Exhausted; I want a way out.

Nurses General Nursing

Published

How do I continue to do this career? I feel like I’ve tried every available, reasonable option. I’ve worked the floor, I worked the E.R, I’ve travel nursed, I did clinical coordinator, and now I do Home Health....suppose to be part time but never is. I’ve driven 1.5 hours to get to work and I’ve worked 30min away from my home. I have been a nurse for 11 years this month and I’m just tired of trying to make it work. Part of my pain is something that has nothing to do with work...and yet does a little bit. Because I was traveling around and trying to find a fit, and because I can count on one hand the amount of men I have worked with, I did not date much and thus did not get married until I was 33. My husband and I have been trying to have a child and it isn’t working out well. We have been told that IVF is our only realistic option but we can’t even get approved for a loan to do it due to my husband’s previous debt. And unfortunately I only make 50k a year and only have a house payment in my name, but they tell me for my husband and I to get approved for the loan we would need to make about 130k a year. My husband is a tradesman and we have never made more than 80k together in a year. However last year he did not have any work at all (Trumps great economy my ***.) Adoption is about as much as IVF and since my husband and I are older also a kind of long shot. (He is 57 and I am 38).

Yes I could probably go back to travel nursing or return to the ER and make more money than I do now, but I’m just tired. Travel nursing was not terrible, but it is always having to learn a new place, system, doctors, and hope you are following their policies correctly when everyone is to busy for you to ask questions. And it is lonely as my husband can’t get work if he is traveling with me. The ER was okay until my dad died 2 years ago and then all the sudden it got very hard to take care of codes for me. Now I do Home Health which is a cake walk compared to my hospital experience, except the charting. Like I can see all my 6-7 patients in 8.5 hours, and I do try to chart as I see them, but I usually have 2-3 hours of charting to do every evening once getting home. Not to mention that I always have to work a little the day before calling the patients with visit times and organizing my day (my agency requires we call the night before between 5-9pm). I usually drive 80-100 miles a day. And thus I feel like I never get a real day off because either I’m catching up on my charting or I have to be home to receive my schedule (we have EPIC and no longer get the schedule emailed to our phones, it is only on our work computer and I’m not carrying that around everywhere) by a certain time. And if the people doing the schedule are late putting it out then I can’t get to things I want to do like yoga which is from 6pm-7:30pm. As I don’t have a full team of patients that are mine, I always have 4-5 people on my schedule that I am unfamiliar with. So unlike full time people who kind of know who they are going to see day to day, I almost never do.

I just feel there is no winning with nursing. In all of my jobs I almost NEVER get out on time. I almost ALWAYS have more patients than agreed to be caring for in my interview. I mean hell, when my dad died at 11am it took until 6pm for the hospital to get things squared away so I could leave without fear of abandonment. I actively now screen my calls and I NEVER pick up, then get ***ed at for not being a team player. This last job in home health I made it very, very, very clear that my time comes first. It isn’t about money, although I definitely deserve the money they are paying me plus some. I gave back a 10K bonus and was like ‘All I want from you is a work load that allows me to have my life back.’ Needless to say there is always some excuse why I have 7 patients instead of 6, or why my 6 patients are 80-100miles of drive time. I’m just done. There is always some reason why we (me and my coworkers) need to do more and be better. There is minimal education with outrageous expectations. I am just done. I am a good, reliable, safe, and compassionate nurse. I have worked many, many jobs and have maybe met a handful that I could not describe in the same manner. It isn’t us not doing the work right or well or fast enough that’s the problem. It’s the institutions and their ***ing nut job expectations. It is patients that go to hospitals called ‘Hospitality’ (that is the real name of a hospital in the Houston, Texas area BTW) expecting a spa day instead of care and business minded idiots who set up that expectation from the get go by naming their ***ing institution Hospitality. I just want to go to work, do my job, and be allowed to leave on time 90% of the time. I want to be able to pee regularly and have a regular lunch break, and lastly I want to have enough energy when I get home (or the next day) to have sex with my husband so I can hopefully have a family....so I can have my life.

Sadly I just don’t see that as a possibility as a nurse without just being a real ***. Like I am just going to have to say no to being in any committee, to staying late EVER for anyone else, to working extra or working over. I find this really hard to do because I believe in team work. I know that team work is how we make it through, but if I stick to my own I can get done. If I do nothing extra I can be with my husband and not be quite as exhausted. I just don’t see how helping others means I have to sacrifice myself this much and I really don’t see humans as worthy of the sacrifice of myself as I once did when I was 22 and really idealistic. I believe everyone deserves good, data based, compassionate care, just not at the expense of my life and desires....ever.

