Left Nursing After 3 Months and Couldn't Be Happier!

Nurses New Nurse

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Hi everyone,

I'm posting a topic today to offer hope to those of you who may have been in my shoes at some point in time.

Little history: I decided to go into nursing through a second bachelor's degree program since my first liberal arts degree was not marketable in the economy after I graduated in 2008. So on I went to take prerequisites and I was accepted (to my surprise!). Throughout nursing school I was a straight A student and enjoyed my classes, even research and some of the harder clinical courses that most people complained about the entire semester. So with much hard work and soul searching through two years, I became a Registered Nurse. Well, on paper at least! I passed my board exams and was offered two jobs about two months after graduation. Mind you, I applied to over 100 jobs since my last semester. It was only after I had passed my board exams that I was actually considered for an interview and called back.

So I decide to take one of the jobs at a private acute care hospital in a medical surgical unit that also received step down ICU patients and fresh ER admissions. I was paid $21.45/hr and worked on average 14-15 hours for each 12 hour shift. This was not isolated to me because I was new. This was a widespread activity for every single one of the nurses on the floor. We were expected to complete the impossible and yet the stress was overwhelming and the liability issues mounting. I would cry before I walked into work hoping and praying that the day would not collapse for if I dare forget one detail my butt was on the line with the charge nurse and director. Example of this was extensive management oversight during the day to inspect and watch to see if all customer service components were completed during change of shift report. This would easily take 45 minutes to 1.5 hours to complete all the shift reports for two nurses to change shift. Anyway, I digress.

After working on day shift, I requested a change to night shift, something I had never done in my life, for hope that the stress would be less and the demands of the job more tolerable. BOY WAS I WRONG! The night shift was terrible and I suffered a lot of health problems from the shake it made in my body. So after three months of employment, unpaid overtime and harassment and discrimination from the patients, management, and other nurses I said goodbye.

That was the happiest most liberating day in my life. I am now a professional educator and teacher for science and mathematics. While every day is no where near perfect, the impact I make on other people is much more fulfilling and deep. I am not robot nurse. I actually help people and feel like I am part of a profession. Something, that nursing tried to eat off my bones from the day I stepped into that field.

All I can say is.... if you are truly unhappy with nursing and the mountain of things that are changing in the healthcare system you can either be part of the problem or part of the solution. I chose to leave it and despite the work and time I put into it, leaving was the best decision for me. There is NO SHAME in moving on from something toxic and unhealthy. There is NO SHAME in discovering other talents and dreams.

YOU ARE NOT STUCK IN NURSING.

Hope this helps someone out there. Best of luck to all of you who actually finished reading this monstrosity of a post! :)

For Kalevra -- I say this with caution, because I don't really know your situation, but it sounds to me like you might have some clinical depression going on. It may be, as you say, due to effects of day/night switch, but it may be more than that. If you are still employed and eligible for employee benefits, you may be eligible for some free counseling through your employee health counselor. Your loss of interest in things you previously enjoyed, your irritability and uncontrollable anger, your sleep problems, your overeating, your dissatisfaction with your life, feelings of hopelessness, etc -- these are all symptoms of clinical depression. Sometimes addressing that issue itself can give you the clarity and energy to find some other ways to go -- either by improving your current situation/job etc, or moving on to something much better.(Some counseling and some pharmacological help has given me the boost I needed to seek some different solutions...I found some helpers who believed in my strengths, when I couldn't see them for myself.) I encourage you to take care of yourself. As the old saying goes..."Misery is optional." We must support each other in believing this is possible for us. I wish you well and hope you will keep us posted on your situation. But believe me, I understand how a demoralizing situation can drag you down!

Hi everyone,

I'm posting a topic today to offer hope to those of you who may have been in my shoes at some point in time.

