Finally Leaving Nursing...For Good!

Nurses General Nursing

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Well, I did it. I turned in my two weeks notice. I'm finally leaving the nursing profession, for good. I had planned to do this months ago, but I decided to persevere a few more months to see if my opinion of nursing changed. It has not. These last few months fully confirmed for me that nursing is not where I belong in healthcare. I applied, interviewed and shadowed in various other nursing specialties, including ICU, outpatient clinics, case management, oncology/hospice, dialysis, and even outpatient psych, and none of these were right for me. I thought my problem with nursing had more to do with my specialty (cardiac step-down) being the wrong fit for me, but now I know that I honestly do not want to be a nurse, at all.

Like most nurses, I dislike the short staffing, high nurse to patient ratios, the demanding families with their unrealistic expectations, needy, rude, and manipulative patients, patient satisfaction surveys, the increasing demands being placed on nurses, healthcare politics and drama, and so on. I know I'm not alone on this. But I dislike the basic elements of nursing, I don't like my role in healthcare with so much responsibility and so little power.

Surprisingly, I don't mind patient care. I have no problem cleaning up a patient, helping them to the bathroom, feeding them, or cutting a little old lady's food for her. I have no problem doing this. I also like collaborating with MDs and NPs (well, most of them), I enjoy learning from them and trying to advocate for my patients. I have been told I do very well with critical thinking and problem solving. I don't mind charting. I absolutely love my dementia patients. These are the few positives I have with nursing.

Now on to the negatives.

My biggest issue in nursing is resuscitating a terminally ill patient, not because it is what the patient wants (I would not have a problem with the patient's own decision), but because the family is selfish, unrealistic, and refuses to let go. I have had several instances where a patient in a persistent vegetative state, with a trach, peg tube, and no quality of life is kept full code by family, even though the patient is in that state because family insisted that "everything be done." :banghead: I have had several patients who died peacefully, were DNR, but family insisted that we "do everything" and we had to. I have serious moral and ethical issues with this.

On a smaller note, I'm a perfectionist, leaving work undone is extremely difficult for me. I dislike the routine of passing medications over and over again; how impossible getting everything done feels with 6 high acuity patient and the many issues and problems that come up; running around the entire shift with very little food and rarely my full 30 min break (considering that I've lost 10 lb since becoming a nurse, and I was underweight to begin with). Being genuinely uninterested in what I'm doing/learning as a nurse, while also feeling super stressed and overwhelmed. The lack of hard science in nursing also contributes to my lack of interest.

I also cannot stand dealing with constant issues for 12 hrs and "customer complaints" among the thousands of other things I need to do. I honestly dislike most of my patients (however, I never let this show). I absolutely hate talking with family members. I hate small talk with patients and dealing with patient/family drama. I hate getting blamed for everything (even if I have no control over it) and feeling like a human punching bag. I hate that I feel no connection or sympathy for 99% of my patients, and that nursing has made me see the worst in people. I always feel frustrated and angry. Every minute of my shift I hate it, and then I dread going back to work on my days off. Since becoming a nurse, I feel like I haven't been able to enjoy life anymore due to how much nursing drained me. After being diagnosed with anxiety/depression about 2 month ago (I was crying every day and getting to the point where I thought dying would be a relief - thankfully that has passed and is under control now), I realized I didn't want to live my life like this anymore, and for my physical and mental well-being, leaving nursing would be the best solution.

Since I've "officially" made the decision to leave nursing, I have felt better than I have in a long time. I feel alive again, like a weight has been lifted off my chest and I can finally breathe. I will always remember and value what nursing has taught me, but I sincerely believe that I am one of those people who is just not right for nursing. It does not mesh well with my personality, interests, and especially not my mental/physical health. I have the highest respect for nurses. Everyday, you are able to do what I cannot. I felt like a failure and a horrible nurse for a long time because of this, but I came to realize that it is best for myself (and my patients), if I find something else to do. I also realized that there is no shame that nursing is not right for me, as long as I did my best to take care of my patients, didn't let my disdain for nursing show, and continued to be a responsible and dependable employee while working as a nurse.

I'm going to be moving on to a new career, with no patient/family interaction and way more science involved (Masters in Biomedical Engineering). I'll still be around on allnurses because, well, I love you guys! :)

*Way Too Long to Read: I'm leaving nursing, it wasn't for me at all. I'll still be around. Nurses are awesome, thank you for all you do!!*

Good luck on your new career!

Although I admit your post made me nervous. I have been an LPN for 8 years and will graduate with my RN in April. After working in LTC in the first few years of my LPN career, I took a year off because I had gotten to the point where you are at now and just stayed home with my kids for some time. I went back but into ambulatory care and found my niche in occupational health for some time. I am struggling if I should get a hospital job after graduation (I originally went back to school because I wanted to work in acute care) or return to occupational health. I love occ health, I can be independent in it, rarely do you work holidays and weekends, and it allows me flexibility with 3 small kids plus it pays really well. But I wonder if I will regret not doing acute care.

I will be 30 in a few months and just want to start a career and stick with it but am afraid going to the hospital will burn me out like LTC did. I know this is your post but do you have insight/advice for me after going through your own experience? I usually am a person who likes plans so it's been stressful not knowing what job I will be looking for a few months time.

Good luck on your new career!

Although I admit your post made me nervous. I have been an LPN for 8 years and will graduate with my RN in April. After working in LTC in the first few years of my LPN career, I took a year off because I had gotten to the point where you are at now and just stayed home with my kids for some time. I went back but into ambulatory care and found my niche in occupational health for some time. I am struggling if I should get a hospital job after graduation (I originally went back to school because I wanted to work in acute care) or return to occupational health. I love occ health, I can be independent in it, rarely do you work holidays and weekends, and it allows me flexibility with 3 small kids plus it pays really well. But I wonder if I will regret not doing acute care.

