Quitting nursing school?

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I am at the point where I am truly considering quitting nursing school. I love helping and taking care of others, but I do not feel I am enjoying what I am doing. I've worked so hard to get here, but I just feel so miserable and depressed. I don't feel competent, lack confidence in my skills, I'm always afraid to speak up and participate in class/clinical, and I'm always thinking I am going to make a mistake. I am always anxious so I dread patient interaction sometimes, and my clinical instructor makes me feel I am not doing what I am supposed to do even when I truly am trying. I have been feeling so down lately and lost my motivation, and I failed my first Med/Surg exam. A classmate always asks me if I am okay and I put on a smile and say I am. I keep hoping something will click and I will snap out of this funk, but each day I feel worse. I was thinking of changing my major, but not sure what else to do at this point. I am losing sleep, developing poor eating habits, and just feel so crappy. I think a career indirectly helping patients may be better for me, but I am so afraid to take that step. I know I will disappoint so many people, especially family. I'm also afraid that I will drop out of nursing school and have so much regret. I read so many stories and posts about people hating nursing and wanting out. The stress, the demand, the lack of resources and staff, the overwhelming documentation just to save the facilities a**. I try and picture where I see myself working after graduating, and which area of nursing will be least stressful but still allow me to care for patients, but I haven't even graduated yet. Instead, I am here in my second semester thinking of all the ways I dislike what I am doing and my performance overall. I started counseling on campus, but it has been ineffective thus far. I wish to reach out to one of my professors, but I feel they may send me to the chairperson of the program or something for seeking advice and in turn, dismiss me from the program.

Am I the only student who feels this way? How can I get my motivation back? Is it my lack of confidence preventing me from succeeding, or is this profession just not right for me? Has anyone else considered changing their major?

Don't look for a spark in nursing or any other line of work. If a spark ignites, great, go for it. But you will be more pragmatic if you see yourself 32 years from now seeking employment because you need to house, feed, and clothe a family or yourself. Which profession or trade is more likely to provide you the means to buy food and pay rent or a mortgage? That is the 'spark' you should keep foremost in your mind. Give yourself the option to obtain a nursing license and try it out. If it does not work out, you can place your license into an inactive status and seek another line of work, knowing that you have a fallback should circumstances ever change.

I was thinking of that, but i am having such a hard time changing my attitude right now. I need to get it together or I won't even be able to ever obtain the license. I feel if I'm not happy I won't even make it through nursing school to see what the other areas are like. Ugh

Specializes in Psych, Corrections, Med-Surg, Ambulatory.
. It's just so hard to come to terms with how I feel. I can't stop thinking about what others will say about me and what I decide. And i don't want to regret the decision. I would love to get into the OR one day and that is just about it. I don't enjoy bedside during clinical and dont see myself enjoying it as an RN. But i can't get to the OR w/o getting through school and currently I am disliking it each day. I have been told stick it out there are so many different avenues in nursing and that I don't have to work directly with pts, and the pay blah blah blah. I don't give two craps about the pay. I genuinely care about people and want to help them in some way. I want to be hands on. I don't want to just give medications, and document document document. I am unhappy and it shows. My bf says you don't have to love what you are doing and at times you'll be unhappy but don't be a quitter. He makes me feel like crap that I am throwing away an opportunity with 2 years left.

Please don't force yourself to stick with something you hate every minute of. If you're pretty sure this is just a hump you have to get over, that's one thing. But if it's truly sucking for you then forget what everyone else is saying. You have to listen to your gut and do what's right for you.

You don't have to be a nurse to work in the OR. You can be an OR tech. It might be worth looking into. If your boyfriend won't support you in doing what's right for you, well that's another matter.

Specializes in public health, women's health, reproductive health.
Is there any student who is thinking of changing their major? Are there any nurses here who thought of changing their major, continued in the program, and ended up hating or loving the profession? Please share!

