Fired After 50, Part IV: A Time to Punt

Fourth in a series about the adventures of a down-on-her-luck RN faced with the eternal question: "Will I ever work as a nurse again?" and finding that sometimes, the only thing to do is look for the positive in the situation......and then drop back and punt. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Same shinola, different day: I received twin rejections between breakfast and lunch today. One was from the hospice where I'd aced two interviews, only to lose out to someone who lives closer, and the other from the local hospice where I'd really, really, REALLY wanted to work. They didn't even give me a fighting chance---I'd had a short interview with the HR director and never even got to meet the hiring manager, who rejected my application without bothering to check my references (among whom are two of her own nurses). After seven weeks of writing cover letters, sending out applications, and retooling my resume....after seven weeks of waiting, hoping, praying, e-mails, interviews, and phone calls, I'm no closer to finding a job than I was when I started.

I have officially hit bottom. I feel like the word "LOSER" is etched into my forehead. All these years I've worked hard and built a good reputation in the community......and now I've got nothing to show for it but wrinkles and a handful of unemployment-check stubs.

It's getting harder and harder to keep up with our expenses now. After all, my husband and I are surviving on only about half of the income we had from our jobs, and the numbers don't compute. I just cancelled our 30th wedding anniversary celebration that was scheduled for late next month because there's not enough money coming in to take ourselves out to dinner that night, let alone throw ourselves a second wedding and reception. We've got over $15,000 in medical bills and are being nagged to death about them, even though I keep telling the collections people that it's all we can do to afford our prescriptions now that we're without health insurance. And that little bit of light at the end of the tunnel? I thought that hospice job was it for sure, but now I fear it's only the headlight from an oncoming train.

Granted, it's not all bad. We haven't lost our home or car..........yet. None of the utilities have been shut off.......yet. We aren't starving, and we can still afford Internet access and cable; at this point, I'm grateful for just about every little blessing that keeps the wolf away from the door. But what a comedown from the past fifteen years, when we only thought things were tight financially; we'd forgotten how bad things can really be. This is waaaaay too reminiscent of our struggles as young adults, and it's going to take more energy than I feel I'm capable of generating to start over again.

I wonder about all the usual things, like what I'm going to do if, despite all my best efforts, I can't find a job after my unemployment benefits run out, and what I'm doing wrong to cause these repeated rejections. But I'm also beginning to question whether I need to think about relocating........whether I'll ever work as a nurse again........or even whether I want to. Nursing has not been particularly kind to me, as much as I've loved it; maybe all this is telling me that I need to do something else (although what that would be, I haven't the faintest idea). And if truth be told, I really don't want to work five days a week as so many jobs seem to require; four days a week is about all I can handle without getting burnt out, and three would be even better. I'm at a stage of life when work is no longer the be-all and end-all of existence---I've got a husband who recently retired and kids/grandkids I like to spend time with, I'm getting more involved with my church and developing a social life again, and I have plenty of hobbies to keep me out of trouble. Who needs to worry about work 24/7? Haven't I already spent enough of my life doing that?

So perhaps these rejections, as much as they hurt my pride, are more blessings in disguise......and perhaps it's time, as my father used to say, to drop back and punt. In other words, accept the fact that I don't know where to go from here, and let that be OK for now. Stop freaking out over things I have no control over, be open to possibilities outside my comfort zone and ready to seize any opportunities that arise. Put a smile on my face and hold my head up because I'm not a loser. And above all, I need to "let go and let God", because my way sure as hell isn't working.

Psssssst.....hey, you! You still got that ad for Truckmasters? I might need that.......

I am filing this week too,,,, everyone says that it shouldn't be a problem getting my unemployment benefits, but I am nervous about it.

I heard from a coworker that my boss told her that I knew what route to give, but I decided upon myself to go against doctors orders and give it iv instead of sq before calling him? WHAT THE? She wasn't even there and she never asked me or the other nurse what had happened that evening of the incident before they fired me. So how can she say that I did this on purpose? A lot of people say I should get a lawyer involved, but at this moment I am still so hurt by the whole situation.

Specializes in Clinical Research, Outpt Women's Health.

This thread is so depressing. Very sad.

I've in nursing 10 years - worked in many places in 10 years. Saw many nurses did med errors, occasionally had med errors too. Before the healthcare reform and cuts - the usual procedure was to file an incident report, call Doctor, explain what happened - no harm to the patient - OK, be careful -- that's all. We are all humans. Now, it's different time, and any med error can be turned as a weapon against us - to fire -- what they are interested in is to find an excuse to let you go without having to lay you off - so not to pay you unemployment.

I see it as being on a ship that is sinking - they (big corporations) are trying to survive by getting rid of us.

I have heard from a few nurses who have made med errors and just got a warning too, they are in shock just as much as I am that I was terminated.

I hope you get your unemployment,,,,,,please keep me updated

I am sooooo stressed out , my husband and I just took out a large loan last month to help with us getting pregnant,,, now this happens :(

I understand you completely - I was also shocked and so were my co-workers - they called me home ans expressed that I was one of the best nurses there. I feel confident about myself, and it was my first med error during the whole year - made in the extremely busy working environment, under lots of stress, understaffed, working for 3 nurses, being paid for one - the present trend of healthcare direction, created by employers (corporations) in order to stay in business and profit. I wish you the best and do fight for the justice.