{"id":6653,"date":"2023-11-29T02:16:32","date_gmt":"2023-11-29T02:16:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/learningcommons.twu.ca\/?p=6653"},"modified":"2024-01-15T22:13:05","modified_gmt":"2024-01-15T22:13:05","slug":"a-woman-with-medicine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/2023\/11\/29\/a-woman-with-medicine\/","title":{"rendered":"A Woman with Medicine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>400 Level Entry<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center\"><strong>A Woman with Medicine<\/strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"post-140\" class=\"standard post-140 chapter type-chapter status-publish hentry\">\n<div class=\"entry-content\">\n<p>In my previous paper, my personal definition of nursing was the Cree word&nbsp;maskihkewiskwew, \u201ca woman with medicine\u201d. This paper will expand my conceptualization of&nbsp;this phrase and how it sums my personal nursing philosophy. I will explain my definition of the&nbsp;word \u201cmedicine\u201d and introduce the community in which I learned Indigenous ways of knowing.&nbsp;I will demonstrate how concepts of Belonging and the Seven Grandfather Teachings have come&nbsp;to undergird my philosophy of nursing. I will discuss how I perceive a Christ-following&nbsp;worldview and Chinn &amp; Kramer\u2019s patterns of nursing knowing (2018) to fit alongside the&nbsp;Grandfather Teachings. Finally, I will explain why the integration of Indigenous knowledges&nbsp;with nursing knowledges is important to my future areas of nursing practice. I believe this&nbsp;journey is continued through deliberate un-silencing and prioritizing of Indigenous knowledges<br \/>\nin nursing discourse, and their consolidation with our more conventional knowledges.<\/p>\n<p>Medicine and Community<\/p>\n<p>There are many different understandings of the word \u201cmedicine.\u201d Referencing my&nbsp;previous paper, my personal definition of \u201cmedicine\u201d is \u201cthe integration of multiple ways of&nbsp;knowing so that persons are honoured, uplifted, and healed\u201d. My approach to healing and&nbsp;medicine is informed by my participation in Indigenous Pathways (IP), a North American and&nbsp;global community of Indigenous people who \u201cseek to bring a message of health and well-being<br \/>\nto the wider Indigenous community\u201d (IP, 2020). Through participation in this community and&nbsp;particularly through serving in their yearly week-long summer camps for Indigenous youth, I&nbsp;was introduced to a concept of medicine as all things that uplift and heal in the physical, mental,&nbsp;emotional, and spiritual aspects of human living. When seen this way, many more things than&nbsp;Western biomedical treatments are also medicine: traditional teachings, art, laughter\u2014even body&nbsp;language might be a form of medicine.<\/p>\n<p>In staff training for IP summer camp and in listening to Elders teach Story to the youth&nbsp;and staff, I learned about Belonging from Martin Brokenleg et al.\u2019s Circle of Courage&nbsp;(Government of Manitoba, 2007) and about the Seven Grandfather Teachings. The primary&nbsp;Elders who taught and teach in our community are Elder Harold Roscher, Dr. Terry LeBlanc,&nbsp;and Elder Nora Yellowknee. We were encouraged implicitly to live out these teachings while<br \/>\nworking with Indigenous youth throughout the weeks of camp. I experienced how life-giving,&nbsp;community-building, and profoundly healing these virtues can be. I realized that these teachings&nbsp;are medicine for all human beings, and that I should extend their application into my nursing&nbsp;practice. In the rest of the paper I will introduce each Grandfather Teaching with the phrase \u201cI&nbsp;heard the Elders say&#8230;\u201d to connect back to the community from which I learned them.<\/p>\n<p>Belonging<\/p>\n<p>Belonging in the Circle of Courage is described as \u201ctreating others as kin\u201d which&nbsp;\u201cdraw[s] all into relationships of respect\u201d (Government of Manitoba, 2007). Indigenous&nbsp;belonging is significant to my personal knowing. Chinn and Kramer (2018) describe personal&nbsp;knowing as \u201ca process of Self-knowing that is conscious; it is developed deliberately to know&nbsp;fully who you are and to understand your actions and relationships\u201d (p. 117). In a past paper I&nbsp;wrote that I was offered deep belonging from Indigenous blood family and non-blood family,&nbsp;and that I want my patients to experience this same kind of deep belonging (Friesen, 2019). This&nbsp;is a similar concept to Maori nurse scholar Irihapeti Ramsden\u2019s emphasis on \u201cthe importance of&nbsp;establishing the \u2018trust moment\u2019 between the nurse and the patient\u201d (Ramsden, 2002, p. 105).