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 Psych.
No, it's not you, it's the system that's insane.

I've pretty much decided that the only way to save our profession from the empty suits that have turned nursing into a "customer-service" enterprise and the receiving of health care into a day at Wally World, is to stand up together and say "ENOUGH!". We used to be authority figures---enforcers of the physician's orders, if nothing else---and now we're regarded as little more than glorified waitresses/secretaries/housekeepers/gofers. I'm sorry, but I didn't go through all those years of college just to become a Stepford drone with a script: "Is there anything else I can do for you? I have the time" :barf01:

VivaLasViejas - Love your moniker! And just wanted to share a "Stepford drone with a script" story. Last year as a student nurse, I did my OB rotation at this hospital where every morning as the RNs went around assessing their patients, they were required to ask them. "What is your goal for the day?" I never saw a single client NOT look at the nurse like he/she was NUTS.

Specializes in Management, Emergency, Psych, Med Surg.

I am very used and I feel like I have been thrown out with the bath water. If you read my profile you will see that I have a lot of experience and I feel that I have a lot to offer my organization. We have a new nursing director and she has all these new projects and teams going. We are not doing anything new or anyting that had not been done before. When I have tried to politely contribute to the conversations, she cuts me off at the knees. I have offered to give inservices on various topics and to participate on the hospital safety committee, but no one seems to be interested in this. I am told by almost everyone in the facility, from other departments, physicians, etc that I am one of the strongest nurses there. My manager told me just last week that if she had an emergency, there is no other person that she would want there. I understand politically correct. I know how to deal with problems and keep my stress under control. I know how to deal with almost every situation that comes up because I have seen it before. I can stay calm in an emergency. But I feel very defeated. I feel like, for the first time in my life that my experience and my knowledge are of no use or interest to my organization and I am being treated like a new charge nurse with no management experience. I am very defeated and demoralized. I did not want to have my career end on this note.

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

I'm sorry to hear that. It must be supremely frustrating to have someone walk in off the street with a batch of "new" ideas that aren't new at all, and to be forced to deal with yet another know-it-all who thinks she wrote the book on nursing.

You're not that much older than I am......you still have plenty to offer, and many years of useful work life left. Don't let this manager force you out of your career if you're not ready to end it!

Specializes in psychiatric, UR analyst, fraud, DME,MedB.
I am very used and I feel like I have been thrown out with the bath water. If you read my profile you will see that I have a lot of experience and I feel that I have a lot to offer my organization. We have a new nursing director and she has all these new projects and teams going. We are not doing anything new or anyting that had not been done before. When I have tried to politely contribute to the conversations, she cuts me off at the knees. I have offered to give inservices on various topics and to participate on the hospital safety committee, but no one seems to be interested in this. I am told by almost everyone in the facility, from other departments, physicians, etc that I am one of the strongest nurses there. My manager told me just last week that if she had an emergency, there is no other person that she would want there. I understand politically correct. I know how to deal with problems and keep my stress under control. I know how to deal with almost every situation that comes up because I have seen it before. I can stay calm in an emergency. But I feel very defeated. I feel like, for the first time in my life that my experience and my knowledge are of no use or interest to my organization and I am being treated like a new charge nurse with no management experience. I am very defeated and demoralized. I did not want to have my career end on this note.

:cool:There is nothing wrong w/ you, it is POLITICS ! Unfortunately , this is quite common in hospital administrations , and corporates, who have their pet candidates and "chosen" ones to take positions . This new director is very much threatened by your experience, possibley because hers is inferior to yours. I am mot trying to ignite an already burning fire here, but sadly this is a fact. Just continue to do your good job , and excel in whatever you are doing, and stay away from politics. Protect yourself and exit from the " eat your own young" scenario. Let the new director create her own hell ..........she will if that is her attitude towards you....obviously her behaviore reveals an insecurity, or she will not cut you off from your knees. A good leader listens, not compete! :nurse::redbeathe

Specializes in psychiatric, UR analyst, fraud, DME,MedB.

This is good to know that this is considered a common occurence , although not a welcome one. It is amazing how we make things personal . For example in an interview....You know you can do the job , and anything else new can be learned....but some of these people think they are interviewing you for President of the US, or something. I know that people carry their baggages heavily on their shoulder , including me, but I make it an effort to be aware as to why and how I am reacting. It sure would be nice if people can put down these baggages so they can do their jobs better and deal w/ people more effectively ?:nurse:

We are "nurses"...professional, intelligent and very much neccessary in health care. I am proud to be one of you and proud of ALL of you . We have a difficult profession but we are CAPABLE . There are not many outside our profession who would CHOOSE to do what we do day in and day out. We certainly do not make our "fortunes" in this field. We pay our dues far more than what we earn. We are REWARDED in ways beyond the dollar. We are presence in time of need for our patients and their families. We place ourselves in the center of the pain and sorrow that illness brings and we offer to carry a bit of that burden for those we care for. We utilize our knowledge and experience to fine tune a plan of care that offers hope. Be PROUD of yourselves my fellow nurses !! I am PROUD to be one of you...

