Full Circle, My First Year of Nursing

I have officially completed my first year of nursing. I graduated in November, passed my boards in December, and started my job in January. The first year was nothing less than a roller coaster ride. I went through so many emotions and so much personal growth. This is a long post, but it is a bare bones rehash of my first year, maybe it will help someone who is where I was back in April-May. Nurses New Nurse Article

January - Newborn ICU Dream Job

I was making cold hard cash. I had an awesome preceptor for orientation. I was signing my name with RN behind it, I was giving meds all by myself, I was a nurse, woo hoo, life couldn't be any better. Everything I had worked so hard for the last 4 years had finally come to fruition. I got my first paycheck and my insurance cards, for the first time in my life I am a PROVIDER! I love being a nurse.

February - Newness Worn Off

There is a lot more responsibility when you are the nurse and there is not a clinical instructor checking your work. The reality is starting to set in.

March - Night Shift Orientation

Another fabulous preceptor! But, I am tired. I scoured allnurses.com for threads on how to survive night shift. I bought Melatonin, an eye mask, and turned off my ringer. I lost a few pounds because of the nausea from staying up all night. I'm not so sure I can do this.

April - I'm On My Own, Holy Crap!

This is so scary, I'm the NURSE, I'm supposed to know all this stuff! One of my patients required an emergency procedure at the bedside, thank goodness for my coworkers at my side supporting me. I am starting to doubt my choice, NICU is too stressful and too much responsibility, maybe I should have done that year or two in med-surg before choosing a specialty. There is a negative nurse on nights who might be a problem, she never has anything nice to say about anyone. I find advice on allnurses.com on how to deal with toxic coworkers. It could be worse, I won't take her behavior personal.

May - Made A Mistake By Becoming A Nurse

There is too much responsibility for too little money. I had a baby self extubate and I was so freaked out by it. I have made the decision to stick this job out for a year so I will be more marketable, then move on (how am I going to make it 7 more months!!!). I am finally able to eat at night, and I am getting some sleep during the day. Toxic coworker made a not so nice comment about my assignment being undesirable that I overheard, why are some nurses so nasty? Gah, I hate nursing, what have I done with my life!?!

June - Took the NRP (Newborn Resuscitation) Class

Another patient self extubated, this time I knew exactly what to do, that felt so good. I got nominated for outstanding new grad (me???). I got my 6-month evaluation, I am a "strong performer" and I am getting a good raise. I can do this for 6 more months. I got my first primary patient. Her dad asked me if I would be her nurse, he could tell I cared about her the way I talked to him on the phone about her. Aww, I loved that baby and I felt honored that someone wanted me to care for the most precious thing in their life. I am feeling a smidgen better about my career.

July - New Grads Starting On My Unit

When I get a eport from them I begin to realize how far I have come since I started. My family took a week-long vacation at an oceanfront house that we would have never been able to afford before. The student loan payments are due now, holy cow, this degree was expensive, I can't quit my job to work in a doctor's office for less pay, I won't be able to afford my student loan payments. I think I might be able to work in the NICU for longer than a year.

August - My Primary Went Home, I Cried Tears of Joy and Sadness.

Words can't express the joy of being a part of nursing a tiny, sick baby to health and sending them home to a happy life. Sadness because I have fallen in love and will selfishly miss that smiling face loving me back every time I work. There is a day shift position opening up, I think I may put in for it, I still can't sleep soundly during the day, getting 4-5 hours of sleep a day isn't working for me.

I scour allnurses.com for day versus night shift threads to help make the decision.

I love the extra money of nights and I LOVE my coworkers. The people I work with on nights have taught me so much, I will carry some of the lessons with me forever.

I start questioning myself, am I a strong enough nurse to deal with the hustle and bustle of days, can I emotionally deal with the drama of days? I talk to my nurse manager and decide to go for it, if days doesn't work out she said I can go back to nights. I just realized that I am 3/4 of the way through my 1-year commitment to this job.

September - Dayshift

What was I thinking! ... families, doctors, rounds, families, social work, nutrition, families, students, LESS MONEY ahhh!