&nbsp;Whether it is described as \u201cbelonging\u201d or as \u201ctrust\u201d, the heart of the matter is that the patient&nbsp;needs to feel that they belong in the place of care, and that the people who care for them will&nbsp;treat them as if they belong there. I as the nurse am responsible for finding an individualized way&nbsp;for each patient to feel belonging.<\/p>\n<p>Love<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Love is carried by the Eagle, a symbol of purity who flies&nbsp;highest and therefore closest to Creator. My understanding of love is also informed by the&nbsp;traditions of following Creator Sets Free (Jesus) that I resonate with most strongly. In the First&nbsp;Nations Version Bible, Creator Sets Free speaks to his followers: \u201cIn the same way the Father&nbsp;loves me, I have loved you&#8230;To walk the road with me, you must love each other in the same<br \/>\nway I have loved you\u201d (John 15: 9&amp;12 FNV). As a nurse who follows Creator Sets Free, I seek&nbsp;to treat all human beings with love because of the belief that all human beings are loved deeply&nbsp;by the Creator Himself. I believe this is the Christian understanding of the value of all human&nbsp;life. Early Anabaptist theology also emphasized love:&nbsp;Another foundation stone was the insistence on the practice of true brotherhood and love&nbsp;among the members of the church&#8230;Hans Leopold, a Swiss Brethren martyr of 1528, said&nbsp;of the Brethren: \u2018If they know of any one who is in need, whether or not he is a member&nbsp;of their church, they believe it their duty, out of love to God, to render him help and aid.\u2019<br \/>\n(Bender, 1942, p. 38)&nbsp;This quotation is from a book that my grandfather Alvin Friesen studied when he was in high<br \/>\nschool; his name in teenage writing is on the cover page. Such a calling, rooted in Love and&nbsp;carried by my ancestors, compels me to render that same \u201chelp and aid\u201d to my patients and their&nbsp;families when I nurse.<\/p>\n<p>Respect<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Respect is carried by the Bison, who lays down his life and&nbsp;everything he has for the good of the people. The Elders say this is an example of doing right by&nbsp;others. To do right is also considered in ethical knowing, which explores how a nurse determines&nbsp;what s(he) ought to do and how to behave morally in each nursing situation (Chinn &amp; Kramer,&nbsp;2018). To behave ethically involves respect for the dignity of humanity and the use of my skills&nbsp;to honourably serve my patients (Chinn &amp; Kramer, 2018; Benner, 1991). I was surprised to find&nbsp;that ethical knowing was not as frequently expressed in my practice as I had expected,&nbsp;considering my interest in marginalized populations and patient rights. However, I think that&nbsp;may simply be due to the framework I use for similar ideas. My respect for human dignity is&nbsp;grounded in the Love that I discussed above. My motivation for treating patients well comes&nbsp;from my Christ-following worldview and from the principles of Love and Respect, and this does&nbsp;lead me to pursue ethical behaviour. Like the Bison, I need to lay down my gifts and strengths as&nbsp;a nurse for the good of patients and their families.<\/p>\n<p>Humility<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Humility is carried by the Wolf, who always submits to the&nbsp;will and needs of the pack over what the individual might want. Florence Nightingale herself&nbsp;understood humility as essential for nursing and wrote:&nbsp;I do say that these women had the true nurse-calling\u2014the good of their sick first, and&nbsp;second only the consideration what it was their &#8220;place&#8221; to do\u2014and that women who wait&nbsp;for the housemaid to do this, or for the charwoman to do that, when their patients are&nbsp;suffering, have not the making of a nurse in them. (Nightingale, 1898, p. 25).