So, finally, nine hours and forty five minutes after starting, I've finished work. There should've been an hour long lunch break in there somewhere, but that fell by the way side of for the love of bleeding christ how many times do I have to explain clinical staff rotas and workload?! plus a doubled ops list because the Friday before a bank
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I always forget how dangerous you job can be. I hope your arm heals up soon and that it's not too painful. *hugs*
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At least with the cat, I was expecting it to go off like that (it'd already swiped at me from the kennel, and had been swearing up a storm for the preceding ten minutes); this dog just went with no warning, which is always fun for the amount of adrenaline that dumps into your bloodstream.
And, eh, I'll heal up, with only about a week's worth of whinging about an inability to do a bunch of stuff. More of a problem is that I was already leary of the ability of Other Nurse to effectively restrain animals that are full-out going off (she...has obvious nerves about approaching potential GFTTs, and doesn't clearly signal if she's going to drop the hold--not in any way saying that she shouldn't drop the hold if keeping it is going to get her injured, but more that she's, well, quiet at the best of times, and doesn't do what me or, say, B do, ( ... )
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Here's hoping that you bad luck this week means that you'll be lucky for months to come :)
I googled Northern Inuits and they're beautiful dogs, but sheesh they're basically about one generation away from pure wolf. It's no wonder they cast them as dire wolves.
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Yeeeeah, this dog pretty much looked like a gangly wolf (it wasn't even fully grown), but it still weighed in at about 37kg.
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