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! :)

Specializes in Occupational Health.

RN from South Carolina : OMG, you sound "burned out".......... I think a lot of nurses can relate to the overwhelming tasks that greet us on a daily basis. Most of us gave up years of our lives to get through nursing school, and once finished we realize we lost friends and family along the way, and sometimes ourselves! You may be depressed and suffering from sleep deprivation. Nurses are terrible patients and usually have to be told to GO TO THE DOCTOR! But consider getting something to help you sleep, and maybe for depression... then force yourself to socialize and meet new people ( I had to do the same... join a Meet-up group etc) since your'e away from family, isolation is not healthy. Then try to get on a shift that works better for you. Sorry to sound like I'm "giving advise", but know that you're not the only one going through this, and we're here to support you! What state are you in? Peace and hugs from SC .

Specializes in Managed Care, Onc/Neph, Home Health.

Well of course I am on a thread of people that are not satisfied with the profession, so whatever I say dosen't really matter. But I mean, yes she went thru all the procedures to get in, but all that school, and she didn't realize how it was going to be once she hit the floor??? But that just go to show you, many people enter the profession for the wrong reasons, and do just that, waste a slot of somebody that really are sincere about their career path, and want to be a nurse, is all i'm saying. Maybe mockery isn't the right word.

I don't think the original poster is taking it lightly. I think having worked in another place other than nursing, when she finally did get into the working world of nursing, she knew there is something seriously wrong with the "nursing work environment of today" I think she realized that this is not the climate in other work places. Here is an environment, a profession, supposedly based on health and it is one of the most sickest, mental ill, abusive, unhealthy environments one can "engage" in next to the drug houdlems on the streets. Thans to the abandonment of nursing and medical ethics and adoption of the almighty, but severly inappropriate "Business model" just because it rings in profits for the chosen few. Comparing the working environment of nursing today to the work environment of 10-15 years ago and older, it is unreal today. It bares no resemblance to a nursing profession. This has nothing to do with EBP, and technology, this has to do with ideology which should not have changed. It is totally uncalled for and yet Nursing allowed and continues to allow it to go on. Nursing administration side with the money mongers in administration spouting of the "business model" montra. There is no healthcare institution loosing money today. There are more profits now a days than ever, even with the CMS cuts. Patients are sicker then they have ever been, common sense would tell a licensed 'competent' nurse- you need more staff to 'competently' take care of them, if you don't something bad is going to happen, either a mistake, an ommission, or a death or some one being discharged becase there was not ample time to focus on the chronicity of the problem. But hey, they come back, there's more money brought into the hospital, They die, well dead men can't talk, some mistake happens- blame the nurse at the bedside. Business has all the angles covered to keep their hands clean and the nurse in a holding pattern in the wings for when the axe falls. Very visable and running around like a prized fool trying not to let all the balls drop.

I don't blame her/him for getting out after 3 months. If I can find a job without any ties to nursing where I can be some what more stable and relaxed at and pay my bills every month- I am outta here too! Kudoes to her/him for not investing anymore time into it and wasting their life and risking their own health and happiness doing it, just for the shallow sence of"helping mankind" there is no "helping mankinds" now adays. The slogan is "Greed is Good"

It's not burned out- It's disillusioned and not going to drink the kool-aid

Another parting prose: I went on a job interview yesterday for LTC- I'm not really a long term care nurse. The DON who was as hostile as an angry pitbull with diamonds dripping for her earrings and around her neck, asks me about my ACLS!!! wants to know if I paid for it myself!!! and where I obtained it- What??!!! it's completely beside the point and off the wall- who cares and what does it matter "did you get it on your own" (No, it came in the mail because I'm old.!!!)This is the kind of insanity the orginal poster is runnig out on. I don't blame them.

Specializes in telemetry.

I do not know WHAT to do----I thought my "sentence" of 5 years of not working was over---oh no, I had to wait 16 months to even be heard at a meeting, then, I get this stayed revocation consent agreement. I feel like it is a total set up for failure a total set up. Now what? I do not know. Plus most places will not hire you with this on your back. Pls say a little prayer for me. I know so many have it worse. I jst want to take care of myself and get some self esteem back.