CONGRATS on the new baby! Glad to hear you and your SO worked it out. Try surgery if that's what you want to do, doctors don't bite. Good luck!

Specializes in Critical Care; Cardiac; Professional Development.

Congratulations on your little peanut. I hope you find more avenues for happiness.

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.

CONGRATS on little peanut!

Don't let being “mean” docs scare you away from surgery. Honestly, most of them are completely different people in the OR- I’m shocked by my friends who work impatient who refer to Dr. SoandSo as (word not permitted by ToS) because they are truly a delight to work with in the OR. It may be the team atmosphere and that they know us all very well- go check out the OR forum and see the inside perspective.

Specializes in Oncology.

I only just found this thread, and was in tears reading it. Kalipso, my heart was breaking for you. I am beyond excited to hear that your husband finally started being really honest about his feelings, and that you two are now working together as a team. Speaking from my own experience, it really is amazing how much a marriage can improve once we both started really being honest and finding a way to work together instead of against each other.

And now you are a mommy! ❤️ Welcome to the Mama-hood. It is a wild ride, but I am sure you will love it. So very happy for you.

Specializes in Critical Care.

CONGRATS on your new baby! I'm glad things are working out for you.

When you're off maternity leave, you may want to consider getting a clinic job. Most of the nurses I know that work in clinics for doctor offices are much happier than the rest of us.

Best Wishes!

Specializes in L&D.

What an update! Congratulations!

I read this whole thread. I’m so, so happy things worked out for the better. I hope you can find your nursing spot after all these years. I am 30, nurse for almost 6 years, and I could relate to your post. I’m already tired and I am unsure what area of nursing is tolerable.

Specializes in Surgical Specialty Clinic - Ambulatory Care.
2 hours ago, Skips said:

What an update! Congratulations!

I read this whole thread. I’m so, so happy things worked out for the better. I hope you can find your nursing spot after all these years. I am 30, nurse for almost 6 years, and I could relate to your post. I’m already tired and I am unsure what area of nursing is tolerable.

Skips,

”I am unsure what area of nursing is tolerable.” It makes me sad to hear that from someone so new to nursing, but it does not surprise me. I have even begged a manager before to NOT give me a raise and instead just give me a tolerable work load so I could have a life outside of work, needless to say that apparently wasn’t in her ability because I got a raise instead. This year, for the second year, my employer has “not been able to give out raises”. Because we are loosing money, both the hospital and homecare part of the organization. They just laid off 10% of the whole organization. So now we are doing even more with even less. I really just am not sure nursing....any health profession....is really living up to the oaths we took. If I knew a way to give out my nursing opinions without repercussions; I would do that for a living. Good luck to you and remember, no matter what oath we took it comes after your needs in life are met and the needs of your family. Caring for strangers is not more important than you.

On 7/7/2019 at 8:30 PM, KalipsoRed21 said:

Your sadness in having an older father and the pitfalls of such a situation are just as much of a sap story as me wanting kids all my life and having no end of road blocks trying to get there. Life circumstances are what they are and despite how much we puny humans want to believe we have control over our circumstance, our exertion over how events go down is much more minimal than we collectively like to believe.

For example, like most people I believed myself to be in a society that is a meritocracy. That my performance and capabilities would matter more about my success in life than just luck and fate. The whole, “If you want to be rich you need to work harder and smarter.” ***. Well there is a recent study from France that confirms that the 20% of the population that has the wealth in the world is an unchanged percent since recorded history. If we lived in a meritocracy then it would be reasonable to assume that those with 20 percent of the wealth have disproportionately higher IQs, talent, and in general just more capable than the rest of us. Turns out that is untrue. The incident of high intelligence and talent is equal in both the 20% and the less wealthy 80%. It is just dumb luck and the way life unfolded that the majority of rich got to where they are. And reasonable to believe that if every person had the same circumstances happen to them that we would be living the wealthy life instead of that 20%.

Here is the article if you would like to read it: https://www.Google.com/amp/s/www.technologyreview.com/s/610395/if-youre-so-smart-why-arent-you-rich-turns-out-its-just-chance/amp/

One needs to be selfless to be a parent, but there are NO selfless reasons to choose to have a baby. The only non selfish circumstance that becoming a parent occurs is an unintentional pregnancy.

With that said there is NOTHING fair about being born or the circumstance one is born into. And while I can tell you that I have thought about the effects on my hopeful child; they are not so detrimental that I shouldn’t try. Life is sad. You worry about the person you love not being there. So does the 12 year old girl who’s mom just got diagnosed with stage 4 ovarian cancer. Just life.

Have the baby, sometimes kids grow up and hate life no matter what. Love the child deeply while you are both here. My dad died of cancer at the age 62. Life really isn't promised.

