This reflexivity paper explores the evolving identity of a nurse leader turned researcher, tracing a journey along “the road less travelled” in nursing. It examines how personal history, professional experiences, and sociocultural contexts shape the researcher's positionality and influence the pursuit of knowledge. Anchored in critical, feminist, and interpretivist paradigms, the paper underscores reflexivity as both an ethical stance and a transformative process that connects power, purpose, and praxis. Reflective practice bridges experience and empirical knowledge (Sherwood & Webb, 2024). Through self-analysis, the author illuminates how lived experiences, leadership practice, and gendered perspectives inform inquiry, ultimately advancing a vision of nursing research that is self-aware, socially responsive, and justice-oriented.
Human
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Nursing Research
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Leadership