Has Nursing Made You a Homebody?

Nurses Stress 101

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I currently have a sick animal at home...Him being sick has stressed me out a lot the past 24 hrs or so and that has led me to write this post. My husband has recently made remarks of how much more of a "homebody" I have become in the past few years (We've been together for a little over six years). I have noticed that, too. I feel like it started when I decided to go back to school and become a nurse. I did an accelerated 1 yr. BSN program at a tough and expensive private school. As mentioned in an earlier post, it was the most stressful time in my life and as menial as it may seem, the sudden sickness of my pet has brought up those feelings of stress again. Constant worry, a feeling deep in my stomach of utter pain. My pet is my baby. Nursing school was a similar stress because if you fail a test or you get below a certain percentage in a class, you were out. That was it. You had to wait a year to restart the program and I wasn't about to do that. I didn't have a year...my husband, then fiance had already established his career and was waiting on mine for financial reasons. He was very supportive and my super hero through school. Plus, we couldn't get married until we had money for the wedding that I wanted. I couldn't fail. I couldn't wait any longer. That gut wrenching feeling that I'm feeling today with my pet being sick, had me in it's grips the whole year of nursing school. It aged me 5 years at least. I didn't fail, thank God! But I did gain something else along with a degree...15lbs! I eventually lost the weight or most of it. I'd never really experienced stress like this before and before school, I liked to go and go. Always doing something. Outgoing for the most part and had a good attitude about life. Then I became a nurse.

After school, I started working within four weeks after graduation. My job in the NICU was nothing like starting old jobs I had and they don't teach you about the NICU in school. I was fresh and scared out of my mind for the first.....well, I'm still scared on some admissions and I've been there a year on June 4th. The seasoned nurses would say, "It takes at least 2 yrs to feel like you have a grip on things." Jeeeez...They were right. On top of the stress of school and a new job I became less social. I hadn't really noticed it except maybe in the last year. I don't like to be around big groups of people. I'd much rather be in a one-on-one conversation when socializing. I'm ok at work. I can talk to co-workers or patients without hesitation, however some days I'm more social than others. It all depends on what I have going on in my life at the time. I also work third shift which means I don't function when people normally function. I have grown accustomed to peace and quiet, rather than drinking/dancing my stresses away at a bar with a whole bunch of drunk people and loud music. My stress makes me want to just simply be home, on my couch, watching Netflix or something. I would rather visit with my sister, who is my best friend, rather than my extended family. My husband is a cop and there is always some social gathering going on in the cop world. I've turned down invitations to those more than I have gone to them. Plus, my husband who is opposite of me in terms of social interaction, (he's a social butterfly) works a lot. We both work a lot to pay down our student loan debts because we wish to purchase a home in the next 2 years. I'd rather spend precious off time with him alone when we get the chance. I've also turned down invitations to family functions, with the exception of major holidays, because I've sometimes found social interaction mentally draining. Even just going out of the house to grocery shop alone or going to the mall alone is too much sometimes. I avoid it unless I absolutely have to. I think this job and the rigorous path to get there has changed me. I love the job...I can handle the job. I'd just rather be at home when I don't have to work. My husband and I are great together. He brings out the social butterfly in me at times. Deep down, it's still in there. When he's with me I don't care to go to the grocery or shopping. I like running errands with him or anyone for that matter, but not alone.

I'm still figuring this out. I'm puzzled. If it's me just getting older and my priorities have changed, maybe? I'm 28. Sometimes I feel being a nurse takes a lot out of me that I don't have much left, plus I'm tired a lot because of working 3rd shift. It doesn't really bother me that I'm a homebody, but I don't want it to change the relationships between my family members and I. My mother is a homebody.....uh oh. I could be turning into her! Which isn't necessarily a bad thing. I'd like insight on this if anyone has felt this way and you are a nurse or have a stressful job, I'd like to know. You may comment below if you feel you can relate. Thank you!

I'm going back to school part time and working part time. I am a full time mom, sister, aunt, girlfriend, and daughter. I do pediatric home care for medically intense kids and by the time I get home I am dragging myself up the stairs. I lost contact with people when I took the LPN program full time and I haven't had time to repair social contacts. I am 35 and I feel like I'm 50. I miss the old me. :(

I never had a social life in my life so I wouldn't know, never had a boyfriend. Nursing has made me more bitter lol

I am so thoroughly sick of people that I have to be alone after work.

