I am stressed out !! And I know why now !!

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Honestly, I do like nursing. I like the OR, I like Post Operative, I enjoyed my peds and psych rotations in school. But I dread work, and I thought I was the only one until now.

Since my second semester of school though I've been wanting out of nursing. I got great grades, love pathophysiology, nursing theory, pharm etc, etc. But as soon as I'd get into a clinical setting I'd get upset and nervous. I'd have trouble recalling things. When my instructor tended to be supportive, I had no problem answering their questions, and using what I learned in nursing school. Put me with a difficult instructor and BLANK, BLANK !! I had a really bad experience my first time in med/surg. My teacher set me up, and the other students started talking behind my back because he would only favor the students who would share negative information. He tried to convince me this was ok but I told him nicely tha I didn't agree with his philosophy. I told him we should learn to helpl eachother and work as a team. There were students in my clinical who had it so easy, easy patients, easy assignments, if they didn't know what they were doing he woudl walk them through it etc etc. If I messed up my first time doing something he would not help me, but he would intimidate me. I remember the first time I ever did a dressing, I brought an extra strile pack. I did not put my forceps in the Garbage, but he said I had. I cheerfully stated I had another pack and he said rudely, "well then we'll be here all day". If he could see me he'd never talk to me, but he'd STARE at me, making me feel uncomfortable. He got people from the hospital to come chat with me at lunch time and stuff, (I would ask them if they knew of nurses who could tutor me in the clinical skills area because my teacher was unable to spend extra time with me) and without me knowing they knew each other he used them at the end when I tried to appeal his decision to fail me. I repeated the course, and my self confidence was shattered !! I have no idea why he did all this, all I know is that since then I've had a really hard time dealing with my fears. I don't feel as if I can trust anyone. I've had lots of wonderful instructors since then who tried to build my confidence, and were willing to put in time to help me instead of watching me drown. But, I didn't get a job with those types of people, and it seems to me, from what I see on the board, that there's more toxic environments rather than positive ones.

Now that I've started my first real nursing job, I feel the same way, the fear and stress are always there. Its like I'm living in a nightmare. I know there have been times and I have been in work/clinical situations where I've really done well and enjoyed myself. Yet there is always this nagging fear that I'm just not cut out or good enough to be in nursing. I posted about what its like working in the OR with older nurses eating their young. I am feeling as if I've aged twice as much in the past 6 years since I started my nursing program, than I ever had before. I'm depressed, I'm feeling financially unstable, beause I feel like any day I'm going to be found out and get fired or one day I just won't be able to continue anymore. I constantly feel like I'm going to die, an then I get frustrated because I'm nto sure but I want to die. I don't know how to handle it when my preceptors are rude to me, and I hear things from the manager, which I never heard from my preceptors/ other coworkers.

After reading all these posts and threads I realized something, its not just me though. I was wondering if there were places I could work, as a nurse with little experience, where the stress levels (at least on a political/coworker level) would be less. I've considered dialysis, doctor's office (very little jobs in vancouver and toronto though and much less pay), community health (need to finsih my degree still) etc..

I've even gone so far as to consider becoming a transcriptionist (working form home if possible), or just a MOA. But I can't really afford to do all that. I'm 30, in debt, no savings or anything. I was waiting to finsih nursing school because I thought at that point I would have a secure income and slowly start building. But now I feel like I've lost.

Please Help.

Are there nursing staffing agencies in Canada?

I personally found that less stressful.

You can work at facilities you agree to and nothing

against you if you say no/do not accept an assignment.

You just give availability and they schedule you.

You can work by the day or by the week/weeks.

That would give you a chance to try different areas

and see what you could tolerate/enjoy.

God bless you.

