For Sale: Used Nurse. Dirt Cheap!

It's taken me a dozen years to get here, but I have finally decided that I'm no longer a "new" nurse. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I'm not sure if it's because I was a good deal older than many of my classmates when I graduated from nursing school and found out very quickly that I was nowhere near as smart as I thought I was, or if it's merely because I'm in awe of nurses who are around my age and have practiced for many more years than I. But whatever the reason, the road to success in nursing has been a lot harder, not to mention longer, than I expected. And I'm sure there are those who wouldn't call me successful at all, seeing as how I'm back to where I started, as a charge nurse in a long-term care facility.

I, on the other hand, see it as having come full circle.

As a newly-minted RN, I was ambitious and eager to move up, and with some life experience going for me, I progressed swiftly through the ranks in the years following licensure. I sampled nursing much like a smorgasbord, starting out in LTC but then "graduating" to the hospital, then to a mid-level management position in residential care, and on to senior management in LTC. I returned to med/surg nursing for a few years, but then went right back to management---this time in assisted living---and there I believed I would remain until retirement. I missed using my nursing skills, and I wasn't fond of the 24/7 nature of management, but overall, life was good; I was earning more money and assuming greater responsibilities, and some of my superiors were beginning to talk of my potential as an administrator.

Unfortunately, I was missing the whole point..........only I didn't know it until my career basically crashed and burned in the fall of 2008. I'd left a job I was more or less contented with to take a similar position with another company that lured me with promises of increased prestige and the kind of salary I'd only dreamed of. At first, I was literally wined and dined with expensive meals, a showy all-expenses-paid seminar, a trip to San Francisco, opportunities for advancement. I was wooed with flattery and given stock options.

But as I've learned many times, when something sounds too good to be true, it almost always is.......and when reality set in, a mere two months into the job, I realized that I had been set up to fail by both my immediate supervisor and the company itself. It was inevitable---I was working 50- and 60- hour weeks, scrambling to keep up with impossible demands............and most of them had nothing whatsoever to do with nursing. I might as well had "Public Relations Person" on my name badge instead of R.N. To say that I hated this with a pink and purple passion would be an understatement; I hadn't gone into nursing to kiss VIPs' rear ends, conduct tours, or take orders for lunch with a cloth napkin draped over my arm. I hadn't gone through the rigorous training of nursing school so that I could sit behind a desk, answering the phone with "It's ALWAYS a great day at (blank) Assisted Living, how may I direct your call?" instead of teaching the care staff how to administer medications correctly.

So when I made the decision to get out, I went to see an old friend who had just taken the DNS position at a local nursing home, and begged her to put me to work. At this point I didn't even mind going back to the floor, even though I was certainly not in good shape physically and wasn't sure how long I'd be able to do it, if indeed I could at all. I didn't care about the pay, the hours, the weekends...........all I wanted was a job. My friend, being a nice woman who just happened to be in need of staff, obliged by giving me one. And as it turned out, a chance to be a nurse again.

Life, as most of us discover at some point, is really weird sometimes. Just about the time you think you've got everything wired, the proverbial rug gets yanked out from under you and you find yourself questioning every assumption you ever had. I thought I was supposed to be ambitious. I thought I was supposed to want more responsibility, more money, more everything. I didn't. I wanted to take care of people. I wanted to be able to turn over the keys at the end of a shift and not worry about it until the next day. I wanted to do a good day's work and accomplish the goals for that day instead of always worrying about the long term. And I wanted to know my residents as people again..........not as names on a checklist.

Who knew that one could find redemption in an old, rundown building that sits on what must be the West Coast's largest ant colony? But that is exactly what's happened in the seven months since I shook the dust of Snootyville from my feet and returned to nursing as I first practiced it, twelve years ago.........only better. The bloom is long off the rose---I know what the workload is---and I'm OK with the lack of glamour in it. However, I also find myself much more patient with residents, staff, AND bureaucracy than I used to be. I never call in. I don't leave stuff for the next shift. And my fears about being too old and out-of-shape for floor nursing have evaporated in the reality of being over 40 pounds lighter.

I don't know what the future may hold, or how long I'll stay where I am---hospice nursing has been calling to me for some time now, and its voice is becoming both louder and more insistent. But for now, I'm "too blessed to be stressed": I'm doing something I love, and my time off is all my own. Wealth and position are lousy substitutes for golden afternoons playing with the grandbabies on the freshly-mowed lawn, eating supper with the family, and enjoying these last precious weeks before my youngest child embarks on adulthood. I missed so much of life when I was spending all of my waking hours either at the job or thinking about the job; nowadays, I have less money, but what I've been given in exchange is well worth the cost!