&nbsp;This fundamental sense of humility reminds me not to hold myself or behave as superior to my&nbsp;patients or any other member of the health care team. It is also an important virtue in&nbsp;intercultural settings where I might be tempted to assume that my approach or my knowledge is&nbsp;better than another\u2019s. In a contemporary context, McGibbon et al. (2014) use a postcolonial&nbsp;framework to discuss the need for humility as we un-learn our own biases and accept that we&nbsp;will make mistakes while working through the process of decolonization. Without humility, I&nbsp;would not seek to know what I do not know.<\/p>\n<p>Truth<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Truth is carried by the Turtle, who listens to all stories,&nbsp;preserving knowledge and carrying it on her back through the eons. My discussion of Truth&nbsp;includes empiric knowing, the pattern of knowing grounded in realist philosophy as a search for&nbsp;objective and quantifiable truth, described by Carper as necessary for the science of nursing&nbsp;(Chinn &amp; Kramer, 2018; Hirani et al., 2018; Carper, 1978). The Elders say the Turtle\u2019s task is to&nbsp;bear witness to the natural laws of the world that always hold true. This carries some resonance&nbsp;with empirical science\u2019s role of the \u201cobserver\u201d and the quest of the scientist to discover the&nbsp;cosmos\u2019 inalienable laws of math and physics (Britannica, 2018). Both the Turtle and the&nbsp;scientist pursue what is immutable about reality. Empiric is the pattern of knowing I emphasize&nbsp;the least in my practice; I tend toward intuitive and emotive approaches to nursing as evident in<br \/>\nmy last paper. However, empiric knowing is still crucial for the maintenance of evidence-based&nbsp;practice that supports high quality care (Hirani et al., 2018; Thorne &amp; Sawatzky, 2014).&nbsp;Hirani et al. (2018) discuss alternatively the paradigm of relativism, a different way to&nbsp;view truth in which reality is subjective and depends on individual human experience. The&nbsp;authors stress the importance of this approach for tailoring nursing care to the unique situations,<br \/>\nexperiences, and values of each patient. As I consider this for my own nursing practice, it&nbsp;reminds me to listen attentively and carefully like the Turtle to the stories each patient tells me.&nbsp;As a nurse I need to advocate for the patient\u2019s truth to always remain central to their plan of care.<\/p>\n<p>Wisdom<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Wisdom is carried by the Beaver, who applies his teeth and&nbsp;skills to the building of good things for his family. I have chosen the framework of Wisdom to&nbsp;explore one of my most frequently used patterns of knowing, aesthetic knowing. Chinn and&nbsp;Kramer (2018) describe aesthetic knowing as not merely having knowledge, but finding the&nbsp;exact time, place and way to creatively use what the nurse perceives and feels to transform a&nbsp;nursing event into one of deep human meaning and beauty. These scholars articulate that&nbsp;aesthetic knowing involves instinctually taking in information about the patient and knowing&nbsp;how to apply it through relationship with the patient, to create that meaningful experience. This&nbsp;was strongly seen in my practice example by the ways I chose to connect the patient with his&nbsp;family amidst a pandemic through window visiting and the speaker setting on his phone. It was&nbsp;also evident in my instinctual assessment of the family processes involved in his goal of care&nbsp;decision, and the ways that I chose to help maintain the family\u2019s natural processes as they&nbsp;achieved informed decision-making.&nbsp;Before taking this course, I assumed that my most common pattern of knowing would be&nbsp;emancipatory, because I value improving health care for marginalized populations. I did not&nbsp;realize that who I am personally as someone who makes and enjoys art is such a large part of my&nbsp;nursing. I know now that at home I create forms of tactile art, and at work I create artful&nbsp;moments of nursing. This course has helped me evolve my conception of my own nursing into&nbsp;one that is supported and strengthened by my personal artistic and aesthetic strengths. This class&nbsp;has challenged me to stay open to new understandings of nursing practice. It has helped me&nbsp;understand myself better and more clearly articulate what I bring to my nursing practice. Art is&nbsp;my set of Beaver\u2019s teeth, gifted to me by Creator, and an element of my best nursing practice. It&nbsp;is my tool to build good and beautiful things for my patients and my communities.