Hey Sandlewood,

I think it's amazing how other people find it so easy to make plans for us that we never imagined ourselves. I agree with you that if you never wanted to become a doctor turning your shoulder to it is a way of discovering what you want in your life. I have always made the attempt to listen to why certain people would think that I would be good as this or that, but ultimately the hardest thing to do is figure yourself out - and for some odd reason, doing the things that I want to do aren't necessarily the easiest options for me, nor necessarily the most financially secure. I think that it's fantastic that you are reflective at all...so many people accept things that with a little provocation they may discover is not good for them - stress has a way of wrecking your body...the whole mind/body connection is so vital. I wish you the best in what ever path you choose...I got a great vibe from the tone of your postings, and I'm sure that as a counsellor or even a social worker you could affect people positively with your energy. Good luck!!

Yes that is an idea. I have a friend who does casual work. Since I am hoping to start university in September or January I'm planning on going part time. If my employer is unwilling then I will most definately go casual.

I was wondering if it would be possible to get casual work and specify that I want experience/ to work mainly on peds, and psych units ?

Are there nursing staffing agencies in Canada?

I personally found that less stressful.

You can work at facilities you agree to and nothing

against you if you say no/do not accept an assignment.

You just give availability and they schedule you.

You can work by the day or by the week/weeks.

That would give you a chance to try different areas

and see what you could tolerate/enjoy.

God bless you.

Specializes in Med. Surg, Oncology, L&D, NICU, ICU.

Hey Sandalwood, I have been an RN for 8 years. I have been around the Nursing world to every area (med. surg./OB/L&D/nursery/ICU/dialysis/corrections). Just to find my place. My friends joke and call me hospital Ho. I still have not found my place. And this is so hard to admit but, my first year in med/surg oncology I wanted to jump off the hospital roof (really). I had worked so, hard and came from poverty. Nursing made my family so proud. How could I ever let them down. I never admitted I hated it not even to my husband. I really cared about my pts but, at the same time I was overworked and could not keep up enough to feel good about myself when I went home. I always felt like I had neglected atleast one of my pts. for my shift. I am currently working weekends only doing home health (I like it). I know corrections sounds really scary but, having OR exp. would def. get u a Job in the field. It is a very controlled env. due to security. I worked in Juevenile corrections doing Sick Call (minor stuff like ice to hematoma's, psych issues, herpes, STD's). The kids would put in a sick call slip just to come to talk to me. It is alot of psych stuff/not alot of stress. Those kids are so, messed up due to life circumstances. Caring people like yourself can really make a difference in their lives. I did this thru registry so, they eventually found perm. staff. I could of hired on c/ them but, like I said I had to try something diff. I HAVE TO TELL U THAT TIME DOES HEAL YOU. AND ITS TRUE "WHAT DOES NOT KILL YOU WILL MAKE YOU STRONGER". I DONT KNOW WHY THE MEDICAL WORLD CAN BE SO, HARSH. IT IS REALLY THE ONES LIKE YOU THAT CARE WHAT OTHERS THINK AND FEEL THAT ARE REALLY GOOD NURSES. Your sensitivity is a gift dont ever feel bad for that. I wish you well and hope you find your place. I am thankful for nursing because; it has given me the opportunity to explore and find my talents and weakness.

Sandlewood Nurse,

I am totally with you! Just last week I had the conversation with my husband that went something like "I don't care if it will cost me $7000 to get out of my contract- I can not do this for another year!"

I've recently started taking Ambien to sleep the nights before I have to work. I definately screen calls on my days off...Lord know's they are looking for people to come in.

My philosophy through nursing school was, I KNOW there are a million options for nurses out there. There MUST be one where I can care for patients in the way they deserve to be cared for. I believe Home Health is that avenue. Now, I just need to accumulate more experience to get there.

One problem is that many older nurses are not supportive of the newer nurses. In fact, some look for fault. There is one in particular that I cringe when I see her picking up my patients at end of my shift, God forbid that I received an order 5 minutes ago and it's not done!

The acuity of patients is higher than it has ever been, the BNE acknowledged this when increasing the NCLEX passing standard. Knowledge is one thing, what is humanly possible to accomplish is another (and I'm talking about a job well done, not just done).