Specializes in Telemetry RN.

First I am so sorry for the emotional pain and grieving you are going through. I can relate to nearly all of it.
 

When you said you felt you’d done all the right things and here’s where you end up (to paraphrase) that you feel you’ve done all this to have a family and yet you sit here with no baby. I FEEL you. I became a nurse to have a flexible schedule for family life, always have a job, have a passion for my work (bec ya know helping people) and make decent pay. I am a second career nurse almost 37 and have been trying for a baby for a little over a year and no luck. I wish I had tried to have a baby in my 20s, I feel foolish. Anyway-When the pandemic hit I was on month 6 of trying (the time at which the gyn said let’s talk fertility tx) and each period felt like doom/failure. I have endometriosis and my husband has poor morphology likely d/t varicocele. I also was so stressed out by work before this all that I was waking up drenched in sweat and constantly getting sick (I have a chronically swollen lymph node as a reminder of this time). Anyway, in March I was told to pause on fertility planning bec of the pandemic. Not only that but my husband suddenly decided he may not want a child in this horrible world (the worst part is I felt on the fence too!). But I felt SO alone and confused. I was heartbroken crying everyday, having panic attacks, and in a daze. I found myself in a complete mental breakdown and retriggered PTSD. During the leave I took I realized (with weekly therapy) that work and the lack of my own clear goals, asking for what I needed and boundaries had led me into a life I didn’t want.

I know you’ve been trying for 5 with a miscarriage —I can’t imagine the hurt. I know you’ve been a nurse much longer than me. You have a lot of self insight and you should be glad for that and take your own advice—listening to yourself can be hard but please do, you really do know the true answer even if it’s hard for you to accept. 

Anywho...here is my advice. Prioritize couples counseling. If you are to have a baby you both need to really want it. I am concerned that though you love your husband the relationship isn’t actually meeting your needs- but only you know this and counseling can help! Prioritize getting mentally and physically healthy (nursing robs this from you for real). Side note- read the book making babies if you haven’t it’s worth a read. This also means find another job, it pains me to hear your mediocre pay, bad schedule and tiredness/stress. The south is notoriously low pay from what I hear. Which is BS! Nurses deserve better pay nationally. What about an educator job- like diabetes educator? Can you do two per diem jobs and make better pay? Can you ask for a raise? I used to be a afraid to ask for more $ and now I do and I get it, crazy. Literally had a recruiter say “good for you, I wish more women would ask!”. Forget travel...Is relocating permanently an option at all? In CA, NY and Massachusetts for instance I know a new grad starts around $35/hr or more and so with 10+ yrs experience you can easily make much more like 90-100k a year. Or make what you make now but working like 1-2 days a week and reduce stress like ALOT! I hope whatever you do that you change something though it is hard. I’m sad that you’re sad and I hope you find your way toward peace, a family of your own, and job enjoyment!

Specializes in Telemetry RN.

Haha scratch my reply I am seeing that you are having a baby!! Oh that is really wonderful. Congrats and much love to you and your family!

Specializes in Critical Care.
On 7/8/2019 at 7:33 AM, KalipsoRed21 said:

I don’t agree with you about the “half” part. My friend who has been struggling to find a job she enjoys as well. We were new grads together. She was a director of nursing at a home for mentally handicapped kids, they about murdered her there with the responsibilities. She also ended up having to work regular shifts as they were under staffed and she was salaried at 63K a year. Sooooooo not worth it....she finally quit after one of the resident/patients wiped jizz on her. Terrible, terrible job. Now she makes $34 an hour working at a long term care unit which she describes as like a SNF/Medical Surgical unit from hell where she has about 10 patients a shift who are mostly bed bound, need wound care, meds & IVs, and a few with peritoneal dialysis among other therapies. If that is the kind of *** I have to do to make 70K a year and then be in a higher tax bracket.....eh no. One of my coworkers makes $31 an hour and she has been a med surg nurse for 16 years.

Now that I will be 5 days a week and a true 40 hours...I can expect about 60-65K. But nothing about comparing my pay to my peers makes me think I make “half” of what I should make. I made 15-20k less than them working less than they did.

I see you have an MSN and are in critical care, maybe this is why you feel that way? I would expect a critical care nurse to get paid more.

Your mindset is why you make what you make. Know your market value and demand it.  This mindset is exactly why men in our profession make more.  Keep continuing your education and your expectations and you will earn your market value.  RN’s like yourself hold us back as a whole by not demanding their market value.  Stand up for yourself.  

On 6/17/2019 at 8:14 PM, neuron said:

can you leave this part out

???  Why??  You’re uncomfortable that women have to have sex to get pregnant?

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