Chicago love 😍
Noah Kahan
Monterey Bay Aquarium
taylor price

shark vs the universe
No title available
ojovivo
we're not kids anymore.
Stranger Things

tannertan36
Misplaced Lens Cap

★

No title available

@theartofmadeline
Fai_Ryy
Show & Tell
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
trying on a metaphor
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Love Begins
todays bird

seen from Belarus
seen from Costa Rica
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from Poland
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from France

seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia

seen from Belgium

seen from Brazil
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Argentina

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
@eyap
Chicago love 😍
“Did we make it home, after years of wandering? Can we see the lights?” __ Daily Haiku on Love by Tyler Knott Gregson __ *Come say Hello @TylerKnott on Instagram and Twitter :) * #tylerknott
a short horror story
President Romney
it’s been three years and I would now like to announce the sequel no one saw coming, President Trump
Hush...Don't Say a Word
The first time I cried, it was during clinicals. Ironic really, considering it was perceived a non threatening environment. Except I was completely threatened. The instructor was evaluating sterile wound care at the patient bedside, and after about three sterile fields that were ripped from the bedside table with a curt, “do it again,” I felt tears flooding my eyes. The patient, alert, looked at me with pity, fellow students surrounded the bed, silently writing notes - likely what they will do differently to avoid this catastrophic fail. Tears fell, as I finally met expectation, but there was no victory. “You shouldn’t cry in front of patients,” commented the Instructor. I vowed I would never show emotion again.
The second time I cried, it was during orientation in Med Surg, the fear of making a mistake, the pressure to take more patients, the demands of the preceptor, patients, and forgetfulness began to build up. The struggle to keep up with charts, meds, assessments, and the overwhelming impossibility of it all. Tears threatened at the nurse’s station, and before I knew it, I was whisked away by a nurse educator into a patient’s bathroom.. “Never let them see you cry.” She said, and left the room. I looked around, through the tears. At least she had the good sense to ensure it was a confused patient’s room. I wiped the tears that betrayed me again, and carried on.
The next time I cried, it was my first code. The patient was a DNR, but the family wasn’t sure. When he stopped breathing, they panicked. And so did I. But still, we coded him, and he survived. I held it together, as we tended to him, post cardiac arrest. I held it together while I thought about his broken ribs, hypoxia, and quality of life. I held it together while the family held hands in a prayer circle and reinstated the DNR. I lost it when I watched the heart rate on the monitor slowly go down, and I slipped out of the room silently to cry in the supply room.
I trembled, the first trauma patient I received in Pacu, a 90 y/o female, broken pelvis, s/p ped struck, after being dragged by a bus for five blocks. I trembled, as I fought to keep up with her rapidly depleting blood volume. I trembled each time she coded on that shift. I fought back the tears when she gave up the fight. “Don’t let anyone see you weak.” Said the charge nurse. And I cried the tears silently.
I felt a void the day I took care of a 17 y/o female who overdosed on energy drinks. I felt a void as we ran a marathon attempting to save her young life. I didn’t feel anything while we maxed out on pressors, pumped her with fluids, and she continued to decline. I felt detached while we invaded her body with a catheter to drain the toxins from her blood in emergent dialysis. I felt removed from the scene when she died, her family destroyed, and my fellow nurses wept at the climax of a heart wrenching day that resulted in defeat. I was her nurse, and I had failed her, but my eyes remained dry. Every so often there’s a patient that affects the unit, one that unifies the team, I looked around as though I was viewing it all from the gallery of an OR, and understood there was no shame in crying, and there was no shame in feeling empty - I remained silent, realizing a nurse didn’t have to justify being one or the other. Sometimes you needed to grieve to move on, and others you need to detach to survive it all.
It was late night in Pacu, when we received word we would need to accept a patient from the OR status post complication of a VATS. (Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery). A simple procedure had been complicated by an error that a 1st year surgical resident made - a catastrophic nick of an artery they couldn’t seem to repair immediately. The family was insistent that she suffer no more procedures or extraordinary measures. The patient was to come to a secluded room in Pacu, so the family could say their goodbyes. There is perhaps a million ways that a nurse and doctor may disagree, but it only takes a moment of commonality to bridge the gap, or remind us of our humanity. I stood with the surgical resident as the family surrounded the patient, crying and comforting one another and telling their loved one it was ok to let go. We stood together in the shadows of the corner, and the resident began to cry. I squeezed her hand gently, and felt my own tears fall in shared understanding. She wasn’t alone.
