In at 6:30, out at 9:00 and not a drop of food. I love this job!

Nurses General Nursing

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Ok, ok, yes, I know I need to fight for my lunch but yesterday was sooo crazy. I'm a new grad and got two patients that were supposed to be split. Had to leave the floor with one for over an hour for STAT tests, etc. Didn't know about the supposed split till later but oh well that is how the cookie crumbles, right?.

"One of those days" the other nurses say.......Problem is, this is nearly everyday. Maybe not staying late but fighting and clawing for your lunch, struggling to dart into the potty to pee, feeling your tongue stick to the top of your mouth cuz you can't remember when you had a sip of your water last. Running like a madwoman with people/family/pagers/doctors/patients in your face CONSTANTLY. I honest to God cannot keep a straight thought. I think to myself, "how in the hell do people do this job and LIKE it?". Sure, I like to keep busy. I like to work hard. But 14.5 hours of frantic "I'm-running-from-a-fire" pace? This is for the birds!!!! I used to enjoy taking care of myself, working out and eating right. Now I don't even give a sh*t anymore and am too freaking exhausted on my days off (or migrainous from the stress or lack of food) to do much of anything at all. I'm giving everything of myself, 120%, but in the end is not enough. This job is sucking the life out of me after only 9 months. How will I ever get to 5, 10, 20 years? I feel like I run, run, run, have all I can do to keep up with latest labs and test results let alone talk to patients/families, and pretty much just BARELY keep my patients alive. The end of the shift will come sometimes before I even realize my patient has a pacer! I mean, my gosh!! I miss the cash register job I used to have where someone actually gave a crap if I got two 15 min breaks or a lunch!!!

And the most depressing part: I'm a caring nurse, but I just can't keep up. I'm in elite shape and I JUST.CAN'T. KEEP. UP.:no: It's not getting better either. I understand the flow better but time management wise? Not. I see the writing on the wall because the other, more experienced nurses are running too (maybe not quite as much). There are just too many tasks and too little time. So much charting. The acuity of these patients is not going down and were supposed to do more with less. How will how I am feeling ever change? Is this really just being a new grad or nursing at the bedside? No wonder people want OUT or burn out. I honestly just don't see any light at the end of the tunnel. I think when experienced nurses say "it gets better" it really doesn't. What gets better is your ability to keep putting up with the sh*t. Kind of like conditioning, learned helplessness. You figure out you can't change it so you just roll with it. How long before it kills you though?

So frustrated. :(

Specializes in Family Medicine.

I'd like to tell you it gets better but it sounds like the experienced nurses are also running around like chickens sans heads.

Get your experience and get out. Have another job lined up before doing so.

I work on a unit like this. Been working on this unit for 3.5 years. Will be leaving ASAP and never look back.

Specializes in Family Medicine.

Oh, and don't forget to punch, "NO LUNCH!"

Specializes in cardiac/education.

Thank you for all the replies. I agree that I need to be more proactive in getting that rest/lunch period regardless of how busy my day is. Just sometimes I feel like I am running on pure adrenaline and I honestly don't even think about food until after 3pm, LOL. You know how it is. I think I might have even had a protein bar in my lunch box but did not even think of it! I payed the price with a migraine today. :( Also, I need to find a better way of reorganizing myself when I have a gazillion interruptions and things go bad. Seems like sh*t rolls downhill then, LOL. ......and figure out how to punch "NO LUNCH". That is, until management gets on me for it wanting to know what it was about my day that made me stay late....:sneaky: oy vey. I'd love to be able to follow an experienced nurse around for a shift now that I know the flow of things to see how they manage their time. Maybe I am doing something wrong.

Specializes in orthopedic/trauma, Informatics, diabetes.

Sometimes, you just literally have to stop and say, I need something to eat. or drink. or pee. If I have to give a med 15 min because I need a break. I do it. You can also tell your charge nurse that you have not gotten to sit down and could he/she give pt. A their 1200 meds, please? I have made statements about the No Lunch clocking and that gets their attention pretty quick. I love when the 8 hour aide takes a 30 min breakfast and a 30 min lunch break while I do her job and mine. That gets old REAL fast.

You will get better at time management, but DO stand up for your needs or you will not last long at all

Have you thought about passing out around 2:00 ?

You have detailed the day of a nurse in a for profit , corporate owned facility.

You will not be able to change it. Spend your time off looking for better employment.

Good luck, let us know when that day comes!

Truer words were never spoken!

I realized I had to get out when I was envious of my sick pts, because I felt they didn't have nearly as much stress as I did!

I've been an extremely ill hospital pt, and a nurse- being the pt was waaay easier.

