Husband became a RN

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Hi, new here to posting on the forums but long time reader. I'm here to present an issue I didn't quite see a specific category for. I am a RN, graduated December, 2010. News to me was, I conceived and got pregnant about the time of graduation. I had pregnancy brain and waited a few months before I took the NCLEX, but passed after 75 questions, got licensed and looked for work. I interviewed for a few positions, but was visibly pregnant at the time and didn't get hired. At a point, I stopped looking. Fast forward to 6 weeks postpartum, I interviewed and was hired for a position in home health care, which I was thankful for at the time because of the flexible scheduling. I have been doing that ever since.

My husband worked at an environmental testing lab at the time, but got laid off when our daughter was just over a year old...leaving me with the entire burden to provide for my son (from a previous marriage) and the rest of our family. I felt a tremendous amount of stress in this role, having to quit my home care job (which was per diem paid and did not offer any health insurance benefits) to find full time employment with benefits. I found new home health employment at a TERRIBLE company, run so poorly I am suprised that CHAP even gave them the accreditation. After 6 months I left for another position with another company that worked out fairly well for a few years, but still required SO MUCH more work than a hospital staff nurse. M-F 8-5 plus on call shifts including every other weekend and rotating weeknight shifts from 5pm-8am, meaning some days, I may have to work for 24 hours, then go to work for a full 8hr shift on top of that. In the mean time, my husband promised to get a job to help make ends meet. --- 3 years later, he never followed through with that promise, never even applied or interviewed for any positions.

During that time, he decided to go to nursing school. I admit, I was dead against it when he mentioned it. He is not the "caring" type and I didn't think it would suit him (plus he is VERY much the "career de jour" type of person) and on top of that, I wanted my own identity in our relationship. I wanted to say, "go get your OWN career" but I didn't. I supported him, because that's what we do in relationships. Now, it has been nearly 6 years that I have been a nurse...dead ended in home care, tried to transition to hospice care for a change of pace, but was passed over by my company because my home care territory was too hard to staff and because "there are big shoes to fill"...I was promised a hospice position in my company but was passed over to give the position to a nurse in another geographic area because my DON threw such a fit about finding a good nurse for my area and hospice needs had to be met. I am left feeling frustrated and trapped in my situation, not wanting to take a leap of faith on another aspect of nursing because I am the sole provider, we have 2 school-age (or almost) children, and I have joint custody of my son with a weird parenting time schedule to accommodate, plus, we (I) just bought a house. I am regretfully unhappy doing the same thing over and over for the past 6 years.

I need something new! I need a challenge. I need new education to spice up my passion for nursing. Meanwhile, he has just graduated nursing school. He was offered a position in the ED before he even completed nursing school, has a badge that says RN before he has even gotten the OK to sit for the NCLEX. He started orientation is already learning and planning to learn so many things that I haven't even heard of...I feel like I have had to sacrifice my opportunity to be able to learn these things and had to accept these types of positions because I was left with the "provider" role. I was enticed with promises of him getting a job during nursing school; he never even made an attempt to get a job. On top of that, I feel resentment that I worked nearly full time, while we were dating, supporting my young son independently, all throughout my full time nursing school...and now I am left to support our 2 children and him through HIS nursing school. And because of the situation, I feel like I missed out on opportunities to learn and advance as much as he is getting right now. I have a bit of jealously and resentment with his success and my lack thereof.

I enjoy my job, but I do not feel challenged anymore...and I am finding a dissatisfaction with what I do, what I have had to do, not having the freedom and opportunity to be able to do what he is doing, and a feeling that I am somehow "less" of a nurse doing home care instead of mastering tele and getting my acls and being able to do/learn all of the things that nurses who are trained in areas such as the ED can do. Am I bat **** crazy and just need to get a grip; that I have nothing to feel this way about? Do I need to just put my big girl panties on and "man up!" ...or do I have some slight validation in how I'm feeling?

I can't tell if you have been unavoidably taken advantage of or if you have a pattern of not owning your decisions so I'm just going to comment on the home health aspect.

I'm a career home health nurse, I've worked in most positions from Case Mgr to QI to Utilization to Administrator. I've had many options and opportunities over the years that have been mine to turn down due to how I have approached my career. I've earned a good living with good working conditions and great hours. There isn't a nursing position out there that is better than mine nor is there a nurse who has enjoyed more job satisfaction than me. Without trying to sound condescending, it's not the home health job here that is self limiting.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.

My heart goes out to you. Your feelings are valid and you have gotten some really good advice from fellow posters.

Can I just add my two cents? Get a housekeeper. Not directly related, but it will really help.