This is so well written, sad and beautiful at the same time. I find it toxic to ORDER not showing emotions, especially when death is involved. Such a wonderful thing you did for the resident. Thank you. <3
^^This is the kind of writing that will change the way we do medicine.
I cry with patients who cry, I laugh with those who laugh… sometimes both within the space of minutes. Providing health-care means actually caring, and if your language of caring for/about someone involves tears, then by all means, cry if it will help you provide better health-care for them.
In my >15 years of being in medicine, I have never once seen a patient or family reprimand a professional (doc, nurse, other) for displaying sympathetic sadness.
WHY IS THIS SO HARD TO UNDERSTAND
So for all you feminists out their who think that all men should die, remember, you are not a feminist.
reblogging for the last comment
Legit question, I’m not trying to hate on feminists or anything. Why is it called feminist if they’re for equality?
castiel-knight-of-hell:
That’s a very good question and thank you for asking so politely.
The word feminism was coined by Charles Fourier in 1837, a French philosopher who advocated for the emancipation of women because he believed society treated women as slaves. We weren’t allowed to vote, own anything, or work a real job. Women were ruled by their fathers/household patriarch until they married at which time they’d be under the rule of their husband. If a woman did not belong to male household she was shunned by society and had very little means to make money, most of them unsavory. You know the idiom “rule of thumb”? That comes from a running joke that started in the 1600s, and was still around in Fourier’s time, that said it was okay for a man to beat a woman with a stick as long as it wasn’t any thicker than his thumb.
The point of the word feminist, and the feminist movement, has never been to say that women are better than men. The point is that women and things associated with women have been given a lesser place in society and we want to bring those things up to a place of equality. The focus is on the feminine because that’s what’s being pushed down. However, focusing on the feminine does not mean we’re focusing only women. Men are belittled and called “less of a man” anytime they portray a trait that is associated with femininity. If women and the feminine were equal to men and masculinity then that wouldn’t happen. Feminism is about raising up things associated with females to have an equal place in society as the things associated with males. It’s called feminism, not equalism, because the focus is on raising up not tearing down. Equalism would suggest that male things need to come down to a lower level so that female things can meet it in the middle. That’s not the point. The point is to raise up the feminine so that it’s on the same playing field that the masculine is already on. We don’t want men to lower themselves, we just want them to make room for us.
This needs to be spread far and wide to everyone on tumblr.
ALL OF THIS.
THANK YOU
This is very thorough explanation, thank you!
The organ is nestled next to a solar-powered tribute to the sun that puts on a light show each night.
Please take me to there.
Source
You’re a different human being to everybody you meet.
Chuck Palahniuk (via thatkindofwoman)
Religious scholar Reza Aslan answers CNN’s question, “Does Islam promote violence?”
college
When people ask me what nursing school is like.
“stranger”
they are coming…again…
http://theawkwardyeti.com
Bernie Sanders is like a real life Leslie Knope. All he's trying to do is make this hell hole better but all of the Pawneeins keep putting their faith in Senator Jam. Why is America Pawnee. Why is Trump actually Senator Jam. Why.
“[I]t is actually more expensive to be poor than not poor. If you can’t afford the first month’s rent and security deposit you need in order to rent an apartment, you may get stuck in an overpriced residential motel. If you don’t have a kitchen or even a refrigerator and microwave, you will find yourself falling back on convenience store food, which—in addition to its nutritional deficits—is also alarmingly overpriced. If you need a loan, as most poor people eventually do, you will end up paying an interest rate many times more than what a more affluent borrower would be charged. To be poor—especially with children to support and care for—is a perpetual high-wire act.”
– It Is Expensive to Be Poor | The Atlantic
Perfect use of that gif.
Look at the new season