Ten Ways To Know You're Burning Out

Here's a primer on how to recognize nursing burnout......BEFORE it destroys your career and lands you in the booby hatch. Nurses Stress 101 Article

Here's something a little different from the writer who usually brings you the funny top-10 lists.

Recently, a good friend of mine I'll call "Viv"---an LPN who's worked at the same LTC for eight-and-a-half years---suddenly up and quit her job. Without notice. Just went to work one morning, told the DNS, "I'm done", handed in a hastily scribbled resignation letter, and shook the dust of the place from her feet.

Not surprisingly, Viv is having trouble finding a new job, even though she's one of the best nurses I know and would hire in a New York minute if I had a position for an LPN. Quitting a nursing job without notice, especially in this economy, is a cardinal sin for which I fear she may pay a terrible price. Yet she is oddly calm about the entire episode, because, as she says, "there are worse things than being unemployed.....like going on the way I was."

Now our group of friends are left to wonder what drove such a wonderful nurse to such a desperate act. Even Viv herself doesn't fully understand what happened; all she knows is that the stresses and strains incurred on the job quietly piled on top of each other for years, until critical mass was reached and she couldn't take it anymore. Now, she's just a statistic---another victim of nursing burnout.

Most of us have been there. I know I have.......more than once. So how do nurses learn to recognize the signs that we're getting a little crispy around the edges and take measures to combat burnout, rather than wait until we're completely fried and then commit career hara-kiri? Here are a few clues I wish Viv had listened to before flaming out in such spectacular fashion:

Ten Ways To Know You're Burning Out

1) Take inventory of the shifts you've worked over a period of at least 4 weeks. If the bad days outnumber the good ones, it may be time to look at changing positions. Life is too short for sucky jobs; to avoid burnout, you have to take action when the suckage overrides the benefits of staying put.

2) Do a gut-check. Are you mostly satisfied with what you do at work, or do you dread going in every day? Again, if you're having two or three bad shifts every week, you are probably not enjoying life even OUTSIDE of work and it's time to consider other options.

3) Ask your family and/or friends if you seem more on edge than usual. They're almost always the first to feel it when a nurse is in the early stages of burnout......oftentimes, before we're aware that we're getting frazzled.

4) Note your overall mood and energy levels. Sometimes, what we think of clinically as 'depression' strikes us when we're starting to brown around the edges: we start feeling anxious, sad or blue; we may sleep or eat excessively (or not sleep/eat enough), and so on. Other times, it may simply be a free-floating unease that we can't put a finger on.....we only sense that something isn't quite right.

5) If you spend a lot of your waking time daydreaming about winning the lottery or counting the years/days/minutes till retirement.....you may be approaching burnout.

6) If you constantly think about the job, talk about the job, have nightmares about the job......you're probably already there.

7) How's your overall health? Is your blood pressure creeping up? Have your diet and exercise habits changed? Are you still enjoying all of your normal off-duty activities, or do you find yourself saying "I'm too tired" and begging off whenever you're invited to go out with friends or family?

? When was the last time you read a good book........went to church........saw a movie........knitted a sweater........played a game with your kids?

9) If you have vacation time saved up (and what nurse with symptoms of burnout doesn't?), take a week or two and see how you feel after you've unwound for a few days. Imagine walking back in to your workplace; does the thought inspire a reaction like "Yes, I'll be ready to go back to work," or "OMG---if I never went back it'd still be a day too soon"? If it's the latter, you may want to consider using the last few days of your vacation to look for another job.

10) If, when you ask yourself whether you can imagine doing this for the rest of your life---or even for the next twelve months---and the answer is "Oh, HELL no".....you are burnt to a crisp and had better call for help before you get hosed. Believe me, if you're burned out, your supervisors have noticed it, and there are too many hungry new grads and older, experienced nurses out there who need work......so do whatever you have to in order to quell the flames and refresh yourself. Your career, your emotional well-being, and even your health may depend on it.

Learn more about nursing burn out

ten-ways-to-know-youre-burning-out.pdf

Been there, done that and now that I am better, trying to find away back. I had a great job, that I loved, but due to being burned out, unhappy with the management and several other things, I am finding it hard to find a job in a small community with limited options in nursing. I do not want to travel, I have a teenager at home. I have tried to apply and call everyone I know at other facilities, but no body is "hiring". I hope that I will be able to find my way back, to where I want to be. I am beginning to believe that I have ruined my reputation beyond repair. Any one got any ideas, suggestions or leads on nursing jobs in Missouri?

I have been in Nursing for 40+ years. Some jobs were great and some not so good. Sometimes you may not burned out on nursing, but may be burned out on what you are currently doing in Nursing. Years ago I was working 12 hour nights in the ER (what I thought would be my dream job) and I hated it!! I have worked nights off and on for years and liked working nights but I sure didn't like working nights in the ER. After a year I went to work in Home Health and Hospice at the same hospital and it WAS my dream job. I truely loved Home Health and Hospice.