Specializes in psychiatric, UR analyst, fraud, DME,MedB.

Wow, you define a current happenings all over the country ... countless people losing their jobs and houses. Makes me really look and face reality. Nowadays people are less kinder, America has become a place for extremely greedy capitalism ( look at enron , aig , the car bailouts and do not forget wall street who pulls the puppet strings. I am for capitalism , as long as it benefits the people , and not ruin them for the corporates bottomless hunger for profits. It makes me think ( and please do not panic) that there must be a reason why socialism thrived in another countries.......well I can make a guess .......probably have to ..... to save the working class, or they will become a beast of burden , they work but they can not even support themselves and their families anymore because of unfair tax delegations ( the working class is supporting the very rich and the poor) , so eventually this class will cease to exist, and who is going to support the greedy rich people and the real needy people? Nobody !!!!!

Hence socialism may exist very easily in this kind of environment...it is inevitable ---unless we all help w/ the reforms that is ongoing now in the health system and the financial system.

and a word w/ those ED...they will get their time and they too will be fired , because they did not jump high enough!!! The sad part ???? these business people are honing in on these elderly facilities because they can make a fast buck ???? I have heard enough w/ LTC , that there is some understaffing. Ex. How in heavens name can you keep up as to what is going on w/ your patients if you have a hundred of them ???????? Could somebody tell me please?????

As a nurse, I have never wanted to be in a supervisory postion. Some people don't understand that, but all I have ever wanted to do was bedside, hands on nursing. Good for you for following your heart! I assumed pyramid thing had something to do with cheerleading! If you never call in sick, I am sure your co workers understand when you have a family emergency. No guilt :)

This could have been written by me...several years ago. After graduation from RN school, I worked on Med-Surg, ER, ICU and for a couple of physicians offices. I had worked 20 years as a charge nurse in a 312 bed long term care facility before becoming an RN, so I returned as the 3-11 Nursing Supervisor. I was there a little over five years, when I decided I needed to be at home in the evenings. My youngest son was still in school and I felt I should be at home. So, without any experience I accepted a position as the Clinical Director for a brand new agency.

I was in this position for almost ten years, when my son was killed in a shooting accident. The agency had become like my "baby" in a way. I was there when we got our first patient. I acted as the CNA until we built up a patient base to hire one, in addition to doing all of the nursing duties and the directors duties. I was also on call 24/7/365. The agency was Medicare deficiency free the entire time I was there. After I lost my son, it was just too much being there. Every time the phone rang or the door opened I thought it may be him calling or coming to see me. I left and held several other director positions in other agencies. I finally felt like I found THE one where I could stay until I retired, but the owner let me go and did away with my position.

After that, I went to another agency out of town, not in a director position, but as the visiting home health nurse. I was in my late 50's and was unsure I was physically able to do it. But I was able to see my patients. I met some of the loveliest, nicest people and just fell in love with all of them.

i had to go out on disability/retirement due to a diagnosis of Mysthenia Gravis. But I miss seeing my patients more than I ever thought I would. I feel like I still have a lot of nursing knowledge to impart to others, I just can't do a lot of ambulating or working an 40 hour shift. Anyone know how I may be able to use this to supplement my disability, please let me know. I've been in nursing 40+ years.

This is truly an amazing article and I am so thrilled that you have shared it. I became a nurse in my 50's and now finishing up my Master degree in Nursing Education at 65. I also fell in love with long-term care and spent many years there. I was a unit manager for two large long-term care facilities and I loved the job. However, the hours I had to work to meet the position requirements resulted in my practically living at the job and began to affect my health. The money wasn't worth the stress and when someone called off and a replacement could not be found I ended up on the cart as a floor nurse until a replacement was found. Then when a replacement was found, I would begin my own job. No more management jobs for me. I am in my last class as I write this for my Masters and then I will teach nursing students. There are many things that I have learned through the years as well as what you have shared that I will be sharing with my nursing students. Thank you so much for sharing your story as you have helped so many nurses see the light.

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

Thank you! I wrote this several years ago and had actually forgotten about it since I've moved on and in fact have retired. (To be honest, I'm disabled but I prefer to call it "retirement".) I appreciate your comments. :yes: