12/18/13

My next step.

When I made the decision to take an extra semester or more in my degree, I wasn’t sure what I would be doing with it. I just knew that I needed some more time to think over where I was going in life.

My decision to apply for nursing school came in a conversation I had with a good friend during the beginning of summer. She acted as my soundboard of sorts, asking me simple yet crucial questions that we all have to ask ourselves at some point in our lives.

Do I want to work with people?

Do I want to work on the ground or behind the scenes?

Where do I want to live?

What am I getting out of my degree now and how do I want to use that in the future?

I had been struggling to figure out how I could practically apply what I learned in my undergrad to what I wanted to do with my life, but I was left with more uncertainty than anything. In all honesty, after I had come back from volunteering in India, I felt that I had little to offer in terms of practical skill. At least in terms of what I wanted accomplish.

Nursing came up in our conversation just offhand, but the idea stuck with me. I had to laugh because I had spent much of my studies exploring alternative, more holistic models to the dominant biomedical model of health and now I had come back full circle. The decision to become a nurse just made sense with my goal of understanding and being able to better human health at a large scale – it was the missing piece of the puzzle that I couldn’t keep ignoring. Biomedicine was dominant in terms of healthcare for a reason and I was going to learn to play the game. I wanted to blend what I learned about holistic health through my studies with the world of biomedicine to ultimately create a larger picture of health and wellness.

I took a long time to play with the idea of nursing school. What were my other options? What did a nurse really do? Why a nurse and not a doctor? Would nursing really broaden my horizons as technical and practical as it was? In the end, it was how I perceived nursing to fit into everything I had learned at this point. Nursing would provide me with practical skills to offer not just locally but in demand internationally. It had flexible enough hours to sustain a well-balanced life and dealt with much one-on-one care with patients. Both of these points contrasted the long hours and little patient-time experienced by doctors. Ultimately, I foresaw that nursing would become my medium for applying what I learned about development and global (public) health in my undergrad. I would be more than just a simple nurse. And with the flexibility in different career paths as a nurse, I felt that a lot of doors would open for me through becoming a nurse.

So here I am many months later, finishing up my prerequisites for nursing school. I still question if this is the right decision but then I tell myself that I have no way of knowing that. All I know is that I feel that it is a step in the right direction. At least for now. Life can swerve you in all sorts of directions after all. All I can really do is keep marching forward always absorbing, reflecting, and communicating.

 

12/17/13

Being human.

If I have learned anything in the last semester, it is that being human is an astonishing experience.

For my nursing school prerequisites, I took an Intro Psych course along with a year-long Human Anatomy & Physiology course. As a fifth year student taking first year courses, I was pleasantly surprised on how much I got out of these classes; it is an experience I would not have gone through had I taken these courses in my first year. Although on many occasions the lectures were dry and the information based on very basic facts and concepts, taking these courses allowed me to better understand my own body and mind to ultimately appreciate just what it is I have as a human being.

Biology taught me how the cells in my body worked in conjunction with one another to keep my body breathing and moving. Having started training in Capoeira in my spare time, I felt more in tune with my own body as began to not just see improvements in my strength and flexibility but understand how my body worked to allow me to move the way I should move in Capoeira. The human body is extraordinary in its efficiency and beautiful in its intricacy. Opening a door, taking a deep breath, even being sore took on a whole new meaning for me as I learned about human physiology. My body is built with so much potential in what it can do if I only put my mind to it.

Psychology explored the human mind in not just the brain but the human consciousness. I learned a great deal about human memory, learning, and behaviour which I found quite applicable to my own day-to-day life. Much like with biology, I began understand why I did the things I did and how thoughts came to be. More than anything, I finished the course with more questions than answers – more possibilities than conclusions. Through biology, I learned how the human body was adaptable in making slow changes and improvements. Through psychology, the power of human consciousness seemed endless.

As humans, we have been given these wondrous gifts of a body and of consciousness. To be able to utilize both of these things to as far as our hearts will fuel them is something of a grand vision I want to spend my entire life exploring. Just what can my body do next? What can I think up with what I constantly absorb from the endless colourful stimuli of this world? I don’t want to take for granted for what I have by default as a whole human being. The possibilities are numerous as the stars in the sky.