I graduated at the top of my class. I am not dumb. I CAN do this, but the question is, do I want to? Is it worth it?

I have considered seeing a counselor or therapist to help develop better coping skills, but should I have to because of a job?

I know one thing- I do not want to become the calloused, task oriented nurse that I see wandering the halls of my hospital. This job is about the people we care for, striking a balance is key...I will never forget the day my preceptor said, "something's gotta give". A quote I read on one of these boards yesterday said it all, "Sometimes being a good employee is in direct conflict with being a good nurse."

Specializes in Community Health, Med-Surg, Home Health.

I am so upset that you had this experience. That is one of the things that I really hated about nursing school...the politics and the backstabbing. And, being a new orientee would bring back bad memories after such an experience. I am glad it is over for you,and pray for you to have a better day. I can really kick that instructor, though...petty bastard...:devil:

Honestly, I do like nursing. I like the OR, I like Post Operative, I enjoyed my peds and psych rotations in school. But I dread work, and I thought I was the only one until now.

Since my second semester of school though I've been wanting out of nursing. I got great grades, love pathophysiology, nursing theory, pharm etc, etc. But as soon as I'd get into a clinical setting I'd get upset and nervous. I'd have trouble recalling things. When my instructor tended to be supportive, I had no problem answering their questions, and using what I learned in nursing school. Put me with a difficult instructor and BLANK, BLANK !! I had a really bad experience my first time in med/surg. My teacher set me up, and the other students started talking behind my back because he would only favor the students who would share negative information. He tried to convince me this was ok but I told him nicely tha I didn't agree with his philosophy. I told him we should learn to helpl eachother and work as a team. There were students in my clinical who had it so easy, easy patients, easy assignments, if they didn't know what they were doing he woudl walk them through it etc etc. If I messed up my first time doing something he would not help me, but he would intimidate me. I remember the first time I ever did a dressing, I brought an extra strile pack. I did not put my forceps in the Garbage, but he said I had. I cheerfully stated I had another pack and he said rudely, "well then we'll be here all day". If he could see me he'd never talk to me, but he'd STARE at me, making me feel uncomfortable. He got people from the hospital to come chat with me at lunch time and stuff, (I would ask them if they knew of nurses who could tutor me in the clinical skills area because my teacher was unable to spend extra time with me) and without me knowing they knew each other he used them at the end when I tried to appeal his decision to fail me. I repeated the course, and my self confidence was shattered !! I have no idea why he did all this, all I know is that since then I've had a really hard time dealing with my fears. I don't feel as if I can trust anyone. I've had lots of wonderful instructors since then who tried to build my confidence, and were willing to put in time to help me instead of watching me drown. But, I didn't get a job with those types of people, and it seems to me, from what I see on the board, that there's more toxic environments rather than positive ones.

Now that I've started my first real nursing job, I feel the same way, the fear and stress are always there. Its like I'm living in a nightmare. I know there have been times and I have been in work/clinical situations where I've really done well and enjoyed myself. Yet there is always this nagging fear that I'm just not cut out or good enough to be in nursing. I posted about what its like working in the OR with older nurses eating their young. I am feeling as if I've aged twice as much in the past 6 years since I started my nursing program, than I ever had before. I'm depressed, I'm feeling financially unstable, beause I feel like any day I'm going to be found out and get fired or one day I just won't be able to continue anymore. I constantly feel like I'm going to die, an then I get frustrated because I'm nto sure but I want to die. I don't know how to handle it when my preceptors are rude to me, and I hear things from the manager, which I never heard from my preceptors/ other coworkers.

After reading all these posts and threads I realized something, its not just me though. I was wondering if there were places I could work, as a nurse with little experience, where the stress levels (at least on a political/coworker level) would be less. I've considered dialysis, doctor's office (very little jobs in vancouver and toronto though and much less pay), community health (need to finsih my degree still) etc..