Little history: I decided to go into nursing through a second bachelor's degree program since my first liberal arts degree was not marketable in the economy after I graduated in 2008. So on I went to take prerequisites and I was accepted (to my surprise!). Throughout nursing school I was a straight A student and enjoyed my classes, even research and some of the harder clinical courses that most people complained about the entire semester. So with much hard work and soul searching through two years, I became a Registered Nurse. Well, on paper at least! I passed my board exams and was offered two jobs about two months after graduation. Mind you, I applied to over 100 jobs since my last semester. It was only after I had passed my board exams that I was actually considered for an interview and called back.

So I decide to take one of the jobs at a private acute care hospital in a medical surgical unit that also received step down ICU patients and fresh ER admissions. I was paid $21.45/hr and worked on average 14-15 hours for each 12 hour shift. This was not isolated to me because I was new. This was a widespread activity for every single one of the nurses on the floor. We were expected to complete the impossible and yet the stress was overwhelming and the liability issues mounting. I would cry before I walked into work hoping and praying that the day would not collapse for if I dare forget one detail my butt was on the line with the charge nurse and director. Example of this was extensive management oversight during the day to inspect and watch to see if all customer service components were completed during change of shift report. This would easily take 45 minutes to 1.5 hours to complete all the shift reports for two nurses to change shift. Anyway, I digress.

After working on day shift, I requested a change to night shift, something I had never done in my life, for hope that the stress would be less and the demands of the job more tolerable. BOY WAS I WRONG! The night shift was terrible and I suffered a lot of health problems from the shake it made in my body. So after three months of employment, unpaid overtime and harassment and discrimination from the patients, management, and other nurses I said goodbye.

That was the happiest most liberating day in my life. I am now a professional educator and teacher for science and mathematics. While every day is no where near perfect, the impact I make on other people is much more fulfilling and deep. I am not robot nurse. I actually help people and feel like I am part of a profession. Something, that nursing tried to eat off my bones from the day I stepped into that field.

All I can say is.... if you are truly unhappy with nursing and the mountain of things that are changing in the healthcare system you can either be part of the problem or part of the solution. I chose to leave it and despite the work and time I put into it, leaving was the best decision for me. There is NO SHAME in moving on from something toxic and unhealthy. There is NO SHAME in discovering other talents and dreams.

YOU ARE NOT STUCK IN NURSING.

Hope this helps someone out there. Best of luck to all of you who actually finished reading this monstrosity of a post! :)

Thank you for your honesty. I hope a number or pre-nursing and nursing students, as well as nurses, look at what you have shared and take it to heart.

And some folks are more gifted for teaching. I have love so much of nursing and what I have done in the field over many years; but there is also a lot of nonsense and unprofessional stuff that I could have and could live without.

When I teach, however, I really feel like I am in the "flow" of things. I have felt that in nursing, but the dynamics in the field (various environments) tend to stifle this flow--or they just work to knock it out of you. Yes there can be politics in education; but I never cease to be amazed at the incredible amount of nasty politics in nursing--and the more specialized the area, often the worse it becomes--very dog-eat-dog. Very sad.

One of the biggest problems in nursing, in my view, is the horrendous dog-eat-dog, backstabbing politics. When you are running around trying to help people get better and save lives, it's just a major insult to have to deal with such politics under these conditions. In teaching, you know it's there, but I am not also stressed out by saving lives and calming radically stressed out parents--while nurses are trying to undermine other nurses. That kind of evil is just injury upon injury when you are dealing with life and death. If nursing needs to understand anything, it's that such nasty politics has no place in clinical management. Hmmm. . . wonder if that will ever change; but has seemed to have gotten worse in this economy. It's harder to claw to advancement--and often nowadays--even hard to make lateral moves. So, the vicious and sneaky politics and undermining of nurses is getting to be horrendous.