Specializes in hospice, HH, LTC, ER,OR.
Good Luck Viv! It's just funny to open my email this morning and this is the first thing I see. I am a tele nurse that works nights. I am fairly young, and this is my first "real job." I've been off work for the last 6 days, and the first thing I thought this morning was that I do not want to go back in that place. I have began to complain about everything. I think my home life sucks. I just returned to school for a BSN. I am wondering if going to day shift would make it all better?? I don't want it to take 2.5 years for me to notice that I'm burnt out.

Yes please don't let it take that long. I thought I could continue working here until I finished RN school. Also at the time the only other options were to jump from one LTC place to another. After continuous prayer and numerous applications. I got a job in home health :)

Specializes in Assisted Living nursing, LTC/SNF nursing.

Marla, you always tell the right story at the right time for me. I've done the same, gave 3 weeks notice and left. Finding it very hard to find a job but keep praying/thinking that the right one will come along at the right time. I do feel like I have my life back now and my family has told me that also. That used and abused feeling is gone but I do miss my coworkers. Life does go on.

Specializes in psych, general, emerg, mash.

already been there! my body was giving me messages which I did not obey. dry wretching in the morning before I went on ****

then my back injury, which was caused by a violent patient who dropped to the floor, while I was giving him a restraining hold

the other nurses sat in the protection of the nurses station, while I had to wait for help.

yes, if your body is telling you something, LISTEN! Time to get out, or seek another nursing job in a less intense ward.

I love nursing, but nothing has changed in the years I have been off. I still suffer with lower back pain. Many of the retiree's were glad to get out. I have not had a sick day in years since I have been off that ward.

Specializes in Med-Surg/Peds/O.R./Legal/cardiology.

Another GREAT post, Viva! I burned out long ago. Right now I'm not working and feel rather lost. What am I supposed to do after giving nursing 38 yrs? I feel as though I have been kicked to the curb for various reasons. What a kick in the gut...

Surgicalcap, I feel you. I am currently in the same situation.

After working many years, the last 6 were in LTC Management. On-call 24/7. And I take my job very personally. Add on top of that first my grandmother, then an uncle, another uncle, then my mom all passing. It all took it's toll. I left a job I loved to help care for these wonderful people in my life and settle their estates. Before I could 'heal' I had to go back to work to support my own family. But 3 jobs leaving all of them on bad terms leaves me at this point out of work for over a year. Yes, it has given me the time to heal. While I thought I may have forgotten too much, I have taken some classes and completed many many CEU's with ease. I have even begun to dream about being a nurse again. No, not a nursing manager but a nurse, as this is what really fuels me. Nearly every part of being a nurse. But, I fear that I have ruined my chance at ever being a nurse again by burning so many bridges. I now know that being a single mom, the DON for a growing LTC facility (mainly at my pushing), and being the only nurse in our family that everyone turned to was just too much. I had to stay strong and keep going even when my heart was broken and torn to shreds. I wish I had taken more time off from the start instead of pushing on to the point of breaking. Now, I just can't seem to explain away what I did or why I left these jobs so abruptly...but I did. Everytime I try to say it or write it, I just sound crazy. Or inept, which I am not. I am so ready to return to work and be a viable part of the health community. Wishing won't make that time go away, maybe with persistance? A little luck? Going back to school?

Thank you for posting this. I know exactly how your friend "Viv" feels. I myself have debated on faxing in my resignation letter and not looking back, but I can't due to the economy. I'm getting tired of dealing with rude staff and rude patients who think they are at a hotel or something. I'm also tired of management having grandios ideas that are unrealistic for the nursing profession.

Specializes in Emergency Room, Specialty Infusions.

I think in that little check list they should add "Losing your teeth". See, when you have nightmares about your job, ya just might be clenching your teeth. Which can either crack or obliterate the nerve. I'm on my second root canal for a perfect, healthy, never had a cavity tooth.

I checked "Yes" to every one of those check points.

My fantasy is sending my "I quit" notice with a photo attached of me burning my license. It always puts a smile on my face.

woot, i am experiencing 9 out of 10.

go me! *sarcasm*

not :down:

Specializes in Orthopedic, Pain Management, Psych, Family.

Thank you for posting this!!! I've been bummed out so badly for the past few months and couldn't figure out why. I work weekends and like others have posted it takes the whole week to de-stress. I also always think, talk, and dream about work in nightmares. I have anxiety and find myself taking my medication mainly after I get to work. It's really noticable since my fiance tells me to stop focusing and talking about the horrors of work since it gets me so worked up. Needless to say I'm looking for work elsewhere, even looking outside of nursing. Just for a change of scenery and I would much rather be doing something I really enjoy for less pay, then putting myself under such stress for a little more.

Specializes in med-surg, hospice, wondering units,.

Hi there, recognizing burnout is so important, you did a great job of giving signs and symptoms. As nurses we seem to be in denial of stress or burnout, we nurture and want to fix things and people but we tend not to care for ourselves. great post Kudos