I will be 30 in a few months and just want to start a career and stick with it but am afraid going to the hospital will burn me out like LTC did. I know this is your post but do you have insight/advice for me after going through your own experience? I usually am a person who likes plans so it's been stressful not knowing what job I will be looking for a few months time.

I'm sorry my post made you nervous! I will try my best to give some advice based on my own experience. If LTC burned you out, and you're afraid that acute care will as well, then I think you should listen to that feeling you have. In your RN program, have you had the opportunity to shadow a nurse on an acute care floor? If so, what did you think of it? You love occupational health, and if you can work there once you're an RN, that sounds great. Occupational health can be a hard specialty to break into, but it sounds like you already have your foot in the door, which is awesome! Personally, I don't think acute care or the hospital is as much as they make it out to be in nursing school. I wouldn't risk the potential for burnout since you already know what you want to do. Everyone is different, and some people love acute care, others do not, and I think you should do what makes you happy and allows you to spend time with your family. If you wanted to work in the hospital eventually, maybe you could do occupational health for a hospital at some point in your career. Best of luck to you!

Title: Leaving Nursing.

Best wishes on your future career. Life is short, so you owe it to yourself to be happy with yourself and career. I am a nurse, but not working in that capacity. I chose a few years back to work on my other healthcare field. I am currently working as a traveler in different parts of the country. I am happier and healthier now then when I did bedside nursing. I hope that I can use my nursing knowledge down the road. Perhaps upon retirement.

I'm sorry my post made you nervous! I will try my best to give some advice based on my own experience. If LTC burned you out, and you're afraid that acute care will as well, then I think you should listen to that feeling you have. In your RN program, have you had the opportunity to shadow a nurse on an acute care floor? If so, what did you think of it? You love occupational health, and if you can work there once you're an RN, that sounds great. Occupational health can be a hard specialty to break into, but it sounds like you already have your foot in the door, which is awesome! Personally, I don't think acute care or the hospital is as much as they make it out to be in nursing school. I wouldn't risk the potential for burnout since you already know what you want to do. Everyone is different, and some people love acute care, others do not, and I think you should do what makes you happy and allows you to spend time with your family. If you wanted to work in the hospital eventually, maybe you could do occupational health for a hospital at some point in your career. Best of luck to you!

I am actually glad you posted your experience, even if it made me weary. I did the majority of my clinical on a step down telemetry floor, this where I actually started to become doubtful about acute care. They had 5 patients each, I assumed that 5 (as opposed to the 30 I had in LTC) would be easy peasy but it was clear that even their senior nurses were overwhelmed and exhausted. They were thrilled they had us students on the floor just so they had some help. I busted my butt during those clinicals, doing mainly patient care to free up the nurses. Even with our help, it was still....undoable it seemed.

My final clinical will be preceptorship, I will be in the ER which before has always been my nursing dream floor. I think my experience there will make this decision for me in the end because it will make or break my pie in the sky idea of what I thought working in a hospital was supposed to be. I like your idea of doing occ health for the hospital and am going to explore that further. Thank you for your response, it was very helpful!

I am actually glad you posted your experience, even if it made me weary. I did the majority of my clinical on a step down telemetry floor, this where I actually started to become doubtful about acute care. They had 5 patients each, I assumed that 5 (as opposed to the 30 I had in LTC) would be easy peasy but it was clear that even their senior nurses were overwhelmed and exhausted. They were thrilled they had us students on the floor just so they had some help. I busted my butt during those clinicals, doing mainly patient care to free up the nurses. Even with our help, it was still....undoable it seemed.

My final clinical will be preceptorship, I will be in the ER which before has always been my nursing dream floor. I think my experience there will make this decision for me in the end because it will make or break my pie in the sky idea of what I thought working in a hospital was supposed to be. I like your idea of doing occ health for the hospital and am going to explore that further. Thank you for your response, it was very helpful!

I'm glad I could help! I hope you have a great experience in the ER for your preceptorship! Best of luck with everything!

Specializes in Family Practice.

Wishing you the very best in your new chapter. It takes courage to admit your done but most of all you found another niche. :-):cool:

Specializes in LTC, SNF, Rehab, Hospice.

Good for you! Love your well thought out and put together vent!

Specializes in psych, dialysis, LTC, sub acute rehab, hospice.

Best wishes to you, Cocoa Puff. I think many nurses can relate to your frustrations, especially the unrealistic and sometimes dangerous expectations. Having anxiety and depression over work is no way to live. Personally, I have changed jobs due to that very issue, and others. Take care and thank you for your honest disclosure. God bless.

Wishing the best to you, I'm sure you will be very successful on your next endeavor.

Specializes in Critical Care; Cardiac; Professional Development.

Wishing you all the best. You definitely are not alone in your struggles and frustrations with the profession and many of your complaints echo my own. I chose to stay closer to the bedside by getting into professional development, but now and then I still get nightmares about floor nursing.

May success and fulfillment find you.

Congratulations on making the decision to be happy. I am desperately trying to do the same. Good luck!!

Welcome to my world...Glad I am not alone! And neither are you, nor should you think that anything you did was your fault...Nursing is not fun, and I felt betrayed for the 5 long years I put in to earn my BSN from the largest medical center in the world, with honors, only to be dashed about as you described. Congratulations on your new endeavor; I wish you the very best for having the courage to speak out and be true to your obviously beautiful spirit.

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