Ah, very old topic, and one likely to end in rancor as those who feel nursing is a "calling" clash mightily with those who feel it's a "job".
But ok, I'm in
I chose to go into nursing because it combined my need to be a do-gooder with my need to be a financial contributor to my household. I felt no "calling"; I'm not a missionary. I researched this option as I looked for "something else", and it fit.
I wanted to find a new career as my children entered school, one that could work around their schedules and needs. But I wanted a career, not a job--most any low-paying job could also be worked around the kids' plans--but wouldn't pay what I desired nor give them the type of role-model I wished for them.
I'm in nursing (as a job --> income) specifically because the combination of decent pay and perks and flexible scheduling is most compatible with my family goals. I'm in nursing (as a career --> personal reward) as a way to make a positive difference in my community in some small way, and give my children something positive to know about me. My children watched me go through rigorous, years-long schooling and are proud of what I do, I imagine moreso than if I worked at the Dairy Queen. Academics are stressed alot around here
I would never be a nurse without the appropriate financial reward; there's just too much responsibility involved to take less. But I would always be doing (as I have always done) community service, so being a nurse is a good fit for me.
I have a better question for this thread: why do so many people feel that a person must either be a saint taking a vow of poverty who feels a "higher calling" toward nursing
OR a money-grubber who callously puts up with patients and rides out each shift only for the paycheck? Why do we feel the need to polarize the "reasons" one is a nurse? I don't see too many other careers doing this....probably yet another example of the in-fighting that makes it so hard for nurses as a whole to gain the incredible political power we COULD have.