Left Nursing After 3 Months and Couldn't Be Happier!

Nurses New Nurse

Published

Hi everyone,

I'm posting a topic today to offer hope to those of you who may have been in my shoes at some point in time.

Little history: I decided to go into nursing through a second bachelor's degree program since my first liberal arts degree was not marketable in the economy after I graduated in 2008. So on I went to take prerequisites and I was accepted (to my surprise!). Throughout nursing school I was a straight A student and enjoyed my classes, even research and some of the harder clinical courses that most people complained about the entire semester. So with much hard work and soul searching through two years, I became a Registered Nurse. Well, on paper at least! I passed my board exams and was offered two jobs about two months after graduation. Mind you, I applied to over 100 jobs since my last semester. It was only after I had passed my board exams that I was actually considered for an interview and called back.

So I decide to take one of the jobs at a private acute care hospital in a medical surgical unit that also received step down ICU patients and fresh ER admissions. I was paid $21.45/hr and worked on average 14-15 hours for each 12 hour shift. This was not isolated to me because I was new. This was a widespread activity for every single one of the nurses on the floor. We were expected to complete the impossible and yet the stress was overwhelming and the liability issues mounting. I would cry before I walked into work hoping and praying that the day would not collapse for if I dare forget one detail my butt was on the line with the charge nurse and director. Example of this was extensive management oversight during the day to inspect and watch to see if all customer service components were completed during change of shift report. This would easily take 45 minutes to 1.5 hours to complete all the shift reports for two nurses to change shift. Anyway, I digress.

After working on day shift, I requested a change to night shift, something I had never done in my life, for hope that the stress would be less and the demands of the job more tolerable. BOY WAS I WRONG! The night shift was terrible and I suffered a lot of health problems from the shake it made in my body. So after three months of employment, unpaid overtime and harassment and discrimination from the patients, management, and other nurses I said goodbye.

That was the happiest most liberating day in my life. I am now a professional educator and teacher for science and mathematics. While every day is no where near perfect, the impact I make on other people is much more fulfilling and deep. I am not robot nurse. I actually help people and feel like I am part of a profession. Something, that nursing tried to eat off my bones from the day I stepped into that field.

All I can say is.... if you are truly unhappy with nursing and the mountain of things that are changing in the healthcare system you can either be part of the problem or part of the solution. I chose to leave it and despite the work and time I put into it, leaving was the best decision for me. There is NO SHAME in moving on from something toxic and unhealthy. There is NO SHAME in discovering other talents and dreams.

YOU ARE NOT STUCK IN NURSING.

Hope this helps someone out there. Best of luck to all of you who actually finished reading this monstrosity of a post! :)

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.

Really? No one told you this in school? Is it possible that you didn't really hear it (or believe it)? As an instructor, it is very easy for us to give the "real life" speech, but a) it could scare many students away, or b) they would just say "that's not gonna happen to me, because I'm going to work days (or insert any unrealistic new grad belief in here). We scare them enough already, with the reality that they might not even pass the class!

Also, when in clinical, do students not see what is going on around them? I know mine do. Whem the floor nurses tell the, "why are you doing this, nursing is a terrible career", what do the students say? they think the nurses are being mean and negative, or are just in a bad mood. When the students complain about how they can never find their nurse, or the nurse is Kurt with them, we talk about the demands of the nurses. I tell them to take a look at the board, and see how many patients their nurse has.

This thread is a great topic for discussion with students and new grads. I k ow it sounds clliche, but Nursing is not for everyone. I wish more people realized that before they invest so much time, money and mental anguish. I wish so many people didn't look at it as an easy path to a good career (I wanted to be a doctor, but nursing is faster and easier) or 'good money', or be so influenced by their family members who encourage them to get into it. I have no regrets about my career choice, but I haven't always been happy.

For those who feel like the OP: no matter what your first job is, it WILL be overwhelming. The wonderful thing about nursing, is that there are options. Obviously not for new grads, you have to put in your time. No one becomes a CEO,or even a manager of a business right out of school. You will struggle at first. A very small percentage will get their dream job right out of school in 2012 (or 2013). Only you will know if you should cut your losses early, try a new job (if you can land one), or bow pit completely.

AGREE!!!

I have been in the healthcare field for 12 years, and I know I have the temperament to stay in nursing for another 18 years. I have been a CNA, a LPN and am a RN. I have said this time and time again: Nursing is NOT for everybody or for the "weak"-sounds harsh but YOU MUST ADVOCATE for YOURSELF for the sake if you patients and career. I have seen how the healthcare profession had been bombarded by "business"-ironic how the business and retail world now wants to run their businesses in the hours of hospitals-and how that can be a huge pill to swallow. I have worked for Magnet, non Magnet, for profit, non-profit small businesses, you name it I've seen it!!!! I have been a preceptor, active on committees in my organizations, and have always satisfied on the way I have advocated for this profession, whether there was change or status-quo. My REACTION and the TEACHABLE moments have made me a better nurse, and remaining flexible in my options to dictate my career based on my life balance HAS KEPT me from never being fired....it has ALWAYS been given me RESPECT from my peers and management -if they ever disliked me, I couldn't care less. I always set the tone of respect me I'll respect you, let's take care of our patients the best way be possibly can!!!

LIFE, including nursing is full of BS and every thing in between...There really is no difference unless YOU are the catalyst for the outcome. You have the POWER to make your own life work for YOU and no one, no organization can take that away from any of you, regardless if you choose to enter, stay, or leave nursing, or are in ANY Profession or position. YOU still are YOU, and YOU decide how YOU react to life in general.

Makes perfect sense. Just like when you choose to go out alone after dark, and then you get assaulted. You knew what you were getting yourself into. Your mother warned you not to go out alone after dark, so therefore it's your own fault if someone assaults you. Going out alone after dark is not for the weak or faint of heart! If you don't want to be assaulted, then stay home behind your locked door when it is dark out!

