Re: No BS, what's the reality of starting as an older male, with a previous degree?
Got my RN at 48, after seven years in healthcare in an unlicensed position. Big change from 25 years as a carpenter, but the time spent pushing beds was a helpful transition.
On the whole, being a nurse has been a great experience. Love my coworkers. The work is hard, at times, but interesting and rewarding. My knees ain't what they once were, but there are situations where life experience is more useful than nursing experience. Put me in a code and I'm standing in the corner, peeing myself with the 23 yr old girls, but send me a disgruntled family member and I can talk things out and work out a solution. (I exaggerate. That's something I do, sometimes. But there's an element of truth in there, somewhere.)
One thing I try to remind myself regularly is that anything I've ever done that was all fun, all the time, I had to pay to do. But I had a pretty good time, this past weekend, and even on a bad shift, there are usually some good parts.
I work weekend nights, plus one other nightshift--usually Friday, although it can be any weeknight. Having a pretty much set schedule has some advantages, and most of our weekend positions are filled with people on the weekend program. I count it as a plus to see a lot of the same people every week--you get to know each other pretty well. But I also like most of the non-weekend people who rotate through.
I like nights. I've toyed with the idea of going to days, to be able to "sleep in" until 0800 on my days off and have a life. Nights are plenty busy, but less frantic, and it does seem like my fellow zombies have less energy for melodrama. Collaborating with a second-year resident is more satisfying than getting your butt chewed by an attending. There's less support from ancillary services, so we're more inclined to rely on each other. The boss is home in bed, so sexual harrassment (the best of all forms of harrassment) runs amuck.
It's entirely possible to have a miserable time as a nurse. But some people do work pretty hard at it. If more nurses were men--especially middle-aged men-- there would be a lot less stress, and only slightly higher patient mortality. Probably closely corellating with football season.
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