I've even gone so far as to consider becoming a transcriptionist (working form home if possible), or just a MOA. But I can't really afford to do all that. I'm 30, in debt, no savings or anything. I was waiting to finsih nursing school because I thought at that point I would have a secure income and slowly start building. But now I feel like I've lost.

Please Help.

Thank you everyone for your support and input. For the time being I have decided to give it another try. I am going to go back with a new attitude, a more positive outlook, and I am going to be more confident. I realize a lot of my issues are having to do with not feeling confident, brought about by the incidence at school. I know that I can do my job, I work hard, I know my stuff, but being nervous does not help.

I am going to try to work on the confidence factor. It helped me a lot that you all came forward and offered me insight as to my options too. That takes some stress off, in that I see now it is a job, which can be replaced. I am just going to have to stay there a few more months however to give it a second chance and also to gain some more valuable experience. I wish you all luck in your endevors as well.

Specializes in jack of all trades, master of none.

What about a different OR? Maybe just a change of the people would help.

You mentioned you were seeing a counselor, I think? I hope you have mentioned the frequent despair & thoughts of death that you are experiencing. I don't want to sound harsh at all, but really think you need to address whatever other underlying issues you have gone through. No job is worth your life!

Prayers to you.

I felt the same way you did, OP. In my first job, my preceptors made me feel like I was a total idiot and had no place in nursing. I lost 17 lbs, woke up in the middle of the night freaking out, lost sleep, cried before I went into work. Finally, after being essentially harrassed too much, I decided that if I didn't switch units, I couldn't be a nurse anymore. In fact, I was dead set on quitting nursing, but something deep down told me to not give up yet. I tried to look out 5 years into the future, and decided that I would regret it if I quit. I would always feel like I didn't give it a good shot and perhaps I missed out on something, if I quit nursing after only 7 months. So, I decided that I would switch units, and if that didn't work out, then I could quit with the satisfaction that I gave it a good try.

Now in my new unit, I'm a totally different person. Not only am I not afriad to go to work, but now I actually look forward to it. I love my coworkers, and I totally feel part of the team. I've also realized that I'm actually a good nurse, and that my old preceptors were a bunch of jerks. It had nothing to do with me and my abilities - it was just not a good match. Don't let yourself think there's something wrong with you, or you don't belong there. It's just that your talents are not fully utilized or appreciated where you are now. You will thrive and shine somewhere else! If I had listened to those from my old job, and believed what they thought of me, I never would have known my full potential.

You cannot give up on nursing altogether - just look somewhere else, and you'll be very surprised and pleased with your accomplishments.

Specializes in acute medical.

Sandlewood, sounds as if you are making decisions you are happy with. I have found that after a similar experience at uni, I couldn't walk back into that building for 10yrs. There are two things I realised

1. Learning ways to take control of your life is really hard, but it gives you confidence.

2. Developing support mechanisms to do so helps you on the way and maintain your focus.

I tried to stick out in one area for 14yrs. For me, since, I found I should have left there long ago. But because I had been in that area for so long, I have few options to assist you with. You could consider community health nursing, where you visit patients at home. What about working in an elective day surgery unit? Do you have hospital in the home, where IVABs are given via PICCs etc?

Keep in contact, and like myself, don't be afraid to seek professional help either if you need it. Does your hospital provide access to this? Don't forget, it's a confidential service. Its another means of building a support network.

Best of luck, and hope your decision works. And if it doesn't, don't be afraid to look elsewhere. Like I said, you continue to take control, don't let the situation take control of you...

So I went to see my psychiatrist yesterday. I was starting to feel anxious all over again, and I showed up in bad shape. I told him about work. He agreed some psychotherapy would probably be a good idea and I shall start in two weeks.

Hopefully psychotherapy will help me in my anxiety at work, and in dealing with difficult people in the OR.

Finding a good fit in nursing seems kinda like finding a good date on the internet. There's lots of potential out there but also lots of toxic people/work environments. It's easy to start to think there's "no one/nothing decent out there" or to wonder "what am I doing wrong?"

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