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! :)

I have also heard that med-surg will wear you out your second day of being a nurse in a hospital.Especially as a new grad. I have heard from my sister(who just gradute as a nurse) that it is best to start at something not so fast pace.Give yourself time to get use to the patients and hospital being a new grad.It is hard being a new grad since you are still adjusting to the atmosphere or people. I agree with everyone on here and virtual since he mentioned it might just be the location.Some states treat you much better than others at hospitals.One thing about nursing it that there are many fields to change to,to adjust with each of our interest.Nursing is not for everyone as someone mentioned above.As I once was told by a physician "you have to have gorilla skin in order to survive nursing school and as a nurse."I will always remeber this. Good luck everyone you can get through this and if your stressed out to the point it affects your health get out.Relax,breath,mediate,exhale,and think about another route(only if you have tried many options such as transferring levels,locations,etc.)

Specializes in PCCN.
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

omg- this is exactly what ive been thinking lately- what am I soo ANGRY!!! I couldn't pinpoint it. I am short with everyone not related to work. Since i am expected tp provide excellent customer service- Ii danm well expect the same in return!!!!I spend my days off sleeping.wow- what a wonderful life!! I feel like a waste too- but oh no- i have to be the one with the income and provide insurance. ughhh. I just couldnt correlate the anger part.

I agree with what some others have said - it may have very well been the place where you worked at and the specialty. However, if you feel much better at your new job and felt that nursing really was not the place for you, then you made the right decision.

Just curious - what would people say are the roughest specialties for a nurse, particularly a new grad? Surely all specialties can't make a zombie apocolypse seem appealing...

Specializes in cicu,pccu.
omg- this is exactly what ive been thinking lately- what am I soo ANGRY!!! I couldn't pinpoint it. I am short with everyone not related to work. Since i am expected tp provide excellent customer service- Ii danm well expect the same in return!!!!I spend my days off sleeping.wow- what a wonderful life!! I feel like a waste too- but oh no- i have to be the one with the income and provide insurance. ughhh. I just couldnt correlate the anger part.

It be like that sometimes..That's when you ask yourself is this place really for me and if it isn't then you should look for employement somewhere else. I was in that same situation i worked in an icu for 5yrs thats where i first started right out of school. Yeah it was difficult but i adapted to my situation and i enjoyed working with the people there. When we switched nurse managers it was hell from then on. I eventually transfered to the micu instead yeah it was tougher but the management was way better. So I say if you don't like it leave. I did and couldn't be happier. I work less hours now part time at that icu job and i work somewhere else that's a stepdown unit. I make m schedule however I want to where it's flexible for what I like to do. So find somewhere where you can just work prn and work somewhere else full time or partime, i'm part time with full time benefits so it's all good. I think it's bedside nursing in general it's for the pits thats why i'm back in school to get my fnp so i can say bye bye to bedside nursing.

Specializes in Med Surg, PCU, Travel.

Sounds like a bad first year of marriage, but I don't know if after studying for 4 years and being in the field 3 months is enough to make a proper career decision after putting so much into it. Then again what do I know, I'm just getting started.

Well for me changing career right now, having an electrical/electronic back ground, there was some jobs I worked 2 weeks, some a month, some a few years, in any case I did not like all areas of electrical work but I gave it my best shot, I believe it will be the same with nursing.

I would suggest to new students like myself to be realistic, make the most out of your clinicals to really determine if this is the career for you, pick your preceptors brains, even if they think its annoying. If you are uncertain, don't jump into school, spend some months volunteering or get a few days to shadow a nurse so you can know what the "real world" of nursing is like. I know there are some areas I wont be interested in at all but I would have to "tough it out" like med-surg and like every job there is always some sort of "manager" who knows nothing about the career, just has a paper degree, but makes more than everyone else and expects you to be superman, or superwoman as the case might be. As for patients and family, some will want to fight you some will want to hug you, you will get bad surveys and good surveys, in any case no one day will be the same.

You were fortunate to get out. Some stay cause of $, stuck in the routine, age, change is scarry. If wow if I hit the lotto or come into a large amount of money with health insurance...geeez I'd be out of this feild. Lucky you and that's for me. Good luck !

I respect your decision in quitting nursing. Maybe it was not really a profession for you.