I disliked nursing school. I kept a journal and I sometimes go back and read it and yeah, it was pretty bad. I did very well as far as grades were concerned but emotionally, I wasn't doing so well. My whole life was nursing school and I studied constantly. I pretty much disliked every semester and just counted down the days until it was all over. I had the toughest clinical instructors. I was so happy when I graduated and passed NCLEX. I thought the hardest part was behind me. Boy, was I wrong, lol. My first job at as a hospital floor nurse was much, much worse than nursing school could ever be. I was in a dark place and I really started to regret that I ever went to nursing school. Fast forward to today, I feel quite the opposite. I think going to nursing school was one of the best things I ever did. I found my niche eventually and I love being a nurse. I'm so glad I did not give up in school or on this profession. I type all this to say just because you dislike nursing school does not necessarily mean you'll dislike being a nurse. And if you dislike your first job, that doesn't mean you'll never find a place as a nurse. I can't tell you what will happen with you in the future. It might very well be that nursing is not for you. The question is do you want to hang in there and see what happens? How important is it to you? Try to figure out if this is a phase you are going through or you genuinely believe you've made a mistake with your major and are not interested in being a nurse anymore. If that is the case, you have to do what is right for you and not be concerned what others think. They don't have to live your life.

Please don't force yourself to stick with something you hate every minute of. If you're pretty sure this is just a hump you have to get over, that's one thing. But if it's truly sucking for you then forget what everyone else is saying. You have to listen to your gut and do what's right for you.

You don't have to be a nurse to work in the OR. You can be an OR tech. It might be worth looking into. If your boyfriend won't support you in doing what's right for you, well that's another matter.

My boyfriend has been helping support me financially while I go to school, so he is feeling he is at a loss. At the end of the day, he supports me, but will refuse to help me financially if I change my major. I have looked into surgical tech, but it is taking a step backwards. Limited role and opportunity within that role. I know someone personally who started as a surgical tech, and continued her education and became an OR nurse and loves it.

I disliked nursing school. I kept a journal and I sometimes go back and read it and yeah, it was pretty bad. I did very well as far as grades were concerned but emotionally, I wasn't doing so well. My whole life was nursing school and I studied constantly. I pretty much disliked every semester and just counted down the days until it was all over. I had the toughest clinical instructors. I was so happy when I graduated and passed NCLEX. I thought the hardest part was behind me. Boy, was I wrong, lol. My first job at as a hospital floor nurse was much, much worse than nursing school could ever be. I was in a dark place and I really started to regret that I ever went to nursing school. Fast forward to today, I feel quite the opposite. I think going to nursing school was one of the best things I ever did. I found my niche eventually and I love being a nurse. I'm so glad I did not give up in school or on this profession. I type all this to say just because you dislike nursing school does not necessarily mean you'll dislike being a nurse. And if you dislike your first job, that doesn't mean you'll never find a place as a nurse. I can't tell you what will happen with you in the future. It might very well be that nursing is not for you. The question is do you want to hang in there and see what happens? How important is it to you? Try to figure out if this is a phase you are going through or you genuinely believe you've made a mistake with your major and are not interested in being a nurse anymore. If that is the case, you have to do what is right for you and not be concerned what others think. They don't have to live your life.

Thank you so much for this. A part of me wants to get through this and shake these feelings knowing I do want this. Then the part of me isn't happy where I am right now. I'm shy, quiet, introverted, and like to focus on one task at a time and NS doesn't work that way. I'm pushed into a place that makes me feel uncomfortable and maybe that's why I don't enjoy school right now. Then I see what floor nursing is like and I don't enjoy that either like during clinical. I want to get to my ultimate goal in nursing in the OR, and it is important to me. It's important for myself, my partner, and my family. But it's like goodness I have to push through this just to get my destination. I can't stop thinking gosh I will have two more years of feeling like this in school. And I've read many people hating their nursing jobs. I can see myself now crying over everything. I need to grow a pair :( I have such a hard time seeing pts in constant pain and at their worst. In the OR, that's a different story. They're awake for a short period of time, then you get to work and do what needs to be done for the pt.

