Exhausted; I want a way out.

Nurses General Nursing

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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.

It depends. Acutes is more flexible like that. Outpatient centers are more structured. Our clinic opens at 5:45pm and my last patient comes off at 5:00pm. If that isn’t late enough for a minimum of 3 hours they will be scheduled for the following day and advised to go to the ER. I do get stuck waiting on medical transport occasionally until like 6:30ish but it’s not common.

1 Votes

I have a similar story. Have worked in private duty respiratory care, nursing home, hospital, community health, dialysis and corrections. Driving anywhere from 30 mins to 1.5 hours, in the snow more than half of the year, after working 12 hour nights. I have awoken more than once by hitting the gravel ditch on the wrong side of the road.

Leaving jobs for ones that were closer to home, daytime, and realistic hours worked. Am happiest in my current position. I too wanted a baby, but it did not happen, my husband did not want to adopt or foster.

Being childless is the club I never wanted to join. People have told me I am selfish, too concentrated on my career, why didn’t u do IVF, etc. judging me about my non- choice about having kids. People bond through their kids. Talking about them, how old, what grade, the nephew math, etc. It is lonely to be in this club, childless. Felt homeless as a nurse too, jobs to get by on, until something better came along, (5.5 years one time) hoping for improvement.

2 Votes

I can really empathize with you concerning how emotionally and spiritually nursing can be. I recently made the decision to leave my stressful job for a less stressful one that pays less money. But in the end I think less stress will be worth it. Do you have the opportunity to work in a less stressful environment such as ECF, school nurse, doctor's office?

I wish you the best and will keep you in my prayers.

2 hours ago, ToddlerRN said:

I chose dialysis because we were trying to get pregnant while I was a tele nurse and it wasn’t working. I work 3 12’s no Sunday’s awesome benefits and I’ve been a rn for 3 years (no bsn) and make $32/hr. I’ve been in it for 2 years, never coded a patient (though I must admit I do notice small changes in my patients) it’s different, but I like it ? good luck! 

Before you posted this I was going to mention outpatient dialysis as a possible job for OP - because that's what I was doing when I had twins at age 41 after IVF. Working at the clinic gave me the flexibility to get the treatments and monitorning done that I would have never had in a hospital or other inpatient setting.

That said, I was very lucky and IVF is not guaranteed at any age, especially after 40. But it can be successful.

Wishing you all the best, OP!

1 Votes
Specializes in OB.
13 hours ago, MissPosh08 said:

It seems like you’ve spent too much time worrying about other people’s expectations of you: good/bad, right/wrong. I think you should live for you: do what you want, find out what makes you happy. You seem like an exceptional and thoughtful person. I wish you happiness and peace.

I agree with all of this. No wonder you're exhausted! I underwent IVF to conceive my daughter (also for sperm morphology issues), and remember very well the physical and emotional pain during that process.

Are you able to take time off of work? Meaning like a real-deal, FMLA couple of months to rest, clear your head, and figure out your next steps? I think you're at a crossroads and it's difficult to make decisions when you have so many stressors tugging at you from every which way. I also wish you happiness and peace. I would additionally encourage you to seek out a counselor who is experienced with perinatal issues---they're becoming more common (thankfully!) and can help you put things into perspective. You don't need to suffer alone.

1 Votes
Specializes in Ortho, Med surg and L&D.
23 hours ago, NurseBlaq said:

Wow! Never knew this could be a result of mumps.

Yes,

Post puberty mumps can fry testes and ovaries causing fertility failures in both.

Jen

3 Votes
Specializes in Neurology/Oncology.

Why don't you go to work at a hospital that pay for IVF. Many do. Since your husband isn't working, is he will to work somewhere that pays for IVF? https://www.fastcompany.com/40496580/these-companies-offer-the-most-generous-ivf-employee-benefits If you two are truly wanting IVF, you need to be willing to set priorities to get what you want. It may not be the job he wants, but if IVF is truly a priority, he will work somewhere that offers it. He could even be a part-time barista at Starbucks and have it paid for. It doesn't take much time to search and find places that pay for it. I found this in 30 seconds.

Specializes in Neurology/Oncology.
On 6/17/2019 at 4:24 PM, TriciaJ said:

This might be way out there, but have you considered fostering? There are a lot of throw-away children out there. Is it in the realm of possibilities to take one in and possibly adopt that child eventually?

I know it's not at all what you had in mind but it would mean a lot to some child. Also you would still be parents. And it might be a way off the nursing hamster wheel.

Good luck, whatever you decide.

1 Votes
Specializes in Neurology/Oncology.

Do you have IVF insurance. While doing some reading, I see that "Texas is one of the 15 states that offers a fertility insurance mandate for its residents. This means that insurance companies in the state are required to offer coverage for IVF cost in Texas or for other fertility treatments." Lots of good information here on help with IVF costs: https://www.ivfauthority.com/ivf-cost-in-texas/

1 Votes
Specializes in Neurology/Oncology.
Specializes in Neurology/Oncology.

You may want to look into the following Fertility financial aid programs: https://www.fertilityauthority.com/costs/grants-and-aid-infertility-treatment

Specializes in Neurology/Oncology.

A few different grant places the above one here: https://www.ivfauthority.com/ivf-grants/

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