New Grad/Hate My Job/Life is Miserable!

After nearly four decades, I still remember my miserable, awful, no good first year of nursing vividly. It was my first full time job, the most responsibility I'd ever had and the achievement of a goal I had been working toward for years. The first year of nursing is miserable, it really is. Sometimes you are so miserable, you find yourself alienating your co-workers without realizing it. There is a light at the end of the tunnel. Hang in there, and it will get better. Nurses New Nurse Article

The first year of nursing is miserable. Everyone is miserable during the first year of nursing. You go from being a college student to being responsible for a full load of patients, and you aren't sure you're up to it and you're worried about what would happen if you made a mistake. Not IF you made a mistake, but when you make one because you just know that you can't do this and you're going to kill someone. You go home worried about whether you did enough, noticed any potential harbingers of a decline in your patient status or passed on everything you needed to pass on to the next shift. Sometimes you stay awake all night worrying about it. Or you fall asleep only to wake in a panic, sure you've forgotten the one crucial detail that could have prevented someone's demise.

The first year of nursing is miserable. I'll say it again. The first year of nursing is miserable. Even after 38 years, I remember vividly just how miserable the first year of nursing can be. I worried that I had missed an order or an important lab value. I worried that I had signed off an order but had forgotten to actually DO what was ordered. On one occasion, I actually got up in the middle of the night and drove to the hospital, sneaked up the back stairway to my floor and ducked into the end room to make sure I really HAD decreased the Heparin drip as I was supposed to have. (Someone had -- I'm still hoping it was me and not the night nurse who found the order when she went through doing 24 hour chart checks.) I was so afraid I'd do an IM injection wrong and injure someone's sciatic nerve, dooming them to a lifetime of pain and suffering that I'd have to go into the bathroom and vomit before giving an injection.

The first year of nursing was miserable. I felt as though I was overworked, that no one appreciated me and that I was an inch away from making a potentially fatal mistake at any moment. I worked as hard as I could, but my time management skills weren't fully developed and I didn't have the experience to detect trouble on the way as the more experienced nurses could. Instead, I detected trouble right about the time the feces hit the fan . . . far too late to head it off at the pass and just in time for one of my more experienced co-workers to save my (my patient's) bacon.

Truly, I WAS unappreciated -- which had a lot more to do with my own attitude and my inability to get along with my co-workers than it had to do with my co-workers, who probably would have liked and appreciated me had I been a bit more likable. But I was too stressed, too convinced of my own incompetence to be able to spend the energy on the social niceties that would have helped me to fit in to the team.

I didn't have the option of quitting my job and moving on. I was supporting a husband who was going to school full time, and health insurance at that time was not portable. I had to make my job work. And as time went on, I had a few scattered moments when I felt as though I could handle it. And then a few more moments. And then most of a day went by, and I handled what came my way, noticed signs and symptoms ahead of time and was able to head off potential badness before it became a full-fledged code. There were times when I was able to lift my nose from the grindstone long enough to notice that a co-worker was in trouble and needed help.

As I developed time management skills, assessment skills and interpersonal skills, my job got easier. I was able to interact more positively with my colleagues. I got to know the people on my shift, and we went out together. Some of them became friends. As I became more competent, my co-workers became nicer. (I know it was ME, not them. I became more likable and they responded positively.) Somewhere around the two year mark, I realized that I liked my job, my colleagues and myself. I had become competent.

Had I changed jobs, it wouldn't have happened, or it wouldn't have happened as soon. I was lucky, in a way, that I was forced to stay at my first job.

The first year of nursing sucks, but it does get easier, trust me. And one day you'll look back over the years and remember how lost and scared and incompetent you felt . . . and know that it was all worth it.

Specializes in Med-Surg, , Home health, Education.

Very well said... I hated my first year as a nurse as well. I didn't know what I didn't know. Luckily I survived and so did my patient's. Now that I've been in the field over 35 years I'm amazed when I look back. I learned so much from my peers and coworkers. Of course back in the day the reception I got wasn't very welcome. I try to make a point of helping the new nurses out because I remember how I felt. You will all get through it- it's like a light at the end of the tunnel. I'm hoping this is my final job and I can look forward to part time and eventually retirement someday. All you newbies- hang in there. Thanks again for this post:yes:

Great article! I am just finishing my second month of my new job as an RN. I have definitely experienced the feelings you mentioned in your post. I have quite a drive and don't know anyone from around here, but everyone has been so welcoming and helpful. I may struggle some days, most days at least once, but I can easily be reminded of my reason for choosing this profession when looking into the eyes of my patients as they thank me for taking care of them. I use this as motivation and to fuel my fire to becoming the best nurse I can be.

