Here's “Nurses : Vital Leaders in our Valley, a column I submitted to our local newspaper (The Fresno Bee)'s "Valley Voices" column. They didn't print it. Can you guess why? I have a theory.
They have printed me before; see a previous column they printed here:
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"Some Confessions from a Christian Pastor"
Anyway.. Maybe the powers that Bee will see this and change their mind.(
PS: Video below of me speaking to nurses as they graduate; related to this article's theme (click the "backstory link" if you don't see video embedded below):
video backstory
video backstory
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“Nurses : Vital
Leaders in our Valley” by Dave Wainscott
Dave Wainscott is
pastor of Third Day Fresno, and adjunct instructor at Fresno Pacific
University.
Nurses are crucial to vital, visionary leadership in our
valley.
But not all nurses see themselves as leaders.
Indeed, not all nurses are always leaders. But all
nurses are sometimes leaders; and any
great nurse can and will lead successfully and courageously, if…no, when… summoned for a season into
leadership. Such leadership may even extend far
beyond the walls and halls of their hospital or institution.
As a pastor in our valley for thirty years, and thus one who
has logged countless hours at hospital bedsides catching close-up vignettes of
nurse/patient interactions, I am in awe of the selfless care…and profound leadership…that nurses
provide.
As one who also
teaches nursing students in the RN to BSN program at Fresno Pacific
University’s various valley campuses, and thus one who has personally witnessed
the astounding extra-mile commitment of hundreds of local nurses, I am in awe
of the tireless tenacity…and profound
leadership….that nurses provide.
As one who was has occasionally needed the services of
nurses and hospitals myself, and thus
one who has willfully surrendered my healing and very life to capable nurses, I
am inspired beyond words, and must brag to our valley about the relentless
self-giving …and
profound leadership…that nurses provide.
“Are you an angel?,” I almost asked a nurse aloud once. As I was finding my way out of the fog of
anesthesia that accompanied a procedure, the first thing I saw upon re-entry was
the unfeigned smile of a nurse, and the first voice that nurse gently calling
my name. She acted as if she had nothing
else to do in that moment. As if I was helping her. I was not client or customer; not an annoyance
or another number, but her current sacred opportunity to extend grace and
practical help. It seemed her only calling in that moment was to ensure that I
was oriented, alright and welcomed back to reality with extraordinary
encouragement. You can see how for a split second, the thought crossed my mind
that she was literally angelic.
As much as you may appreciate along with me that nurses can
be helpful and even life-savers, I am aware that some are not finding my thesis
that nurses make stellar leaders immediately obvious. I invite us to consider the same thesis, as
articulated by Grossman and Valica, in their exceptional book, “The New
Leadership Challenge: Creating the
Future of Nursing” (F.A. Davis, 2013):
“One of the areas in
which nurses are most skilled is communication.
Nurses know how to listen. They
know how to encourage people to keep trying when there seems to be no hope of
success..They know how to encourage others to respond openly. And they know how to avoid barriers to
communication. Therefore, nurses are
particularly advantaged when one examines this element of leadership.
book link |
Such opportunities
are, in fact, more available than many nurses realize: serving on a committee
at one’s institution or in one’s professional association, speaking at a
conference, writing for a professional journal or local newspaper or
organizational newsletter, meeting with a legislator, talking with patients and
their families, being interviewed on a campus radio station, holding office in
one’s professional organization, campaigning for a candidate or a particular cause, confronting a healthcare
team member, networking at professional meetings, forming alliances with other
health care professionals, seeking and using a mentor, and so on. We are limited only by our own imagination
and our willingness to take risks.” (Grossman and Valica, p. 14)
I don’t know about you, but that exhortation resonates with me.
I wish you could feel firsthand the endless potential that Drs. Stacy Manning, Stacy Wise and Peggy
Avakian (directors of nursing and health
care programs at Fresno Pacific) and I, see in “our” brave nurses. I’m sure other local educators of nurses
agree.
Allow me to use this public forum to offer heartfelt thanks
for the thankless job that nurses routinely bless us with.
And allow me a throw-down; a challenge, to any nurses
reading: step out, risk well; trust and
lean into your “angelic” leadership instincts.
Precisely because of your self-effacing “I’m not a leader,” you may well
be summoned to a next-level leadership in your city, valley and beyond.
Lead on.
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Hey, thanks for engaging the conversation!