<\/p>\n<p>Honesty<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Honesty is carried by the Saabe, an ancient being who walked&nbsp;the earth reminding us to live with integrity. Here I will revisit the pattern of personal knowing&nbsp;that I introduced in my discussion of Belonging. Personal knowing is connected to this sense of&nbsp;Honesty because it is defined by being our authentic selves with our patients (Chinn &amp; Kramer,&nbsp;2018). It involves critically reflecting on who one is and how one\u2019s self and actions impact<br \/>\nothers as we interact in relationship, and maintaining \u201ccongruence between one\u2019s actions and&nbsp;values\u201d (p. 124).&nbsp;Much of who I am personally comes from situatedness within my three ethnic heritages&nbsp;of Euro-Settler, second-generation immigrant Chinese, and Indigenous Pasifika diaspora. Add to&nbsp;that my involvement in Indigenous communities of North America, and my life expression has&nbsp;become a combination of the West and the East, the European and the Indigenous. I must learn&nbsp;to reconcile different ways of thinking and being, epistemologies and ontologies within my own&nbsp;body and within my own mind. I must also navigate a constant sea of different worldviews and&nbsp;perspectives in my relationships with others. Through NURS 510, I came to realize that I cannot&nbsp;separate this complex multiplicity in my personal life from my nursing practice; this is the Self&nbsp;that I bring to my nursing. This is also the Self that I brought to this paper, because I am writing&nbsp;to you, reader, like I live my life, a little messily but in an honest seeking to reconcile Indigenous&nbsp;and all patterns of knowing towards each other so that they can coexist in friendship.<\/p>\n<p>Courage<\/p>\n<p>I heard the Elders say that Courage is carried by the Bear, who is gentle until she needs to&nbsp;be fierce, for the defense of her family in a time of danger. This is where I will explore&nbsp;emancipatory knowing: the use of the skills and power nurses possess to address injustices that&nbsp;our patients face (Chinn &amp; Kramer, 2018). In my personal and nursing life, I have borne witness&nbsp;like that Turtle to many heartbreaking structural and individual injustices done against&nbsp;Indigenous patients. It has made me angry and determined to do something productive in&nbsp;response, like the Bear. Chinn and Kramer state that \u201cthe dimensions of emancipatory knowing&nbsp;include \u201ccritical questions\u201d and \u201ccreative processes of critiquing and imagining\u201d (p. 81).&nbsp;The first critical question I asked in Indigenous health was \u201cwhy are Indigenous patients&nbsp;so commonly misunderstood and mistreated?\u201d as exemplified by my nursing practice experience.&nbsp;As I explored the deeper roots of this question, I then asked \u201cwhy aren\u2019t Indigenous knowledges&nbsp;accepted in academia and bedside nursing?\u201d If nurses understood more about Indigenous ways of&nbsp;knowing and the effects of colonization, they would likely be more sensitive to patients\u2019 needs&nbsp;and nurse them more safely (McGibbon et al., 2014). This paper itself is one creative process of&nbsp;Chinn and Kramer\u2019s \u201ccritiquing and imagining\u201d; I deliberately centred Indigenous knowing in<br \/>\nmy discussion of nursing, where I believe it fully belongs. It is my personal step towards&nbsp;conscientiza\u00e7\u00e3o, my learning to act against oppression (Friere, 1970).&nbsp;In my MSN studies, I hope to learn from scholars and Elders who have walked the road&nbsp;before me, to better understand the body of nursing research and praxis in Indigenous health.&nbsp;What research gaps need to be filled? And most importantly, how do we help Indigenous people&nbsp;redefine health care and wellness for themselves? I purpose to join the circle of people working&nbsp;to decolonize nursing. The more research and praxis I can participate in that restores good&nbsp;relationships with Indigenous people and health, the more justice and healing can be found for&nbsp;the harms in our health care system.