is the clean-up crew.’

What’s next?

The variant that will raze humanity and salt the ground?

Pfizer and Moderna can keep churning out boosters and will because it is a profit leader.

But if the unvaccinated people aren’t reached, all they are doing is slowing down the unending march to the end.

To quote H.G. Wells’ novel War of the World, “For so it had come about, as indeed I and many men might have foreseen had not terror and disaster blinded our minds. These germs of disease have taken toll of humanity since the beginning of things–taken toll of our prehuman ancestors since life began here.”