The author of the Reflections essay in AJN‘s September issue, Kathleen Resnick, confronts a question many nurses must confront at some point: what is it to be a nurse?

And a related question: what is the essence of nursing work? If you can no longer work as a nurse because of physical constraints or for another reason, are you still a nurse?

Writes Resnick in “A Different Kind of Nurse“:

My nursing career was spent in hospitals, working mostly in critical care as a bedside nurse, then in management. I worked hard and my work was a large part of my sense of self-worth. I loved patient care and the satisfaction of making a difference. As a manager, I felt my  primary mission was to enable those I served to do their best work. . . . I was somebody. Now what am I? An acquaintance asked me, “Didn’t you used to be a nurse?”

Once a nurse, always a nurse.

After a period of struggle with having lost her sense of purpose and identity, the author one day finds herself in a tragic and dramatic situation in which all her nursing instincts and skills are called back into service. And they are right there, ready to respond.

The event reminds her that nothing will ever change the fact that she is a nurse, and gives her the hope to find a way to apply her knowledge in new ways. In losing a beloved profession, Resnick learns that she will always carry the profession within.