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A Fish Out of Water

By January 21, 2018December 6th, 2023Advocate, Caregiver, Clinician, ePatient, Leader, Written Only
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When I went to an inner city Nursing School in 1975, I was a 19-year old hippie white boy from the suburbs in a class of 150 mostly mid-aged African American women (one other guy).  I felt like a fish out of water. When you’re admitted to the hospital you’re wearing a johnnie, pushing a button for help, and feeling like crap you’re surrounded by streams of people in uniforms who know each other and work together every day. A fish out of water. As a patient stakeholder/expert on a panel, I’m surrounded by scientists, physicians, administrators.  A fish out of water.

Interesting idiom, fish out of water. I picture a fish flapping, breathless, on the deck of a boat or in a pail, ready to die. But really that’s way too drastic. It’s more, oh crap, what am I doing here? I don’t belong. I feel so small. I’m an extrovert (or ENFP for you Myers Briggs folk), so I wriggle out of that fish out of water feeling pretty quickly. Ever since my hippie drug days, I learned to bring safety with me whenever I did anything risky. My intro to Participatory Medicine was Take this Book to the Hospital with You by Charles Inlander and Ed Weiner. Create your own pond in the middle of dry dock in the fish out of water idiom. In Nursing School I set up a study group and held them at my classmates’ homes.  I knew how to study and they knew how to cook. As a direct care nurse, I encouraged people to have a family member with them at all times. I build relationships with people on panels and soon I have a pond.

It’s harder when you’re not an extrovert.  It takes pre-thought, planning, and encouragement from others. When I watch introverts manage successfully they know who they are, have confidence, and are clear that it’s their needs that should be met. And they take someone to the hospital with them.

What do you do when you’re a fish out of water?

Post Image from Public Domain Pictures

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2 Comments

  • Pippit says:

    Interesting article! I do sometimes feel that way. Mostly I have to assess the situation to know how to deal with it. In some instances it works to be outspoken, whereas in others, with my extroversion I might be viewed as an interloper. I tend to forge ahead in many circumstances and hope that people will understand my good intentions. Sometimes they do and respond well but once or twice I’ve found myself defending my position against 300 attackers. That is not fun. Well, as they say, “No guts, no glory!”

  • Susan Spivack says:

    Great! Beautiful metaphor…. I love knowing what your nursing school days taught you.

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