interact with the patients and their families on occasion. Years later in 1992 my father was diagnosed with prostate cancer; and in late 1993 my mother was diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer.
I was the primary caregiver to both my parents until they passed away in 1994. It is impossible to describe how painful it was to see both my parents die in so short a period of time. However the visiting nurses and hospital nursing staff made such a difference; the patience and compassion they showed my parents and family was extraordinary. I felt as though they truly understood what I was going through. The entire experience only reinforced my thoughts that I should be a nurse, but single parenthood dictated that I must keep food on the
table. Fast forward to 2011- I am happily married; my son is now twenty-one years old and in college, thanks to the recession I am without a job and halfway through finishing what I barely started after high school. Being able to provide loving support and empathy to patients and family while they are in a state of uncertainty would truly be a blessing. I look forward to completing my clinicals and spending the second half of my life do what I believe I was called to do.