Beautiful Bazoomas!
Good Nurse Renee
Good Nurse Renee
Renee is a real-life nurse. We doubt this is the outfit she wears to work in the hospital, but one can dream, right? Well, get this...
"I am a cardiac surgical intensive care unit nurse," Renee told us. "I am in scrubs and a T-shirt and a lab coat. Or I will wear a V-neck sometimes. I work about 12- to 13-hour shifts, and I do that three days a week. I work nights, so it is a lot easier to get away with wearing something tight-fitting. But when I do wear those kinds of shirts, my co-workers freak out when they see how big my boobs are. I don't really wear stuff like that often, but when I do, people notice."
Unfortunately for her patients, they rarely get to see Renee.
"We usually don't deal with them when they are conscious, and when they are, they are pretty out of it on medication. But the ones who see me and can speak always tell me that I am pretty and that my eyes are nice. It's never a direct compliment on my boobs. But you can tell that they like them and that they are looking."
Maybe it's better that Renee's patients not see her as we see her here. Those code blue alarms would go off non-stop on her shifts.
"I am a cardiac surgical intensive care unit nurse," Renee told us. "I am in scrubs and a T-shirt and a lab coat. Or I will wear a V-neck sometimes. I work about 12- to 13-hour shifts, and I do that three days a week. I work nights, so it is a lot easier to get away with wearing something tight-fitting. But when I do wear those kinds of shirts, my co-workers freak out when they see how big my boobs are. I don't really wear stuff like that often, but when I do, people notice."
Unfortunately for her patients, they rarely get to see Renee.
"We usually don't deal with them when they are conscious, and when they are, they are pretty out of it on medication. But the ones who see me and can speak always tell me that I am pretty and that my eyes are nice. It's never a direct compliment on my boobs. But you can tell that they like them and that they are looking."
Maybe it's better that Renee's patients not see her as we see her here. Those code blue alarms would go off non-stop on her shifts.