I just had a convo with my sister, and although she feels for me, she doesnt really understand because the feeling is hard to explain. I am hours away from family, I went to school away from family, toughest 4 yearss, but I did it, now in a profession i think i dont like hours away from family. working nights, feeling like life is being wasted so much sitting around days, fighting sleep at nights for 10mnths nowThe scary thing to me is that I had a break down in the comforts of my own room weeks ago long ago, and actively got back in control. This morning i went to the gym,something i LOVED doing but now just i do it to keep myself physically up for the job, ate my healthy bf, watched shows, I laid in bed for the 60th time, getting up back to bed, up, back to bed, checked my phone the 125th time, screw my laptop ive been on it all freakin morn and day, looking at the ceiling, and I JUST SNAPPED! Upset. that scares me, i know im unhappy and that scares me. . crying, vented to God cos he wouldnt give youmore than you can handle, but he gave me this and im not handling it, im pretending to.I have always been active in my decisions, and a very strong ambitious person, but ive become a very vulnerable defeated person. Nothing i do lately EVER feels right. I have no sig other ive lost myself. in my early 20's, and so ****** that a boy is the last thing i need. i dont care about a lot of things i used to, because this switch of clock has affected me whole.
I moved hours away for a job and dont have any friends or family in the area. The friends and family i left back "home" I dont talk much to them and even less close than before. The worst part is that for the most part I dont really care. On my days off ai sleep so late then get up to watch tv and go online. I used to rotate and that was worse than nights. I cant tolerate day shifts and rarely is a permanent day shift available . I used to go to the gym all the time, now i barely want to get up from the bed to the sofa when i am off. the times i go to work are the most productive of the week!
Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.
I cry a whole freakin lot. and I just cried in anger, and threw my cell phone because it wouldnt load quick enough.

Here I am,I work nights, on my day off like other days sitting here, bored on the internet, Watched t.v shows I can give a crap about. was I hungry? nope but I ate 2 bowls of something i didnt need, text my sis, im going to quit tomorrow, but am i? nope cos i need to pay my bills.

I feel like a waste sitting here, and as much as I am blessed with a job, my health is surely deteriorating, more so my mental health. I can't think, because the clock difference has disabled me. I just vented to God for 10 minutes and apologized after. Something isnt right with mee, and I was NEVER EVER like this. SMH

You're one of those people who can't work nights. Find a day shift position and get your life back!

Sorry. My reply above was for Gloryfied, not Kalevra. Any chance Gloryfied and Anotherone are on 12 hour shifts? I found that very grueling, especially by the third shift in a row. All I wanted to do was sleep and veg, and couldn't do the studying that I knew I needed to do.

No, she does not have CLINICAL depression and does not need PILLS or counseling!

Although I agree with the latter part of your message, it is fine to be sad sometimes and have feelings. People can be sad for a day. They're not always going to be happy because we are people.

Kalevra, I'd say look around for another job, especially where your family is since it seems you are missing them. Even a job with lower wages, but a better work environment as you look for a better, higher paying job. Look around for caregiving jobs, they are usually at the person's home (a better work environment than a hospital, in my opinion) and can pay decently. Look for jobs at community centers. Since you use the internet often, maybe look for some job postings online such as at Monster.com or other places.

Cheer up and God Bless :)

For Kalevra -- I say this with caution, because I don't really know your situation, but it sounds to me like you might have some clinical depression going on. It may be, as you say, due to effects of day/night switch, but it may be more than that. If you are still employed and eligible for employee benefits, you may be eligible for some free counseling through your employee health counselor. Your loss of interest in things you previously enjoyed, your irritability and uncontrollable anger, your sleep problems, your overeating, your dissatisfaction with your life, feelings of hopelessness, etc -- these are all symptoms of clinical depression. Sometimes addressing that issue itself can give you the clarity and energy to find some other ways to go -- either by improving your current situation/job etc, or moving on to something much better.(Some counseling and some pharmacological help has given me the boost I needed to seek some different solutions...I found some helpers who believed in my strengths, when I couldn't see them for myself.) I encourage you to take care of yourself. As the old saying goes..."Misery is optional." We must support each other in believing this is possible for us. I wish you well and hope you will keep us posted on your situation. But believe me, I understand how a demoralizing situation can drag you down!

oops I meant gloryfied also

:laugh::wideyed:

Rather than just sinking and losing spirit every passing year, you did something about your unhappiness.

