A Strong Cup Of Tea

 

The one thing about working night shift as a nurse, is that on one deep dark moment in the wee small hours, you and your colleagues WILL succumb to what is colloquial known as NNH ( Night Nurse Hysterics)
Now, obviously this depends on who you are working with, but if you are lucky enough to work alongside like minded characters, all it will take is a look or a word and giggles worthy of a gaggle of oestrogen filled schoolgirls on heat will ensue. 
This morning , all it took was support worker Cat making me the worst cup of tea this side of the Welsh border and me asking “What the fuck is that? for all three night staff to be reduced to childish giggles.

It’s not rocket science that stress and tiredness finds an outlet in silly humour and banter.

I remember one particularly stressful night on intensive care where seven out of a full compliment of eight patients were sedated, ventilated and incredibly poorly. 
I just happened to be looking after the only awake patient who had just been woken up from his induced coma, and throughout the night he had watched, wide eyed as one patient had been resuscitated successfully and another had been given unit after unit of blood to combat a huge bleed. Aware of every noise and activity from behind paper curtains.
Around 5 am, the nurses took their first proper break which was a grabbed cup of tea behind the nurses station and all it took was a very loud and unexpected high pitched fart from my patient to silence the banter of the eight nurses and one doctor on duty.
In the stillness that followed the doctor , who was not known for his humour said wryly 
“ I believe that was an A sharp”
And the hysteria that followed was long and prolonged and much needed.
Even my patient was laughing, albeit weakly
I remember him saying 
It’s not like this on effin’ER”



67 comments:

  1. Too funny. I worked nights for years and it was usually about 4am when everything became terribly funny. It's strange because one of my patients on Friday was a nurse I worked with for 18 months, 23 years ago. She seemed grumpy and unpleasant 23 years ago but age seems to have softened her and she was quite nice. Or maybe it was me.

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    1. I agree , the “ dying “ time of 4-5 am is a persons lowest ebb, that’s when so many patients die in hospital .
      That’s the time a boost of adrenalin and endorphins is required by laughter too

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  2. That photo is frightening. I pray that I never end up like that.

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  3. Barbara Anne4:08 am

    Same on night shifts in my experience. Sometimes you just have to laugh!
    Love your mug with the kids featured on it. :)

    Hugs!

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    1. I had forgotten about that, a colleague bought that for me at Christmas

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  4. Laughter is a great stress reliever. I love that mug!

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  5. Ha-ha! I love the patient's final remark. That's never a mug of tea is it? It looks like strong coffee to me.

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    1. That’s the tea that caused the laughter

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  6. Thank goodness for humour!

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    1. I couldn’t have been a nurse without my sense of humour

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  7. Laughing until you cry are special moments.

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  8. There's nothing like laughter shared between friendly co-workers during the wee small hours of the morning.

    Love,
    Janie

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    1. I so agree….I love the lunacy of that small wee hours laughter

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  9. They don't fart on ER, or laugh for that matter. Gotta let both out! xx

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    1. No they just rush around like termites on some honeyed toast

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  10. I'm very much obsessed about my morning cup of tea. I have been working on image post production platforms so, I have to use my brain a lot in order to enhancement of my editing work, a perfect cup of tea really helps me to take right decision for my work.image post production

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  11. The tea looks like creosote, but I love the mug. They probably do fart on DO...but cut those bits out! x

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  12. I miss a good laugh at work.

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  13. That comment made me giggle and as for the tea - YUK. Earl Grey here, and in a genteel colour-way please . . .

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    1. Yerch Earl Grey …piss

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    2. Not so much piss to me, more perfume. Should be dabbed, genteelly, behind the ears.

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  14. Sometimes laughter can be terribly strange and inappropriate. In 1992 when I was living in Hounslow, West London, I was burgled TWICE within, I think, four months. When the police arrived to take details, I can't think why but I just couldn't stop laughing as I told them what I'd lost. It must have been the unlikeliness of having been victim again so soon after the first time. The two coppers were, frankly puzzled and most definitely NOT amused. After they'd gone a friendly neighbour told me that they'd asked her if I was reliable enough to believe. Understandable enough.

