 Being a nurse means a lot to me. It's not just a job. It is a novel profession. Nurses provide accessible, affordable and patient-centered holistic care to all. Nurses care for people, not only conditions. Working with migrants requires even deeper empathy. The hardest part of it is having to listen to their stories because most of them have gone through very difficult moments. Most of the time, when they come back to their country, most of them have no source of income or shelter. When I am assisting them, what I really focus on is cancelling. So with this, it contributes more towards the physical, mental and psychosocial well-being of the migrant which enables the host country and the families to be able to achieve this socio-economic development wherever they are. Knowing the fact that sometimes you are migrating to a certain place that you don't know what you are going to find. So the fact that fear of unknown can also be there. And then the fact that you are moving, you don't know what is happening, you know what will happen on the journey. And having to work with migrants, you have to even go beyond your knowledge to give them that care they need and satisfaction, which is really difficult to do in nursing care. On International Nurses Day, what I have to tell to the nurses and the world out there is, it is said that save one life and you are a hero. Save hundreds of lives and you are a nurse.