May your current job be more rewarding.

Sometimes I hear about nurses in miserable environments and wonder if inertia sets in and they can't seem to make a change.

Thank you for writing that. I just wish I knew what field to go into from here and how to afford that. I so admire nurses who can do it and be happy with their career; it's not for me however.

Well Sweetgeorgia, I sincerely hope teaching will be better for you than it was for me. I'm quitting teaching after 5 years to go into an ABSN program. I also had 12 hours days, only I worked them 5 days a week (parent meetings, planning, creating materials to teach with since the district is too cheap to provide me with textbooks for every subject).

I felt my fellow teachers were great. There was no backstabbing, but that's because there's no career ladder to climb. That's a problem, too. With nowhere to go, I felt teaching was a dead-end job. No way to make extra money by picking up extra shifts (tutoring only exists for wealthy schools), no more pay for experience (now teachers are paid by kid's test scores), and my salary was cut for 4 years in a row: so I left in my 5th year. I made $40,000 one year, and upper $30's for the other 4 years, which I felt was NOT enough.

Also, the principal will do whatever s/he wants with you. I had to teach 5 different things in 5 years (K, 1st, 5th, special ed and kids who won't speak English). That's almost like expecting a nurse to move from PACU to LTC to Med-Surg to something and then something else. It was constant re-learning and never feeling like I know what I'm doing. Plus, you can't plan any vacations. You can only travel when school is out, at a time when the rest of the world is trying to travel, in the summer when it's hot as heck, or Christmas when it's freezing (this is a big deal to me since I love to travel). That's why the tourism industry gets involved with school calendars, then want toe have peek travel times so teachers and families pay top-dollar to go anywhere.

I know nursing won't be perfect, but 3 days a week of BS sounds better then 5 days of it! I also feel like in nursing I will actually help someone. In teaching I felt like I was producing little test-takers.

I've been a LPN for the past 30 years. Fast forward to now, going into the last year of a LPN-RN bridge. Watching ( on my clinical rotations)some of the things I've seen nurses have to put up with in the acute care area and the care or lack of care provided to patients because they are so tied to technology and profit margins is scary. For the past 17 years been working in LTC, a small non-profit org ran by a wonderful religious order and yes when I obtain my RN I'm staying right here. I love nursing, I love nursing, but when young people ask my opinion about entering the profession of nursing I steer them in another direction. The RN programs prepare you with all the technical and critical thinking skills you will need, but they don't prepare you for the harsh reality of the REAL WORLD OF NURSING! Many students in my class are young and not emotionally ready for what's waiting out there lurking around the corner, they are all ready complaining about all the 'Busy Work" the instructors have us doing, I just smile to my self and think "They have no idea of the purpose of the "Busy Work."

You sound like you an intelligent, caring hardworking and responsible woman the kind of person that is needed in the profession. So sorry to see you go!

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

I'm glad you found a niche you are happy in, sweetgeorgia. I'm not sure if the solution for everyone is to leave the field altogether. I do completely understand that some people have stayed in the trenches and tried to change the profession from within for many years and burned themselves out.

Your post makes me happy for you and sad for the profession I've seen head downward in esteem, pay and benefits in the last 36 years since I was first licensed. Up until about 5 years ago I was still on the "nursing been very very good to me" bandwagon. I pretty much wrote my own ticket for the first 20 years. When I returned from mommyhood due to severe financial and personal straits, I was able to work in private duty, which turned out to be ideal for me at that time. Now management has shown their true colors in too many cases as a result of the seller's market in Nursing Jobs.

I'd just say to new people, the first year will be stressful most of the time. But don't ruin your health and your family life trying to hang on by the skin of your teeth to please people who are exploiting you. Not worth it.

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