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    1. Perhaps you were just excited raymondo ..with those uniformed policemen in your home

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    2. I doubt it, JayGee, the clincher being that, if I remember correctly, one of them was a 'she'.

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  15. Anonymous8:50 am

    Many professionals at work use black humour, clever remarks or whatever to cope with their jobs. I remember being hysterical with laughter, out of control once at a work training course. The gay guy I was partnered with at the work course was exactly the same. It was only years later I realised it was a stress release.

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    1. Yes, that makes sense, and probably accounts for my own misplaced near-hysteria mentioned just above.

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  16. I wonder if, I can get laughter in my office?

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  17. I have tinnitus in both ears - when it is bad I find they are exactly a major third apart.

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  18. Thanks for making me laugh this morning. I can readily imagine both scenes. Where would we be without laughter?

    When my father died and his body was cremated, the funeral home called to let me know I could pick up his ashes. My sister came with me and as we sat in front of the funeral director's desk, he came in and put the urn (brass box) in front of us. We were silent and already on edge when all of a sudden the director reached over and turned it (I guess) right side up. My sister and I looked at each other--wide-eyed--but it wasn't until we got in my car, with the urn sitting between us, that I turned to her and said, "That would have really pissed off Dad to be set on his head." At which point, we both collapsed in laughter. My Dad had a superb sense of humour. We liked to think he was laughing with us.

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  19. Our lovely aunt was dying and we her grown up nieces all in our 50s were gathered around her bed-at the hospital-the nurse came into the side room and asked us to wait outside while they made her more comfortable-we wandered to the loos but never mentioned how poorly our aunt was-my cousin was still smartly dressed for work and teetering along in high heels I said "that's a Very elegant walk you have there"and we giggled like children x

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    1. See it’s that humour that got your through x

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  20. Same aunt previously had been with another aunt at my mums funeral-my mums coffin was no sooner lowered into the grave than I clearly heard my aunts voice-several of us turned around and she said "where are the toilets"they ran off together down a pathway in search-it was funny at the time and helped me x

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  21. Reading this made me snort/laugh!

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  22. Oh, dear. Humour is the only thing that would get me to go through a night shift. I have not pulled an all-nighter since the frantic writing sessions we had in college during our comprehensive exams. Never again!
    Also, I truly admire anyone working in the health care professions.

    XOXO

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    1. The best film I ever saw that truly explains this phenomenon is M*A*S*H

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  23. Tickled me that it was the doc who spoke up. :)

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    1. Anaesthetists , in my mind are some of the most human of doctors

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    2. Yes, I met a nurse anesthetist at my cataract surgery who caught my heart, said he was a crier too. A most human human.

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  24. Night shift in Hospitals, some of the funniest and worst places to be.
    You also get the 'night nurse tremor' ie you're not asleep or awake. You just can't move. A light touch or someone talking to you usually had the desired effect. 'Snap' and you're OK again.

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    1. Yes Shelly, I did a post about that a while back. It was known to me as night nurse=paralysis , very frightening when you see it for the first time

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  25. I gather gallows humour is very common in health settings, though obviously not within the patients' hearing range. I'm sure it relieves some of the endless stress of the job.

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    1. The humour can be incredibly bleak at times and can be mistaken i grant you

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  26. Priceless..and much needed xx

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  27. Our office does not have such shared humor. Typically we are in little groups of one or two. When the big boss has us all together we have to indulge in his humor which is often mean spirited and offensive. That is why I do not appreciate coming into this place.

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  28. I remember third shift hysterics!

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  29. My colleagues and I used to refer to that dark shade of hilarity as "newsroom humor".

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  30. What a lovely mug! I have one with a schnauzer drawing on it but it is not MY schnauzer!

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  32. Really, tea has various advantage one of them is make people active and alive. After drinking tea one can get refresh.

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  34. This is such a vivid and relatable portrayal of those moments that get us through the night shifts! NNH really is a lifesaver, isn’t it? The way you captured the blend of stress and laughter is spot on. That high-pitched fart story is hilarious! It’s amazing how something so simple can break the tension and bring everyone together, even in the most serious of settings. Your patient’s comment just sums it up perfectly—sometimes you just need a good laugh to keep going. Thanks for sharing this! If you interested digital marketing services. Please click hyperlink.

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