I LOVE YOU for writing this! This is truly my story. I am two years employed but just now beginning to feel like I can really call myself a nurse without snickering inside. In the beginning I had the same experiences -- it truly is an evolutionary process -- changing into a "real" nurse. I remember staying awake at night to rethink everything I had done that day while hoping that nothing would put someone in jeopardy, and yet having to be awake again in just 3 or 4 hours to get back onto that floor. I remember always feeling that I was the worst nurse ever, and being totally miserable at the job. I hated the endless hours of charting which took forever, hated having to ask for help all the time from my coworkers, hated the feeling of standing in the nurses station -- just overwhelmed to the point of being frozen with that powerful fear that came from not knowing how to proceed with something so stupid as how to put through the order I had just received. Honestly, there were so many days during that first year, in mid-shift, when I totally thought the best plan would be to just go to the DON and tell her I was not up for the challenge, just say anything - whatever it took - to get off that floor on that day. But I really needed the health insurance and so just kept on getting through, day by day. Now, two years in, I am just beginning to feel like I can deal with almost anything that can be sent my way, but OMG, thank you so much for your post!

Specializes in LTC, Rural, OB.

So I'm only 4 months into my first year and at first it was miserable but I attribute that to the position I was in. I was doing LTC and the CNAs with their insubordination (ie acting like children who had to be wrangled) and the different residents with dementia was enough to make me cry a lot of the time. I have switched to the hospital and while I still feel like there's a lot I can't do or don't know, I really love it. I think it honestly depends on where you work, if you like where you're working and what you're doing. The first year can be good and not miserable.

Specializes in VA, Ortho, Med/Surg.

Well poop. Why didn't I enter this contest ugh? I love to write. I wish I would have gone for my RN instead of an LPN after reading this. The more you do these things like Heparin drips and stuff it has got to get easier right? Repeatition has it's merits.

Specializes in VA, Ortho, Med/Surg.

Haha ruralnurse84...you reminded me of my neighbor who is working as a CNA at a nursing home. Her stories of jerk CNA's is insane. Attutude is all around us ugh.

It is very true! I have no option to quit + I love nursing with all my heart. However, there are days when I feel I am making full of myself. I graduated with high grades, got hired off my preceptorship, received thanks from patients and recognition from co-workers and bossed, but then I get a day like today and I just want to roll in a ball and die. I feel so incompetent, so stupid and so defeated today. I know I will pick myself up tomorrow and go again, but it is so hard to do. I love that we nurses constantly learning, but I also feel that doctors loosing trust in a nurse when she makes even smallest mistakes. What I have done today is listened to a nurses report to me and called the doctor about the issue, the information was not true, she probably missed up the pt's in her head. I end up looking like a fool and a liar and idiot. Especially because the doc hand up on me after correcting me for 5 minutes.

Thank you so much for this article Ruby! I am three months in and in the midst of all this... I have a great support system, think i am getting along with coworkers well for the most part, but the time management/critical thinking/problem recognition/remembering everything is still rough going... I am committed to slogging through this first year though, i KNOW it will begin to be more doable as i get more experienced... Thanks I am bookmarking this to read over and over!!

Thank you so very much for writing and posting this article. I am three weeks into my first full-time nursing job, a MICU. My terror has been increasing with each shift, as has my sense of incompetence and failure; the more I realize that I don't know...the more terrified I become. It is nice to know that this is normal, and that the only thing to do is to just keep fighting. Do your best. Try to take each failure or near mistake, or actual mistake, as a chance to learn, and try to learn from it. And to hear the reality is it is going to be miserable for a while. As much as I don't relish that prospect, it is a relief to hear that what I am experiencing is essentially normal, and that if I keep at it I may gain some rewards I haven't yet imagined. Mostly though, that it is normal to feel the way I am feeling. That everyone (or almost everyone) new feels scared, overwhelmed, sick to their stomach, frequently full of tears before and after work. I only hope that the beauty comes over time, that I blossom into the person and nurse I want to be.

I am 3 weeks off of orientation at my first nursing job. It's my "dream" job. And the phrase, be careful what you wish for because it might come true, keeps coming to mind. I just had a patient aspirated on meds- I didn't properly screen his swallowing function. I just wrote a post about it, because I feel like it's just another example of my complete incompetence. It feels like I'm circling the drain. Everyone says to try and suffer through this first year, but I really do think I'm a special kind of terrible.

Hi Ruby Vee,

You have no idea how much I needed to read this today.

Thank you so much for sharing your experience -- It's heartening to know that someone so seasoned remembers what it was like, and can articulate how they felt. I'm in a new job too, and am working so hard to try to make up for my lack of process, that I'm going through the same thing you did (with regards to keeping my nose to the grindstone and not forging relationships).

You've given me some hope, and that's what I needed most of all. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!

RN_KTZ