Why I'm Leaving the Nursing field and Nursing School

Nurses General Nursing

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Hello there! I'm not looking for validation or approval, just wanted to get this off my chest and perhaps reach out there to fellow peers who might relate. I'm 35, have a BA degree in English, and made a career change to nursing 5 yrs ago b/c I love working with people & wanted to have a stable job. I've been a lpn for 5 years now and going through school and had this gnawing feeling that nursing wasn't right for me & expressed it to people around me, but was always told (by people who are not nurses), "Nursing is such a rewarding career, you'll make great $$ once you get your rn & you'll always have a job! Don't quit, you can make it through." I didn't quit, made it through lpn school, and have been very dissatisfied with my career choice.

My 1st job I worked in a 48 bed hell hole, lost sleep became depressed, suffered through chronic panic attacks, and cried before, during, and after every shift. I cared about these patients, but there was just too many of them to really make a difference and help them, let alone give care safely - I was a med robot. I quit, landed a job in a Dr's office which was much better, but the pay was horrible. It's also a dead end job, so I got through my prereqs and quit that job to enter a lvn-rn adn bridge program.

I get good grades, my instructors say I'm doing great in clinicals. I care about patient safety. I decided to leave nursing school in my 3rd semester adn program. I feel so relieved and at the same time sad. Relieved b/c I feel that I can no longer ignore that gut feeling I have telling me to run the other way from this field. Sad because I've invested years working and taking classes to get me to this point only to find that I really don't want anything to do with becoming a rn and I refuse to waste anymore time trying to convince myself that when I start working it'll get better, or to adjust my attitude. I've been bottling up my anxiety, crying before and after clinicals and class, tired of the sleepless nights full of dread of returning to the hospital, pretending to keep it together at clinicals isn't working for me anymore.

The hard work, blood, guts, poop doesn't bother me. It's the stress levels, the belittling from nursing instructors, the fact that rns will take the fall for any mistakes, the rns from the hospitals at clinicals telling me that I'm crazy, to want to become a rn, the hostile environment nurses must work in, the lack of jobs for new nurses who can't even get their 1st job! There is a reason nurses get paid well - it has to do with the amount of abuse and BS they must put up with.

At this time I'm looking for a career change. Into what, I'm not sure yet. I'll probably do lpn homecare until I can transition into something else if I don't find a job right away. Perhaps a lab assistant, pharmaceutical sales, or even working in the fashion industry, which I regret ever leaving in the first place. I'm ready to find work that makes me happy, or less miserable at the least.

Thanks for reading :)

Specializes in ICU, CM, Geriatrics, Management.
... the mental and physical stress of hospital nursing....

Mental and physical stressors for nurses don't only reside in hospitals.

Specializes in ICU, CM, Geriatrics, Management.
It all boils down to why you became a nurse in the 1st place...

I suggest volunteering before even entering a program...

With respect, disagree with first quote, and totally agree with the second.

Nursing in concept, scholastically, and in theory is absolutely marvelous, IMO. But nursing in practice, in the trenches, and in many work settings sucks big-time. (Won't go into all the details here.)

Have always believed in volunteering before taking the Nestea plunge into this sometimes totally crazy world. (That's what I did before applying to school. But ya know what, I didn't "see" then all the zaniness that we've all witnessed on-the-job. I saw nurses working together for the common purpose of helping another human through a medical crisis. It was cool! What's happened to that scenario over time? How do we get it back? Can we return things to how they were?)

Work is not about doing what I love. I work so I can live, work is my paycheck and I disconnect from it when I leave the job. Find other things you enjoy in life outside of work. I go to work, do the best I can at my given job, get paid. If you are happy outside of work, you will be happy. Don't make work, any work, your life and our happiness. If you can't find personal happiness, you will never find professional happiness. Kid yourself in thinking otherwise but it won't happen.

I have found through the years if you take a positive attitude with you to work, you perpetuate positive vibes through everyone on the job. If your negative, the opposite happens. This works anywhere. The people that are just negative to the none will always be there and they fall away to the side.

I also wanted to add that I love my job and always have. I'm happy digging a ditch though, as long as I'm getting paid. I am also happy personally(internally with myself) too though

Thanks for your reply, I appreciate your input. It's great that you love your job and that you have the ability to disconnect from the work you do. It's essential to succeed in nursing. The outlook of "work is work & is a paycheck" is just one outlook & it's great if it works for you, just not how I choose to see things. I understand there will be times where one must take any kind of job for a paycheck, I've been there too. In my situation, I have other job options immediately available to me that are not in nursing, will still pay my bills, and I won't be miserable...so why not? I have friends who, on most days, really enjoy what they do for work. I know it exists & one day I'll get there too.