<\/p>\n<p>Conclusion<\/p>\n<p>This course has taught me the importance of astutely balancing different knowledges to&nbsp;create the best nursing care for my patients and their families. Ignoring or silencing any of&nbsp;Indigenous, personal, ethical, empiric, aesthetic, or emancipatory patterns of knowing leads to&nbsp;care that is unable to fully meet diverse patient needs. What the Eagle, Bison, Wolf, Turtle,&nbsp;Beaver, Saabe, and Bear have to teach us leads to healing in many different ways which are not<br \/>\nincompatible with Western nursing. In the midst of profound human difference, we are not as&nbsp;diametrically opposed as we think. By bringing these different knowledges together and seeking&nbsp;to live them with integrity, I hope to be a maskihkewiskwew, a woman with medicine.<\/p>\n<p>11<\/p>\n<p>References<\/p>\n<p>Benner, P. (1991). The role of experience, narrative, and community in skilled ethical&nbsp;comportment. Advances in Nursing Science, 14(2), 1-21. Benner, 1991.pdf (twu.ca)<br \/>\nBender, H. (1942). Mennonites and their heritage, number 1: Mennonite origins in Europe. The&nbsp;Mennonite Central Committee.<br \/>\nCarper, B. (1978). Fundamental patterns of knowing in nursing. Advances in nursing science, 1:&nbsp;13-24. ISSN: 0161-9268<br \/>\nChinn, P. &amp; Kramer, M. (2018). Knowledge development in nursing: Theory and process.&nbsp;Elsevier Inc.&nbsp;Encyclopedia Britannica. (2018). Scientific theory. In Britannica.com.&nbsp;www.britannica.com\/science\/scientific-theory<br \/>\nFriere, P. (1970). Pedagogy of the oppressed. Seabury Press.<br \/>\nFriesen, M. (2019). Redeeming displacement: cultural safety in nursing as a Christ-motivated&nbsp;ministry of decolonization. Journal of NAIITS: An Indigenous Learning Community, 17,&nbsp;28-49. Journal Table of Contents (naiits.com)<br \/>\nGovernment of Manitoba. (2007). Circle of Courage.&nbsp;www.edu.gov.mb.ca\/k12\/cur\/cardev\/gr9_found\/courage_poster.pdf<br \/>\nHirani, S., Richter, S., &amp; Salami, B. (2018). Realism and relativism in the development of&nbsp;nursing as a discipline. Advances in Nursing Science, 41(2), 137-144.&nbsp;https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1097\/ANS.0000000000000207<br \/>\nIndigenous Pathways. (2020). What we do. www.indigenouspathways.com\/aboutIP.html<br \/>\nMcGibbon et al. (2014). Toward decolonizing nursing: the colonization of nursing and strategies&nbsp;for increasing the counter-narrative. Nursing Inquiry, 21(3), 179-191.&nbsp;https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1111\/nin.12042<br \/>\nNightingale, F. (1898). Notes on Nursing. www.fulltextarchive.com\/pdfs\/Notes-on-Nursing.pdf<br \/>\nRamsden, I. (2002). Cultural Safety and Nursing Education in Aotearoa and Te Waipounamu.&nbsp;https:\/\/croakey.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/RAMSDEN-I-Cultural-Safety_Full.pdf<br \/>\nThorne, S., &amp; Sawatzky, R. (2014). Particularizing the general: sustaining theoretical integrity in&nbsp;the context of an evidence-based practice agenda. Advances in Nursing Science, 37(1), 5-18. https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1097\/ANS.0000000000000011<\/p>\n<p>Author\u2019s note: Verbal permission was received from Elder Nora Yellowknee to use the Cree<br \/>\nword maskihkewiskwew as my definition of nursing and use it in writing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>400 Level Entry<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":123,"featured_media":6655,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[41],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-6653","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-2021-winners"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/pad6JM-1Jj","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6653","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/123"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6653"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6653\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":6946,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6653\/revisions\/6946"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6653"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6653"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/create.twu.ca\/learningcommons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6653"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}