And forget about the reflective journals for clinical. I tend to be too honest with how I feel with my performance which i think makes me look bad.

Clinicals in nursing school will include lots of things that have little resemblance to what you'll do in the OR. If you know the OR is where you want to be, you might just have to make the best of it until you can get in the OR.

Also, I told one of my professors I wasn't sure I wanted yo be a nurse. Oh boy! That was a mistake!! She was one of those old school nurses who thought you were born to be a nurse or you shouldn't be a nurse. Any doubt about the path was taken as a personal insult. It was not pretty. She was my clinical instructor, so it made a bad situation (I was awful in clinicals) much, much worse.

Specializes in critical care, ER,ICU, CVSURG, CCU.

Omg, a crusty ole bat awaken after midnight

SO HERE IT GOES

SOME SPECIAL SNOWFLAKES MELT IN THE SUMMER

Clinicals in nursing school will include lots of things that have little resemblance to what you'll do in the OR. If you know the OR is where you want to be, you might just have to make the best of it until you can get in the OR.

Also, I told one of my professors I wasn't sure I wanted yo be a nurse. Oh boy! That was a mistake!! She was one of those old school nurses who thought you were born to be a nurse or you shouldn't be a nurse. Any doubt about the path was taken as a personal insult. It was not pretty. She was my clinical instructor, so it made a bad situation (I was awful in clinicals) much, much worse.

I can only imagine! That's the reason I haven't opened up about this to one of my instructors. Instead, I save it for my ineffective counselor. I keep thinking an instructor will tell me I need to drop, when I would hope one would say... this its normal, things get better, don't give up.

Specializes in UR/PA, Hematology/Oncology, Med Surg, Psych.

Don't look at it as two more years, look at it as probably much longer than that. OR jobs hardly ever just show up for new graduates, so it most likely will take time to get to that OR position. You quite possibly will have to work as a floor nurse before even being considered eligible to transfer. If you don't like patient care, I would strongly recommend looking at another major. Hands-off patient care jobs are not easy to find or to get, especially as a new grad. How do think you'll be able to avoid direct care nursing for the rest of your life?

You are not alone! I did poorly on my first Med-Surg tests and cried almost everyday for about a month because I thought I wasn't cut out for it. I felt so awkward and impersonable in clinicals, and I didn't feel like I was I had it in me. I still struggled afterwards, but afterwards I had the mentality that, "if I can pass Med-Surg, I can finish the rest of nursing school." I also liked my community health rotation a lot more than the ones at the hospital (even though I currently am a floor nurse).

I think, if you think you can do it, it'll be worth finishing out your degree. Even if you don't ultimately end up going into nursing, you'll still have a Bachelor's in a healthcare field, which will help you find a job etc. I have a few friends from nursing school who decided that becoming a nurse wasn't for them and went into something completely different (teaching, healthcare consulting, etc). I also met some girl in an interview awhile back who got her BSN, went to do something else (business I think?), then decided to try nursing again so she took her boards and started looking for jobs. Regardless I hope you figure out what you're looking for, and I'm all ears too if you need someone to talk to! :)

Specializes in Psych (25 years), Medical (15 years).

Arguably, MSTLUV, Nursing is a calling. It was, and is, for me.

I am a Nurse 24 hours a day. If I had not had the calling, I could not have worked in the Nursing field for as long as I have. I don't have a lot of patience and I'm easily bored. Nursing continues to inspire me to be patient and has kept me interested for years and years.

If I didn't have the calling, I would not have stayed in Nursing and at least have been an adequate Nurse. There are Nurses who have become and stayed in the Nursing field who were not inspired by being a caregiver, and to put it politely, they stink. They are miserable and they make everyone around them miserable.

IMHO: Find a career that you will be at least able to tolerate for the rest of your life.

Good luck in your endeavor and my very best to you, MSTLUV.

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