One of the June grads had a baby self extubate, she was paler than the baby, I jumped into action and helped her out. After it was over she thanked me and told me that she isn't sure this is for her, too much responsibility, would she ever know how to handle a crisis.

I told her to relax, she was being too hard on herself (I can't believe that I actually told someone that, me THE queen of being too hard on myself). I am dealing with the hustle and bustle of day shift just fine.

When I do get behind, my dayshift coworkers are always willing to lend a hand to get me back where I need to be. I LOVE my coworkers.

Sometimes I am all caught up and I have the opportunity to help someone else get caught up. This time management stuff is starting to click.

October - Day Shift is Smoothing Out

I am adjusting and things don't seem so bad anymore. I think I was getting depressed from lack of sleep on my night shift stint. I like most of the families and there is a rhythm to the business of the day. I don't have that dread feeling when I go to work anymore.

November - I Like My Job

I don't know what has happened to me or when it happened, but I like my job. I like the challenge and I like taking care of the sickest babies. I sometimes leave work worrying that I forgot to do or chart something and I fear getting a nastygram in email over it. I decide that I am a big girl and if I get a nastygram, so be it, it will only improve my practice.

December - I Feel Confident Some Days

I still suck at starting IV's, but I am an expert at developmentally appropriate positioning. I still get little inklings of worry that I forgot something at work but I have made the decision that I am not going to worry. I do the best I can every day and I am only human.

My primary from the summer came to see me and bring me a Christmas card, she is a chubby bundle of smiles, I wish I could kiss her fat little cheeks. I was so touched that her family made the effort to come to my job on a day I was working to be sure I could see their child. How wonderful is that? What a gift. It may have been the best Christmas gift I received this year.

Our breakroom has been transformed into a cookie and candy palace. Every surface is covered with treats brought by current and past families. It is overwhelming, both emotionally and on the waistline. It is hard to believe that this job has such an impact on people.

I guess it isn't just 'a job.'

I can't imagine leaving this magical place.

I became a nurse because I love people. There is no way I am leaving.

If I leave and go work somewhere else how will I know how all the babies are doing?

I love being a nurse.

The biggest lesson I learned this year is that being a good nurse doesn't mean you have all the answers or know how to do everything. Being a good nurse means that you care about what you are doing, are courageous enough to own your mistakes, and humble enough to ask questions when you don't know something or for help when you need it.

The ability to leap tall buildings would be a plus, I plan on working on that during my second year of nursing.

full-circle-my-first-year-of-nursing.pdf

Specializes in Trauma, ER, ICU, CCU, PACU, GI, Cardiology, OR.

enlightening article, thank you for sharing....aloha~

Thank you for your reply. I had a preceptor and I have been on my own for 4 days now. The nurses on my floor are great and I am always asking questions and they have been very helpful. This past Saturday was awful, the charting system was offline for the duration of my shift and nobody knew the procedure for paper charting. I felt so alone and then trying to be there for my patients. It just broke me. I am having to switch nights to days and days to nights. I stayed up for 24 hours yesterday just to get ready to work this morning at 7. Good thing I was cancelled and now I am trying to re-gather myself. It is just very hard, you know. But they do have EAP and I have a call into them. But you are right about schools not preparing us for the harshness of reality, they prepare us for the NCLEX but this is certainly much harder!:eek:

Specializes in Alzheimer's, Geriatrics, Chem. Dep..
Thank you for your reply. I had a preceptor and I have been on my own for 4 days now.

I wonder if they'd let you go back to having a preceptor. Also one thing that helped me was staying on just nights until I could get a day or evening position (maybe a different unit?). Working nights is not great for those of us with mental health issues, but personally I found it better than switching back and forth! I mostly did nights for several years. It helped me with sleep, it was not so busy and there were fewer people around to disrupt my "flow." ie, patients leaving the floor for PT, drs visits, head nurses and supervisors standing over me (sorry supervisors) etc.

Just some thoughts and none of them may work but I'd hate to see you leave already.

