It happened.
Grad school pushed me to my breaking point.
I’m talking full on emotional breakdown, anxiety attacks, re-emergence of repetitive behaviors…
It got bad.
For some reason I hit a wall and could not move past it.
I went to work and functioned as if I was ok, however mentally I was losing it!
It all started with one class… Pathopharmacology. Now let’s remember, I’m in school for my masters in nursing education. I was not prepared to cross paths with this class. It hit me like a ton of bricks. The grading rubric was 5 pages long with part “A” consisting of like, 3 of those pages. I hated it. It’s not a class I have ever wanted to take. It did not interest me. I couldn’t retain the information. The paper I turned in was basically a pompous regurgitation of information that no one wants to read.
It sucked.
The sheer weight of the paper that was due gave me anxiety so I procrastinated. The procrastination made me anxious. The anxiety made me procrastinate more. The procrastination gave me anxiety.
It was the feedback loop from Hell.
I almost broke. Quitting actually started to look like a viable option. I was literally in tears thinking about the paper.
It was the beast I could not defeat… or so I thought.
I had to have friends and family really rally around me and offer support to help pull me back from the edge. They managed to get me to take a step back, breathe, and break the monster down into manageable pieces.
I have a great support system, something I don’t acknowledge enough.
After hours of research, coming up with an outline of what was needed, and taking the paper in small chunks, I completed it. I turned in 36 pages of absolutely glorious regurgitated information. It’s what they wanted, so it’s what they got.
I passed the paper and the class.
It was if a 10-ton Boulder was removed from my shoulders. I could finally breathe. I celebrated by drinking wine and playing Final Fantasy Online with my cousin. It was amazing.
I’m now in Health Assessments. It’s at least something I have some familiarity with. I know the advanced practitioner health assessment is far more involved but it’s something I can learn and retain. It’s useful information, I mean I’ll have to teach that to nursing students one day (hopefully). So, I’m nervous about the assessment I have to record. I’m nervous but not panicking. I’m learning to breathe and take things one step at a time. I finally have a plan to move forward. It’s doable.
Good for you, Fred! You muddled through and even got organized. Now that’s progress. I had a few courses in the NP program that gave me nightmares, but I made it . You can’t be good at everything, or like everything you have to learn. Keep doing what you’re doing! You’ll be successful in the end. 📚🎶 Christine
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Remember to breathe…slowwwwwwwww deep breaths…and repeat to yourself: This too shall end. This too shall end. This too shall end.
🙂
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The slow deep breathes probably let me from going insane lol!
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Whoa! That sounds intense. I’m glad that is behind you – I feel like celebrating with you!
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Now it’s on to Health Assessment… my other not-so-favorite class
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