Sweetgeorgia,

I am in the same position as you. I graduated in 2008 with a Bachelors in Psychology,which is still completely useless. So I went into nursing. I did very well, got A's, got my ADN, I did have a strong interest in it. I hated clinicals though, most of my instructors were mean and purposely undermined a lot of people's confidence. I recently moved from CT to FL because it is almost impossible for new grads to get a RN job in CT right now. In FL I got a job for 19.68 an hour! It was like a punch in the gut to get offered this because starting salary in CT is around 29-30 an hour. I took the job because I needed to get my foot in the door and I want to get that first year under my belt so I wont be considered a "new grad" nurse and have a bunch of doors slammed in my face. Anyhow,right now I am in my 8th week of orientation and I absolutely hate it. At first I thought I hated nursing, but Ive thought about it and I hate my coworkers. Most of them are very unwilling to help. My preceptor disappears all day, I cant call her to help, I ask her to help she tells me I need to prioritize and then she busies herself with helping everyone else. I feel like no attention is paid to me and I dont know if Im doing anything right or wrong, great,just what I need , to lose my license for not knowing what Im doing. Then this issue kept coming up of me being "short" with the nurse aides and not saying please or thank you. I shook it off as ridiculous because I am too nice to everyone! I can maybe understand being short with people because I am running around like a chicken with my head cut off. At my 3rd week of orientation, she gave me a 6 patient load and I had to assess 2 other patients under LPNs. I recently found out that another orientee was started off with 2 pts one week, 3 the next, 4 the next etc. My orientation did not allow that gradual increase! I am so angry right now about it because I was overwhelmed with 6, being told I was not helpful enough to the nurse aides, and now I feel like I was set up for failure from the start. So my preceptor's big solution was to have me follow a nurse aide for the day to see their routine and to have a better understanding of what they go through. I was ok with this, and this was supposed to happen Friday but I walked in yesterday and I was assigned with a nurse aide. It caught me off guard but I went with the flow. This nurse aide took a 25 minute breakfast break at 9 am, took an hour and 10 minute lunch break, and I caught her talking on her cell 5 times in the linen closet. Everytime I asked her for help she was on the computer, and she never ever got up to do what I asked her to do, I ended up doing everything myself. While she was late for her lunch break, a sitter in a room needed to use the restroom and take her lunch while I was taking vitals on everyone. She stops me and says "I need to go to lunch" I said "well im taking vitals now , the other tech was supposed to be back 40 minutes ago to relieve you." She says very rudely " oh no, vitals can wait I need my lunch break". I said " what do you want me to do?" Somedays I dont eat my lunch until 5pm or at all on a 12 hour shift. The entire day also, I had my preceptor delegating to me as well as her bestfriend on the unit. The entire day, I felt like she was being everything to me that she had been complaining about to me. She was rude, short, did not say please or thank you. When I told her I was busy doing something she left the task for me to do later in the day. She never helped me, she didnt ask if I needed help. I felt like she was teaching me a lesson. I didnt let it bother me. At the end of the night I talked with her about me taking 4 pts and her taking 2 on Friday so that I can incorporate delegating and helping the nurse aides, and she says " Im not here Friday, and the director does not want me precepting you anymore, not because I dont want to , but she wants you to see other nurses techniques" I had talked to the director about her, I had said that she disappears, she doesnt answer her phone or doesnt even have one, that she looks at me like I have 3 heads when I ask her a question. And the director asked me if I still wanted to continue my orientation and continue it with my preceptor. They thought I was going to leave. The director also told me they spent $30,000 training me...almost making me feel guilty if I was thinking about leaving. So I dont know exactly what she talked to my preceptor about, but it must have made her angry ebough to decide not to have me follow her yesterday but instead play a big game with me, and I feel that her friend and the aide were in on it too. I told her about the aide taking extra long breaks and not helping, and how the other aide wanted to stop me from getting my vital signs done on time so she could take a break and was rude, and she seemed totally unphased by it. She said" That's their routine". She didnt sympathize, her facial expression was completely flat. So all in all I feel that I was taken advantage of the entire day and taught a lesson that I didnt need to be taught because I was not ever mean to anyone! And I feel that I was bullied and that is the last straw. Luckily, I already have another job lined up in a few weeks and I was only there to get paid and waiting to hand in a letter of resignation. I was told that this hospital has a reputation of the nurses "eating their young" but my preceptor is 3 yrs younger than me and has been a nurse 1 year. I cannot wait to be done with them.

I'm glad you found your niche. People can try to convince you to stay with nursing. They'll say oh it was the hospital you worked at or your coworkers etc. It is perfectly ok to not like nursing. I don't like it and I'm changing careers. I'm glad you are posting this. So people who truly hate nursing will know that it is ok to change careers.

I am happy to hear that you have discerned what you really want early as possible. I can relate to your situation, I have been a good student; I even got a nursing scholarship for I performed well in class and in my licensure exam as well, but I think, I can't work in the hospital setting because of the too much stress! I just talked to my friend yesterday and she's telling me that she almost drags herself to work, and that's the common complaint of all the nurses I know. Your story really enlightened me, thank you so much! maybe there's something else in store for me other than nursing when it comes to career!

I wish I could find a permanent postion that was out of nursing and be done with nursing forever- let all the some one else's who have no fromal education in nursing do it. The CEO's, the HR trash, the secretaries, the project managers, these bird brains in these nursing agenies any Joe blow off the street- just think of how low the CEO can drive those wages. And that's after 30 years! It doesn't matter how much experience you have. These places will always come up with a reason not to hire. I am tired of the sputs of unemployment.

Others may tell you to stick it out, things will get better with experience, try another area of nursing, "find your niche"--nonsense. This is what has become of the nursing "profession". This is what life is like for so many of us. I'm envious that you have a way out of this hell! Best of luck and let us know how you are doing.

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