Hanging It Up

Here are some thoughts on what goes into the decision to leave nursing and go in a completely different direction late in life: the hopes, the dreams, the disappointments, the fears.....and the relief that comes with hanging up the stethoscope for good. Nurses Retired Article

It seems almost unreal: in six days, I will don my scrubs, put my name badge on, and go to work at the nursing home like I have almost every weekend since last July. I will pass meds, listen to hearts and lungs, change a dressing or two, greet visitors, answer questions, and do admission assessments in much the same manner as I have for the past sixteen-and-a-half years.

Only this time, it will be for the last time.

After many months of having one foot firmly planted in nursing and the other foot testing the waters outside of it, my career as an active, working nurse will be over as of next Sunday. It's actually been over for some time; I simply wasn't quite ready to acknowledge the fact until a month ago, when I looked at my December schedule and saw that I'd been scheduled for only four shifts all month. The reasons for it are many and have no place in this discussion; suffice it to say that the reduction in hours told me everything I needed to know about where I stand in clinical nursing.

They say everything happens for a reason. Just as I was surrendering to the inevitability of going back to Vocational Rehab and begging to be retrained for something that didn't require me to ask customers if they wanted ketchup or fry sauce, I got the call offering me the position that had literally been my dream job for years.

First reaction: That call did NOT just happen.....did it? Second reaction: Omigosh, what do I do now that I'm not the loser I thought I was? You see, when I lost my assisted-living management job last spring, I'd become convinced that I was branded and would never again hold any position of consequence, in nursing or anywhere else. And when I tried to recreate the magic I'd made the first time I worked at this LTC, I crashed and burned, disappointing not only my superiors and co-workers, but myself. That's when I knew it was the end of the line for me as a nurse, and I could almost feel my entire life beginning to unravel.

No one starts out in nursing with the idea of being satisfied with mediocrity. We don't throw ourselves against a wall every day for decades just because we want a paycheck. It's when years of physical and psychological stress wear us down to the point where we can no longer perform to our own standards that we lose what made us good nurses in the first place, and burnout occurs. I'd been through it before; it had always been temporary, though, and I'd always been able to recover and come back stronger than before.

Not this time. I will be 55 in a few weeks; I'm tired, and I've run my course, though that has less to do with aging than with mileage. Some nurses can maintain the required level of intensity in their 70s, while others should've gotten out in their 50s or even their 40s. When I put my bandage scissors and hemostats away next Sunday, when I turn in my badge and collect my final paycheck, the sigh of relief will probably be audible in every corner of the nation. This career has been good to me in many ways, but it's nearly destroyed me in other respects and I am ready to be done.

I'm just thankful that there's a second act for this "semi-retired" nurse. I'll keep my license active because I'm a specialist in this position and need the credentials, but there will be no more shifts, no more running the floor with my hair on fire, no more 24/7 responsibility for too many residents with too many care needs. I can't work like that anymore. I can't LIVE like that anymore.

Even if something were to go haywire with this new job, my days as an RN in any vital capacity are over. And as with every other decision I've made at gut level, I'll never regret this one. I may wish I could still nurse the way I used to, but I can't, and walking away is the best gift I could have given myself---and my patients---this Christmas.

Specializes in LTC, Agency, HHC.
Now it's totally official. :) Today I received my notification that I have been selected for the position of Client Care Surveyor, what my job classification and salary are, and when I am to report for work. I feel like an 18-year-old who just got a new car and a scholarship to Harvard. I can't wait to get started!

Awesome!! I can't wait to hear your surveyor stories!!

i couldn't be happier for you!! i can tell by your post that you have class, poise and professionalism!! i wish you well! i have no doubt you will be an asset in your new position!!

Congratulations! And good luck on your new journey. :up:

Congratulations! I've known many surveyors . . . they are nice folks! :)

Specializes in PACU, pre/postoperative, ortho.

Today's the day!! Good luck in your new adventure!!

I am jealous....it seems I have the same thoughts myself. Nursing is not what it used to be. After many years of doing something I once truly loved, I know dream of new avenues, things I can do AWAY from nursing. I am saddened, as I always thought there would be nothing else. But doing more with so much less, knowing that money, not patient care, is the priority, I just don't know that I can go much farther. I was not trained to ever think that spending a few extra minutes consoling a family, a patient, or helping a fellow co-worker with a fall at the change of shifts was wrong. I am tired of being frustrated, feeling guilty because I can't offer snacks or extra lip balm because it is "not in the budget", or not being able to offer coffee to a family while they are keeping vigil at a dying resident's bedside because again, the kitchen is locked tight to safeguard the "budget". I am tired of too many chiefs and not enough Indians. How sad our industry has become. Kudos to you for taking the plunge!! I wish you all the luck in the world!!

Specializes in med surg.

I also have been a nurse for 39 years and have recently left the bedside for an educator position. The pay is not as good but my body was starting to tell me that 39 years of lifting, tugging and bending was taking its toll. The staffing issues and all the paperwork now is exhausting as well as the fact that many new grads do not want to work. I worry about health insurance and keeping my position but am hopeful.

Congats to you viva!

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

Well, today was the day.....I am now officially retired from clinical nursing. As I passed my meds, performed the usual G-tube rituals and did treatments, I felt a bit wistful because I knew I was doing them for the last time; but honestly, my most prominent emotion is relief.

I should've done this a couple of years ago......and probably before that. Although I didn't know it at the time, I was tapped out long before I made this last ill-fated attempt at floor nursing, which turned out to be a blessing in disguise because it forced me to understand that I really WAS done. As many of you know, I'd toyed with the idea of leaving nursing for some time, but it wasn't until this past summer that it became crystal clear that I had no choice in the matter---it was time for me to go.

And I won't be back. I hope and pray that this new job will be the one I stick with until full retirement age, but even if it's not, I know I'll find something else to do. One of the more amazing things that's happened in the past few months is learning that I can push myself beyond some of my limitations and take risks I was too afraid to take even a short while ago; however, that works only if those risks are calculated, and with help I've come to recognize which are too dangerous to attempt.

Remaining in clinical nursing is one of them. Yesterday I almost committed a serious med error when I got distracted by too much noise and activity in the hall. Yes, every nurse makes mistakes and escapes making many more, but this was another time when only the grace of God and one more quick glance back at the MARs saved both my patient and me from disaster. Needless to say, that scared the daylights out of me---even today, it stilldoes---and only reinforced the conviction that I've done the right thing by leaving before my luck runs out.

It's good that this part of my career is over. I've no doubt that I'll miss it---at least a little---but not enough to return for an encore even if something were to go sideways during my second act.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.

Congrats Viva...your career is NOT over, your just using your nursing practice in a MUCH different way...nurse ON my nursing sister!!! :cheeky:

I'm feeling kind of in a silly lighthearted mode...I'm going for a job interview tomorrow, so I'm nervous and excited; still carving out my niche in nursing...even if with a sieve and colander and will shape it in a bowl. ;)

But I digress-enjoy your new semi retirement plan! :up:

The "dark side" is not so bad. I left clinical nursing 11 years ago to become a surveyor and have loved every minute of it.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
The "dark side" is not so bad. I left clinical nursing 11 years ago to become a surveyor and have loved every minute of it.

That's great to hear! I've really got a good feeling about this---it's the job I've wanted for years, and I think I'll do well. For the first time ever, I'm more excited than nervous about starting a new position and as the date approaches, the anticipation gets more intense. :D

You will find your niche. You already know the f-tags and state regs. You are still a nurse. Good luck!