To kcmylorn - I agree that there's something wrong with the "nursing environment of today." A lot of it has to do with the way we treat one another. Tech's won't do the duties they're asked to do, nurses are mean to one another and staff love to run to the boss with complaints about each other - and I haven't even touched on the long hours, the lack of breaks and the expectation from the families! I had worked in other careers before nursing and had never been in such a difficult workplace until I entered nursing.

Why quit nursing altogether and not just find another nursing job?

Why quit nursing altogether and not just find another nursing job?

Well because she/he didn't like it and had other options. Which I'm glad they posted about so people who are in her/his situation will realize there are other things you can do besides be a nurse.

Specializes in Clinical Research, Outpt Women's Health.

I worked in hospitals for a decade before I became a nurse.

After I became one I realized acute care was not my thing.

And I did go into the field for the "right reasons" - a desire to help, a desire to make a decent living, and a desire not to throw away my previous decades experience.

Good for you OP.

Specializes in emergency, psy, case management.

I also have now left Nursing after 35 yrs.

The line in the sand , for me, was the mandatory flu shot thingy. Enough was enough.

I do think that many RN's have too many co-dependent traits to really stand up for themselves. They will give up their lives for their patients, but they will not take up for themselves. Acute care hospitals recognize this and at times even rely on it.

I am through beating my head agaisnt a brick wall.

Specializes in Managed Care, Onc/Neph, Home Health.

I guess just reading all of this from many posters is just hard for me to grasp, being schooled in 1982, and the pride of being a nurse that came along with that. I must say, I haven't worked in the clinical setting in past 8 yrs, and maybe during that time, things has went south that bad, that has caused such a negative image. My thing is, if people in nursing school, see what go on DURING CLINICAL ROTATION, (you have many) get a clue and GET OUT THEN, it will get no better when you graduate, then there won't be all this ranting about how you hate your job. You will get some idea of how it is from giddy go. Why continue to put yourself through all that studying...thats what I don't get. Nursing school is a Booger!

To RN In FL,

I entered the profession with a clear heart and genuine love for taking care of people. To THIS DAY, I still take care of my family with the same love and care that I gave so many strangers during those three months and two years of unpaid service to people in nursing school. Being a student, even during clinical, did not adequately prepare me for the liability and legal consequences that are beyond unjust. As a student, I took the time to absorb as much of the real duties of the job as I was allowed. I enjoyed sitting down with people and listening to their stories. The heart of nursing was still there as a student. As a real nurse, none of that care and time mattered anymore.

My respect level for nurses in general, after seeing the neglect and abuse, among a myriad of other things (some so subtle and small). One human being should never treated by another human being with a looming power over them just because the other person is as a nurse. No one should be subjected to nurses like that and no one should have to work for them either. I left because I BELIEVE in better for people. I left because I CARE.

And yes, I finished school and fought through it like we ALL did because I wanted to finish what I started, and not give up on my dream, a dream I had since I was four years old. I think if you took a step in my shoes and did what I did and saw what I saw, you would have a completely different opinion. You are entitled to your independent thoughts like we all are but it sounds like you have some other issues going on, like you are jealous of people who work hard to make good grades and an honest living.

And thank you for those who are trying to explain. I put my story out there so that I could share my experience. I didn't put it out there to bash nursing, blame it for everything. My whole point was and still is, you have a personal choice as to what kind of nurse you will be, if one at all. There is no shame in realizing, no matter how late or how soon it is, that there are other professions, other types of nursing, and other places to work. It is a matter of self respect and self preservation.

Thank you.

Specializes in ICU / PCU / Telemetry / Oncology.
It sounds too me like your problem wasn't nursing, but your working conditions. Working 14-15 hours for a 12 hour shift is tough! You didn't get paid much for a new grad. Also, there are some people who just can't do nights.

This was my exact thought, so I just decided to quote it. $21.45/hr? That's ridiculous. New grad RNs make almost or exactly double that per hour in some of the major metro areas.

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