I think too if you read the other posts before mine you will find something helpful. I am sure that *I* posted earlier than this - I probably had totally different feed back than today, haha...

Specializes in Trauma, ER, ICU, CCU, PACU, GI, Cardiology, OR.

wishing you all of you the best in all of your future endeavors...aloha~

Well written article. It gives a sort of reassurance to nurses everywhere that their choice of career is worth all the hard work.

Specializes in Trauma, ER, ICU, CCU, PACU, GI, Cardiology, OR.
well written article. it gives a sort of reassurance to nurses everywhere that their choice of career is worth all the hard work.

i agree with you, however, one shouldn't forget to add perseverance, patience, faith, and excellent work ethics, among several other characteristics in order to succeed in my beloved career.

Specializes in Alzheimer's, Geriatrics, Chem. Dep..
i agree with you, however, one shouldn't forget to add perseverance, patience, faith, and excellent work ethics, among several other characteristics in order to succeed in my beloved career.

that's right! good points! :)

Specializes in Telemetry.

Thank you for this article. Tomorrow will be only my second day on my own as a new grad nurse. I'm on dayshift, which helps a lot with my sleep schedule, but my hospital has been trying to cut expenses and wants *everybody* out exactly by 19:30; I'm still so slow! Really hoping I can get the hang of this soon. I don't want to get written up....

Specializes in Trauma, ER, ICU, CCU, PACU, GI, Cardiology, OR.
thank you for this article. tomorrow will be only my second day on my own as a new grad nurse. i'm on dayshift, which helps a lot with my sleep schedule, but my hospital has been trying to cut expenses and wants *everybody* out exactly by 19:30; i'm still so slow! really hoping i can get the hang of this soon. i don't want to get written up....

first of all, don't be so hard on yourself if it's just your 2nd. time on your own. on the other hand try to emulate those nurses that seem to finished their work on time or those seasoned nurses this will give you an idea on how to manage your time & priority. wishing you the best always as i send you a hug from across the miles....:hug: aloha~

quote from nurse hooloovoo

thank you for this article. tomorrow will be only my second day on my own as a new grad nurse. i'm on dayshift, which helps a lot with my sleep schedule, but my hospital has been trying to cut expenses and wants *everybody* out exactly by 19:30; i'm still so slow! really hoping i can get the hang of this soon. i don't want to get written up....

first of all, don't be so hard on yourself if it's just your 2nd. time on your own. on the other hand try to emulate those nurses that seem to finished their work on time or those seasoned nurses this will give you an idea on how to manage your time & priority. wishing you the best always as i send you a hug from across the miles....:hug: aloha~

nurse hooloovoo, it's only your 2nd day on your own. you're still like a bird fallen from the nest! i'm sorry that you're in a hospital that is pushing the day shift out at a certain time...often times a good nurse has to take the time to take care of the patients and wait until the end of the shift to stay late to document. every shift has it +s and -s and in my limited experience day shift is the "med-pass shift".

i agree with gitanorn that you should talk to the seasoned nurses on how to manage your time, but please don't try to emulate those nurses who seem to finish their work on time....in my experience good seasoned nurses usually leave late. the nurses that get out on time on a regular basis put documentation before patient care. you are going to be slow for a while, and that is ok!!! better safe than sorry :)

Nurse Hooloovoo, it's only your 2nd day on your own. You're still like a bird fallen from the nest! I'm sorry that you're in a hospital that is pushing the day shift out at a certain time...often times a good nurse HAS to take the time to take care of the patients and wait until the end of the shift to stay late to document. Every shift has it +s and -s and in my limited experience day shift is the "med-pass shift".

I agree with GitanoRN that you should talk to the seasoned nurses on how to manage your time, but please don't try to emulate those nurses who seem to finish their work on time....in my experience good seasoned nurses usually leave late. The nurses that get out on time on a regular basis put documentation before patient care. You are going to be slow for a while, and that is ok!!! Better safe than sorry :)

Specializes in Trauma, ER, ICU, CCU, PACU, GI, Cardiology, OR.

i have one thing to say...."better late than never" :cool: