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Bow Criddle: Then, Farmer, Firefighter, Plumber, Accountant Now, RN, Senior Manager, Hematology/Oncology

Farmer. Firefighter. Plumber. Accountant. Every job Bow Criddle had was a prelude to becoming an oncology nurse and then a senior manager at Banner Good Samaritan Health Center in Phoenix. “Each made me stronger as a nurse,” says Criddle, who has finally found his true calling.

“I have a friend who had a premature baby and I was amazed at his nurses’ skill and compassion. When nothing more could be done, they made a quiet place where my friend could hold him in a rocking chair without tubes, and she sang him a lullaby as he took his last breath,” says Criddle. “Nurses ensure that life and death are both handled with dignity. That’s really what attracted me to the profession. My accounting job was only about making money, and instead I wanted to make a difference in people’s lives.”

Growing up, Criddle worked grueling hours hauling grain on the family farm in Idaho and paid for college by building firelines in the wilderness. The intense physical labor of those jobs was perfect preparation for the long, demanding shifts in oncology, when Criddle, a single parent, was cramming his hours into three seemingly endless days so he could have more time with his son.

Criddle spent 12 years in oncology before taking on a senior management position in 2007. Nothing, he says, could have better prepared him for stepping into management than the nine years he spent in accounting. “All that paperwork, then I went into nursing and have more paperwork than ever!” But he still gets out onto the floor—being one of ten children reinforced his innate tendency to be a caregiver as well as a manager. “I visit with patients and make sure they’re getting everything they need,” says Criddle, who spends most of his time with the nurses on his team, assuring they have the tools they need to do a good job.

And the plumbing? Criddle says, half joking: “You’re working with the same types of things you do as a nurse—the T’s and valves—and what you’re doing is running things through tubes. Not unlike the human body.”

Next up: A U.S. Army platoon leader becomes a pulmonary and critical care nurse. “I learned how to manage people in the Army.”

Catherine Ettlinger
Catherine Ettlinger is former editor-in-chief of Elle magazine as well as editor of Glamour, Harper’s Bazaar, Marie Claire and Mademoiselle. She is the author of the hit blog the Unconfidential Cook which has already won the Honest Scrap Award. A compilation of recipes filtered through friends and family over the years, this foodie blog is chock full of photos and sage cooking advice for dinners at home, hosting parties and even homemade treats for your pet! The Unconfidential Cook is a winner of the Honest Scrap Award.

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