So while I'll probably never retire---I can't afford to now that I've given up my souped-up 401(K) and my stock options---I have essentially retired from the rat race. But if you're a hospice agency and you need a good used nurse, dirt cheap.......well, I could be just the one you're looking for.

Specializes in Case Management, Home Health, UM.

I wasn't fired. I was told that if I remained in this position and missed one more day in order to "care" for my family, I was going to "lose my job" (I am quoting the ED verbatim). I was then given a choice of resigning or taking a PRN position.

I did nothing wrong. I simply asked for and received approval in advance to take time off to be with my sister and BIL, when they were hospitalized. When they realized just how much my FT position was costing them, they seized on this opportunity to trim their payrolls....and at my expense.

What bothers me is that the ED made it appear that this was all my fault, as I was accused of "demanding" to be off.

How convenient.

VivaLasViejas,

Thank you for your amazing post. I'm a crossroads and really need to make some decisions. I really needed this.

Great post. I still consider myself a new older nurse. I so much can connect with you on being ambitious, and was once told in a nice way by a nurse manager, "I am not a go getter". I don't agree with her, because, if it is something I really want, I work hard to get it. For instance, nursing school. I fought and worked hard to get through nursing school, with four young children and an unsupportive spouse.

Since that time having a family and taking care of them has precedence over my job. I really prefer to be home with them, but due to the economy I have to work right now. My oldest just left home, and now I can see what ppl having been telling me all these years. They will grow up so fast, enjoy them while you can, it is finally hitting home. My life is not my job, but while I am there I am going to give it my best, but I want to leave it where it is when I am not there. I still haven't found my nitch as they call it, but I do know that right now my job is not the center of my life, my God and my family are.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
Great post. I still consider myself a new older nurse. I so much can connect with you on being ambitious, and was once told in a nice way by a nurse manager, "I am not a go getter". I don't agree with her, because, if it is something I really want, I work hard to get it.

I was told the same thing by one administrator. She put it a bit differently---"The administrative end of things is not your strong suit"---and when I left that facility, she told the residents I had resigned because I wanted to "go back" to patient care, as if that were somehow less worthy an aim than being the best supervisor I could be. At the time, I thought she was full of it, and when I took the next job (the high-paying one where I crashed and burned) I did it partly to prove her wrong. But as it turned out, she was spot on, because now I feel like I'm where I was supposed to be all along. Go figure!:wink2:

Specializes in Ortho and Tele med/surg.

Wow. Thank you so much for that insightful article. It's not easy to basically bare your soul to all of us, but thank you for reminding us that the best things in life can't be bought even if you have a fat pay check. Wow, money truly isn't every thing. :yeah:

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

And yanno.........I'm not doing all that bad financially. There's only four of us at home now, and my sister is self-sufficient with her Social Security so she doesn't really 'cost' us anything. Nursing home wages are nowhere near what hospitals pay, but that's another place I wouldn't go back to if they offered me twice my current salary.

I once figured out what I was really earning when I divided my annual salary by the amount of hours I was actually putting in, and it turned out to be, well, not so good (I think it was around $15-17/hr.) SO not worth all the hassle..........never again will I complain about the hourly wage system!

Specializes in Med surg, cardiac, case management.

Good story Marla, I'm glad you got out of there and into something better.

Patient contact really matters.

u are such great and brave that worth our proud !

i will give my best wishes to u , faraway but true friend !

Thank you for your post. It showed me that the path you sometimes choose isn't always the one you should be on. Of course the grass always looks greener on the other side. I recently just turned down an offer to be a Nurse Manager for our unit with higher salaried pay. I had concerns about being oncall 24 /7. The DON and ADON told me with straight faces that they hardly ever got paged. They told me that in the months that they had the beepers it rarely went off. I said no. Their beepers don't go off because they turn them off and their cell phone mailboxes were full. The new nurse manager started and I see her filling in on almost all shifts that are short. Not too much managing. I guess she can't be on call if she's already working.

Good luck with your future in NURSING!

Specializes in ED, ICU, PSYCH, PP, CEN.

There is no shame in being a bedside nurse

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
There is no shame in being a bedside nurse

None at all.

It's our culture that's got it all wrong. Society tends to look down on people who actually work for a living, while glorifying those who don't really "produce" anything. You know it's true; just compare the earnings of entertainers, athletes, health-insurance company CEOs and so on with those of firefighters, janitors, teachers, factory workers.........and nurses!:cool:

But it's all good......I'm certainly not wondering where my family's next meal is coming from, which is much more than a lot of people can say these days. We are blessed indeed. :heartbeat

Specializes in Psychiatric, MICA.

Awesome.

D