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Nursing Mentoring

Nurses are needed more than ever before. There is a nursing shortage in the United States that appears to be getting worse. Yet the nursing profession is one of the most caring and admirable professions that there is.

  

Young people who want to become nurses sometimes seek out mentors who will help them with their career path. A nursing mentor is a lot more than a school guidance counselor. The nursing mentor will help the person he or she is mentoring for as long as they like.

Anyone can be a mentor. Regardless of age, gender, race, or profession. Everyone has a special gift that they can give to others. Even young children can mentor other children. We often see young grammar school children helping Kindergarten children in peer mentoring programs. Many people feel that it is their duty to help others in any way that they can.

Mentoring in nursing can consist of many different facets. Not only does a person who is thinking of becoming a nurse need a mentor to help them choose the right courses as well as keep on track with their goals, but even after becoming a nurse, a mentor can prove invaluable.

Nursing is not the easiest profession in the world. It can be very difficult, it can be emotionally stressful and also very demanding. The pay is not great. Those who study nursing do not pursue this career for monetary gain. They usually have an innate desire to help others who are in pain - either physically or psychologically. They are healers.

After a person becomes a nurse, he or she will still need a mentor. Their nursing mentor will be able to tell them how to balance work and personal life and how to deal with some of the tragedies that they see throughout the course of the day.

Nursing mentoring has its own rewards. A nurse who decides to mentor other nurses is not only doing a favor for the nurses that he or she is mentoring, but for the patients for whom that nurse cares for. In addition to that, the nurse who is mentored will, hopefully, one day go on to mentor other nurses in the same manner that he or she was mentored. This creates a domino effect. But instead of the dominos falling down, they are all jumping back up.

Mentors share their knowledge with another individual who wants to achieve the same goals and achievements of the mentor. While the mentor may be flattered at the prospect of someone emulating them in this manner, the concept of mentoring has many rewards that are not monetary or even based on flattery. It gives the person who is mentoring an opportunity to give back to the community while at the same time, helping another person achieve greatness. Nursing mentoring is one of the more honorable ways to help other individuals. You are not only helping another nurse, but possibly creating a chain that will last for a long, long time.



   

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