You stated that I might not be happy in my personal life and that may be why I haven't found happiness in my career. Wow you couldn't be more wrong! I live a charmed life & am ever so grateful with everything I have: a wonderful & happy home life with my husband & children, a tight knit group of friends, good health, hobbies I enjoy, a positive outlook. You might've been lead to believe that I'm probably one of the negative ones at work who drag others down, also not the case! If I'm going to be spending time away from my family to earn a living, it might be as well be for work that I enjoy & where I'll experience more good days than bad. I had hoped to find this in the nursing jobs I've held. Didn't find it, gave it my all, now I'm moving on!

Quoting the poster who quoted me....

Lol @ abused... I am a "new" RN but served as a proud LPN for over 8 years in LTC and you think you are abused? I took the abuse and the $12/hr with pride and worked my way to my dream status of RN. So you left and now you are happy right? Such as my post suggested? That is great. I did not say to stay where you are unhappy. I said I do not understand unhappy people who stay in unhappy situations. Grumpiness is not an attractive trait. I personally can find happiness in what some "spoiled" and "lookingforanythingtobitchabout" nurses consider abuse.

Quoting the poster who quoted me....

Lol @ abused... I am a "new" RN but served as a proud LPN for over 8 years in LTC and you think you are abused? I took the abuse and the $12/hr with pride and worked my way to my dream status of RN. So you left and now you are happy right? Such as my post suggested? That is great. I did not say to stay where you are unhappy. I said I do not understand unhappy people who stay in unhappy situations. Grumpiness is not an attractive trait. I personally can find happiness in what some "spoiled" and "lookingforanythingtobitchabout" nurses consider abuse.

So, what do you consider abuse?

I've been punched, kicked, spat at, verbally assaulted, and nipped.

Being vomited or pooped on is a walk in the park after you've wound up in Emerg because of a patient.

Specializes in Pediatrics, High-Risk L&D, Antepartum, L.
Quoting the poster who quoted me....

Lol @ abused... I am a "new" RN but served as a proud LPN for over 8 years in LTC and you think you are abused? I took the abuse and the $12/hr with pride and worked my way to my dream status of RN. So you left and now you are happy right? Such as my post suggested? That is great. I did not say to stay where you are unhappy. I said I do not understand unhappy people who stay in unhappy situations. Grumpiness is not an attractive trait. I personally can find happiness in what some "spoiled" and "lookingforanythingtobitchabout" nurses consider abuse.

I'm talking about the abuse get from our employer and other employees...lack of pay, poor schedule, horrible benefits and so on all while trying to protect your license.

It is the abuse nurses receive that is a major issue. And I'm not taking about abusive patients!

So my point is that for many they became an RN unaware of the realities many of us fact. So if people come to hate being a nurse...it is understandable.

And yes I'm leaving my RN floor nurse behind for an APRN future because I deserve better than what I can get as a floor nurse. I deserve more money, respect, a reasonable schedule, some hope of decent benefits, vacation time....I expect issues as an APRN but they are likely to be far less with more compensation than as an RN.

Specializes in Pediatrics, High-Risk L&D, Antepartum, L.

So, what do you consider abuse?

I've been punched, kicked, spat at, verbally assaulted, and nipped.

Being vomited or pooped on is a walk in the park after you've wound up in Emerg because of a patient.

The bigger issue is the abuse from employers...inadequate staffing, poor wages, horrible health benefits, poor scheduling and more.

Specializes in ICU, OR.

Good luck in your future! I totally understand and know a lot of people who have left the field also.

Are there any agencies or websites that advocate FOR nurses? I have questions I cannot find answers to.

Thanks.

I think we all are advocates for nursing. Good, bad or indifferent. What I can't see advocating for is for anyone to be in a position that they don't have choices in nursing, or not in nursing, and are miserable.

One thing being a nurse has taught me--life can change in an instant. And is far too short to be unhappy in your choices.

Within the TOS, anyone of us are often willing to answer questions. Seeing as AN has 700K+ members, that has got to be many, many years of nursing experience combined.

Very interesting thread. Glad I read it all. :)

....... being abused, overworked, given enormous responsibility with little autonomy.......

This sums up nursing in a nutshell.

After more than 20 years of nursing, I'm tired.

I'm in my 50s, and now that everyone has finally figured out that there's no shortage, the big push for having a BSN has begun. I'm looking at going back to school to get it.

I had a high paying job with great hours, and a very doable work-load, but the hostile working environment, and the most mentally ill co-worker I've ever had made it Hell.

I took a huge pay-cut to take another job with terrible hours. I

It's very labor intensive and stressful, but the environment is much more supportive, and no nut-job co-workers.

I have worked in many different specialties, even worked from home telephonically. Working from home was bad due to very punitive mgmt who micro-managed every key-stroke.

Nursing is a very difficult and stressful career, no matter how you slice it.

Congrats to all of you who have decided to move on, and feel good about it. Much luck and success to you!

Specializes in ICU, CM, Geriatrics, Management.
The bigger issue is the abuse from employers...inadequate staffing, poor wages, horrible health benefits, poor scheduling and more.

Agree... and those items listed in your post are only a few selected examples.

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