You have your head on straight, so don't let the "it gets better after a year" crowd drown out your inner voice of reason.

Yes, it really is that bad, and no, it's not going to get better, fluffy-pants-unicorn-crowd be damned.

Cheers, and welcome to batsh&t crazy.

:) :) :)

My days are not unlike yours and I'm not a new nurse. That being said I know exactly why my days are like this: because I'm always at the bedside. Taking my time to educate patients on a new diagnosis, explaining new meds, making sure they fully understand is why I'm always chasing my tail. At the end of the day though, I feel like I did my job the right way and I'm okay with it.

Specializes in cardiac/education.

I just don't know. Out again last night at 8:30 with lunch at 4....barely staved off that migraine! HeartRN.....your comment about the bedside is so true. I'm always in rooms. I just don't find this fulfilling me though. I'm so exhausted already. Every day is a marathon, a race to the finish and I always seem to be the last to leave the floor, finish charting, etc. Nine months in I really feel this should be better by now. Really, really, REALLY wondering if bedside is not for me. Not that I am not a good nurse, just that my mind really is not organized enough in some way to succeed at bedside. I mean, really, it's one thing to have crazy rush days every now and again but when every day is like that......how to get through? I have two little ones at home and workout....I'm just burning the candle at every end. And I wish I could say I felt like I was doing my life's work. But I don't. And I kinda feel guilty about that. I like helping people, that part I like. But I don't think I can give up everything of myself in the process. I really feel like it's me or them (the patients). Every single day at work I think about how this job is NOT worth twenty something an hour and wish I could speak a second language. Then I could make nearly twenty as an interpreter!!!!! The dietary aide, HUC, transporters...their pay doesn't look so bad now. I look at them and think about how calm they look and wish I was them, LOL

I have brain sheets.....I have a flow.......blah, blah.....but none of this is helping much.....WHY????

Specializes in L & D; Postpartum.

Aside from all the good advice offered, I would say your charge nurse or supervisor needs to be involved.....going that long without a meal break (and probably potty breaks, too) is unacceptable.

Specializes in Anesthesia, ICU, PCU.

Yeah I've lived this story (pretty sure everyone here has) plenty of times in the 13 months that I've been working. There are good days and bad, even the good are busy at the bedside. I've brought up my struggles on the job/not feeling like I'm doing a good enough job to two managers before, I was offered brain sheets and reassurance that I'm doing a fine job and time management will come with experience. Not to say my managers aren't supportive (because they're great), but there is only so much that can be done from their perspective.

For this 6-week schedule I had requested one PTO day per week, to lighten my workload and give myself a break for a little while. The stress and frustration of my workload has taken a toll on me emotionally (let's be honest I'm depressed), and I have plenty of PTO, so why not? Of the 6 days requested, 1 got approved. The week of vacation I'm allowed was only available at crap time so no summer for me (joys of being low man on the totem pole). One might ask: why is "paid time off" considered a benefit of my employment if I can't use it? I'm thinking this may be a side effect of working in a large, corporate hospital also.

The reality is that this job is hard and that requires either a big psychological adaptation or a change in workplace. Staffing is also unique to nursing because we work 24 hours out of every day out of the year, so that places additional strain on employers in such a profession. 1 in 5 new nurses leave the profession in the first year of practice. Nursing, as a career, also has one of the highest turnover rates in the country. None of this is really made clear in nursing school because these are professional issues not academic ones. Maybe you'll jump around from hospital job to hospital to hospital job or specialty to specialty looking for that one that's just right, or maybe you'll find a new career. Seeing the number of nurses who struggled for 10 years in 8 different jobs to find one that they can tolerate, I believe I'm going to err for the latter and get a new career altogether.

Specializes in cardiac/education.

TU RN,

I know what you mean. I've already blown through my PTO for reasons like you describe.....just needing an emotional and physical break. But it is too early to feel this way! Jeez, I thought it would take me a few years at least before I was "burnt out". Guess not. And yes, let's be honest, I am depressed too, a condition which has been medication resistant for me. Oh well. I have chronic issues that are definitly not made better by this situational stress. Just trying to see a light, er, a glimmer, at the end of the tunnel. And in the meantime, contemplate my escape route. I don't think another hospital job is the answer, aren't they all the same, really? I don't really seem to have a high pt load or weird ratios but I still suck!! LOL. In the end that is all that matters.....:(

LOL ~ I love when my upper lip sticks to my upper front teeth because my mouth is dry, then I have to walk around looking like I have tardive dyskinesia as I do tongue thrusts to generate some saliva!

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