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How to Make Friends In and Out of the Hospital
Jeff Hindenach | NursingLink
August 26, 2010
When we were younger, making friends was easy. School provides us with an instant pool of people our own age that we interact with on a daily basis, who are in the same boat we are. But once we leave nursing school and enter the real world, finding friends can be a more difficult task, especially if you have to relocate for a job.
Whether in or out of the hospital, you are dealing with a myriad of ages, interests, and personalities. So how do you sift through it all to find true friends? Here are some tips on how to make it happen.
Make Yourself Accessible
At the Hospital: The workplace can be a hard place to approach people. Conflicting shift schedules and running around after patients makes it hard to interact with your coworkers. Make an effort to show you’re a friendly person. Engage in some friendly hospital banter. Ask coworkers how their weekend was. Any excuse to interact with your colleagues will help show them that you are willing to make the effort to be friends.
Out of the Hospital: When you aren’t working a shift, you don’t have a direct pool of people to interact with. The entire city is a pool of possible friends. The best approach is to simply be approachable. Be friendly. Smile and say hi as people pass. Strike up a conversation in the line at the grocery store or the bank. The friendlier you are, the more people will want to interact with you.
Reach out of Your Comfort Zone
At the Hospital: You can’t sit in your little bubble and expect people to approach you. You are going to have to handle some awkward social situations before you can find your hospital BFF. Take every invite to go out to lunch, even if you’ve brought your own. Attend every work happy hour. If your coworkers want to sing Love Is a Battlefield at karaoke, get up on stage with them. You need to show you’re a team player if you want to be included in their reindeer games.
Out of the Hospital: If you continue to go to the same bars or same places to eat, you are going to keep running into the same people. Branch out. Take a class. Start shopping at a different market. Go to a movie or dinner alone, or grab a drink by yourself. Strike up a conversation with the bartender. If you have social anxiety, and strangers scare you, try starting small, like chatting with the Starbucks barista you see every morning.
Most potential Registered Nurses always ponder the same age old question, "Do I need BSN or should I just get a ADN?"
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SF_NurseLady
over 2 years ago
16 comments
It's always great to have a friend at the hospital. Not a best friend maybe, but someone to get lunch with or vent to.
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over 2 years ago
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very nice.
Inara
over 2 years ago
64 comments
helpful!