I've always thought it was hereditary, but I'm sure dealing with the stupidity of people at work hasn't helped in my descent into hermitdom...

Specializes in Critical Care.

Sounds like a combination of stress, sleep deprivation, night shift and a little bit of depression. Nursing is very stressful and you are only in the first year of NICU. Eventually when you become more experienced the stress should be more manageable and if you could get a day shift position that would probably help as well. Not everyone can function well on third shift. It takes a toll.

I started to get like this in nursing SCHOOL.

I can totally relate to your entire post....i bet we would be really good friends, because I feel the exact same way and am in a similar situation! :) My fiance is a firefighter, and there is ALWAYS some sort of function going on. I know he is dissapointed, but I just don't want to go. I don't know if it is depression or just my personality, but I just don't have that much fun going out anymore. My dog is also currently sick. He is 13 and had a seizure Saturday night. They gave us Prednisone and said he probably has brain cancer. I feel sick about it. I lost my other dog three years ago, and still am not over it. Best wishes and hope your pet feels better. And yes, I think nursing has made me more introverted for whatever reason.

And it gets worse the older you get! At my age, my body really has aged. Before nursing, I worked in an office and had to "dress up." I wore the fashionable high heels with dresses and suits, so my feet and legs took a beating. Now nursing has pretty much "finished me off." I really need my "down time," too. But I am somewhat introverted anyway.

I bet your still pretty as a peach :)

Specializes in Pediatric Private Duty; Camp Nursing.

I think a lot of it has to do w the fact that you're in your late 20's and still adjusting to the arc between being a young, carefree "newbie" adult and settling down into the real, adult-life grind. It took me the better part of a decade to realize that the party was over (I was very social and spontaneous from high school until I started up w my dh when I was 24). I'd be home on Friday nights thinking, "Why aren't I out? I should be somewhere else!" when really if I did go out, it'd just be a bunch of silly drunk college students with whom I had nothing in common anyway. All my other friends were married too, most had kids (if you think you're a homebody now, wait until you're a parent!) I'm sure the stress and responsibility has a lot to do with it, but it's a phase of life that most everyone goes through anyway. It took me about 10 years to be comfortable in my own skin w being a married grown-up.

Just be who you are. Not who you were.

Specializes in Critical Care.

My withdrawal from others is kind of a coping mechanism for me. I'm being drained all day with needy, whiny, nasty behaviors... and it takes every ounce of energy and self control to remain calm and professional.

true statement!

on more than one occasion my husband has (nicely!) asked me to get him a drink, do this, please do that, and i just SNAP.

"you are able bodied, babe! you arent sick, do it yourself!"

"NO!! im tired, do it yourself!"

or, when his stomach didnt feel so hot and was going to drink juice , i grabbed the bottle right from his hands and chastised him, "no no no, not on your stomach. nothing acidic, sir!"

his eyes were like WTH? lol

12 hours of pretending to care, keeping my mouth shut over stupid complaints "my left finger is tingly the past day or so.....i dont want that maxapime, i must be allergic", makes me hardened when i want to come home to my husband and take care of him and his stupid little complaints :-)

Nursing and "life" has made me a homebody - I don't have friends, don't go out other than with my spouse and that is ok by me. I too have pets and they too are my kids (don't care if anyone understands that or not!) and I prefer to spend time with them or at home. Is depression part of it? Yes. Anxiety? Yes. But, when dealing with people as nurses do, in the ways that we do, needing a break from humans is ok..you grow, you change, your priorities change, life events change you..I miss some of the "old me" but this is who and where I'm at now..as one person posted - be who you are - not who you were - and don't apologize for it.

LOL, have you all ever told a family member not to talk up the new neighbors too much or offer to lend them stuff because you are thinking, "Oh, God now they'll want to talk to ME all the time, ugh!!!" ...then you hear them calling your name as they cross the yard... you quickly lock the screen door and go off to finish the laundry hahaha!

Reading these comments has made me feel a little better. I thought I was the only one who was a homebody. I'm not married and don't have kids...well 6 furry ones. Yes, I do feel some depression, anxiety, and some loneliness. However, I always seem to prefer being home. My friend is constantly trying to get me out of the house. I'm not a drinker, don't smoke, don't dance (anymore).... I'm happy lying on my couch on Friday nights..although this will probably change... I'm in between jobs and was just offered a night position which I may take (still have 2 more interviews). Perhaps we should start some kind of "group"? The Nursing Homebodies or something like that. :)

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