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

Wait till he is well off orientation and stable in his new career i.e. 1 year on the job and then quit your job and go back to school to do whatever you want. You want challenge? Find an NP program. Now it's your turn!

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
a feeling that I am somehow "less" of a nurse doing home care instead of mastering tele and getting my acls and being able to do/learn all of the things that nurses who are trained in areas such as the ED can do.
After 10 years of working as a floor nurse, I now have a nice job as an RN case manager for an insurance company. It is a work from home position with no weekends or holidays. No patient care or hands-on procedural skills are involved.

If other nurses enjoy the beeping alarms, infiltrated IV lines, poopy bedpans, vent settings, hostile family members, and demanding patients at the hospital, good for them. However, I'd rather continue to ride the relaxing wave away from the hospital and see where it takes me.

Specializes in Psychiatric Nursing.

OP, don't worry about paragraphs! You can vent here. I feel your frustration and pain. I think some excellent advice has been given by previous posters. Cleback made a good point; you have 6 years of steady employment, which makes a stellar resume. Why not search for a more fulfilling RN position? You deserve it! What type of nursing interests you the most? Maybe you've always been curious about another branch of nursing? You have every right not to be miserable. Start looking around for other employment opportunities, to see what piques your interest. Feel free to private message me if you'd like to talk.

Specializes in NICU, ICU, PICU, Academia.
My heart goes out to you. Your feelings are valid and you have gotten some really good advice from fellow posters.

Can I just add my two cents? Get a housekeeper. Not directly related, but it will really help.

BEST ADVICE EVER!!!!! My life changed for the better once I made that $50/ week decision!

BEST ADVICE EVER!!!!! My life changed for the better once I made that $50/ week decision!

There are a lot of things I'd give up before I'd give up my housecleaning service. I haven't scrubbed a toilet in 25 years, and I don't intend to do so ever again. I'd dress in rags before I'd give that service up, lol.

I understand how that can be frustrating, as you feel like its more of a competition now. I would try not to let this ruin your marriage. Your husband most likely became an RN for job stability and security. There are so many different parts of nursing, if you're not happy where you are keep searching! Think of the positives, your husband will understand what you're talking about when you say you are stressed or exhausted. My boyfriend thinks I have it easy because nurses can work "off shifts" and "get great benefits and job security." If you are unable to get passed this you need to sit down and talk to him about your concerns. Good luck!

Oh sweetheart... I get the feeling that you're the "suffer in silence" type. You probably bend over backwards for the people you love and your feelings and desires probably take a backseat. Which isn't a bad thing, but it isn't a good thing either. It's great to be kind and generous to others, but not and I repeat not at the expense of yourself. You're tendency to self sacrifice and allow others to take the lead if YOUR problem. Yes, your husband failed to keep his promise, but it is your responsibility to demand respect and hold him accountable to his mistakes and word. You need to remind yourself that you are in control of your destiny and you matter. Like someone said before... leave the past in the past and focus on today and focus on the future. Sit hubby down and make it VERY clear that you intend to focus on your career now that he has secured this position. Personally, I would suggest going back to school. Get higher degree. With your experience in home health and a higher degree, you'll surpass him easily. Yes... he got a great job, but he's still at the bottom of the pecking order so to speak. He's a baby nurse fresh out of school and still has A LOT to learn. YOU are a practicing nurse with 6+ years of experience. Get that grad school degree and in 2 years, you will be back on top. I also recommend marriage counseling. You guys have got to get better at communicating and you've got to learn to stand your ground and demand respect. Good luck and I hope you figure it all out. You deserve to be happy with your life and career.

Personally, I would suggest going back to school. Get higher degree. With your experience in home health and a higher degree, you'll surpass him easily. Yes... he got a great job, but he's still at the bottom of the pecking order so to speak. He's a baby nurse fresh out of school and still has A LOT to learn. YOU are a practicing nurse with 6+ years of experience.Get that grad school degree and in 2 years, you will be back on top.

JMO, but that kind of competitive frame of mind is not healthy for a marriage and should not be encouraged. She needs to respect herself and her accomplishments for her own personal satisfaction, not in order to feel superior to her life partner.

Specializes in IMC, school nursing.

Find it hilarious that this has come down to a competition that she must win. Poor position for a safe marriage. Feel sad for those married that feel this way. No wonder divorce is so easy.

Specializes in Home Health, Mental/Behavioral Health.
Career resentment can destroy your marriage. I would suggest that if you can not sit down and iron out a family plan for both of your careers as well as your family life, then perhaps marriage counseling may be in order, before festering sores overwhelm your family.

^^^^^^^^ THIS!!! ^^^^^^^^^

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