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
Makes perfect sense. Just like when you choose to go out alone after dark and then you get assaulted. You knew what you were getting yourself into. Your mother warned you not to go out alone after dark, so therefore it's your own fault if someone assaults you. Going out alone after dark is not for the weak or faint of heart! If you don't want to be assaulted, then stay home behind your locked door when it is dark out![/quote']

I don't know if this is a response to my post, but FYI I am a domestic violence survivor...so you are entitled to your sarcasm, but I speak on the merit of my own personal victories by not backing DOWN. My point is that anyone's responses to life's challenges are up to the self. One of the things that can happen in nursing, because its a female dominated profession is the myth that we are supposed "to take it" as well as the clicks, the pack mentality, etc. We are painted as to be victims. I have endured racism, classism, ageism, assumptions on what type of nurse or person I am, etc. It GOES with the territory of LIFE. If you cannot walk away from a situation or speak up PERIOD, then LIFE WILL EAT YOU ALIVE, no matter what your status, position, etc. We are going to endure in life, and lessons learned makes a excellent teachable moment. I applaud the OP who walked away. They take courage and the POWER to say "this is not for me." For the ones who are suffering emotional burnout, yet want to stay in nursing it takes COURAGE to say "I need help" "I need to talk to someone" "I/we need to be treating each other better". We as nurses, in my opinion, have the RIGHT to be treated with RESPECT and integrity. And if WE don't expect it and stand on that principle, then who will?

LadyFree28,

I was speaking to the"blame the victim" mentality that I am seeing represented here. Some people seem to be of the opinion that if another person is unhappy with nursing, then it is due to a character flaw within that person, rather than the idea that there just might be something wrong with acute care bedside nursing nowadays.

I'm not sure why you felt compelled to share that you have a DV history, but since you brought it up, I will say that lots of us have severe past trauma and yet we each experience nursing in our own unique way.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
LadyFree28,

I was speaking to the"blame the victim" mentality that I am seeing represented here. Some people seem to be of the opinion that if another person is unhappy with nursing, then it is due to a character flaw within that person, rather than the idea that there just might be something wrong with acute care bedside nursing nowadays.

I'm not sure why you felt compelled to share that you have a DV history, but since you brought it up, I will say that lots of us have severe past trauma and yet we each experience nursing in our own unique way.

Thanks Stargazer, I'm with you on that-more Grrr-l Power is needed! ?

For us and this female dominated profession to survive sooooo long, we have all had challenges in our life, and we are STILL HERE, which is AWESOME. The most we can do as nurses, is drop that victim mentality.

I felt compelled to share because my experience in that situation allowed me to look at life in a very different way, and in situations of interpersonal relationships, especially professional relationships, and I built on my previous experiences, and it had helped me for the better, whether it may be patients, their families, doctors nurses, upper management, nurses, and everyone in between that I have interacted, even my own family. I think we owe it to ourselves in our profession to review sometimes our worse days and build on them, especially for new grads and people who are here who love the profession and have started taking their required courses to the ones who have significant mileage in the nursing game if we are committed to the profession. Own up to what could've gone better, do some soul searching, mindset searching, and if you decide to be in nursing for another day, remember it's a new day-you only can do your BEST!

Really? No one told you this in school? Is it possible that you didn't really hear it (or believe it)? As an instructor, it is very easy for us to give the "real life" speech, but a) it could scare many students away, or b) they would just say "that's not gonna happen to me, because I'm going to work days (or insert any unrealistic new grad belief in here). We scare them enough already, with the reality that they might not even pass the class!

Also, when in clinical, do students not see what is going on around them? I know mine do. Whem the floor nurses tell the, "why are you doing this, nursing is a terrible career", what do the students say? they think the nurses are being mean and negative, or are just in a bad mood. When the students complain about how they can never find their nurse, or the nurse is Kurt with them, we talk about the demands of the nurses. I tell them to take a look at the board, and see how many patients their nurse has.

This thread is a great topic for discussion with students and new grads. I k ow it sounds clliche, but Nursing is not for everyone. I wish more people realized that before they invest so much time, money and mental anguish. I wish so many people didn't look at it as an easy path to a good career (I wanted to be a doctor, but nursing is faster and easier) or 'good money', or be so influenced by their family members who encourage them to get into it. I have no regrets about my career choice, but I haven't always been happy.

For those who feel like the OP: no matter what your first job is, it WILL be overwhelming. The wonderful thing about nursing, is that there are options. Obviously not for new grads, you have to put in your time. No one becomes a CEO,or even a manager of a business right out of school. You will struggle at first. A very small percentage will get their dream job right out of school in 2012 (or 2013). Only you will know if you should cut your losses early, try a new job (if you can land one), or bow pit completely.

Wanting to be treated like a human while making a living wage and wanting to be a CEO are two very different things. It is sad that in the nursing world not being forced to work overtime without pay, being paid a normal wage, and having polite coworkers is compared to being a CEO.

Well of course I am on a thread of people that are not satisfied with the profession, so whatever I say dosen't really matter. But I mean, yes she went thru all the procedures to get in, but all that school, and she didn't realize how it was going to be once she hit the floor??? But that just go to show you, many people enter the profession for the wrong reasons, and do just that, waste a slot of somebody that really are sincere about their career path, and want to be a nurse, is all i'm saying. Maybe mockery isn't the right word.

I get the point of using the word "mockery" from reading the OP. Three months of one bad situation is not sufficient to make a blanket assumption about an entire career field and I did not need to know that a person's grades were above average. A barely passing person in school has the same right to come to whatever conclusions as those who are at the top of the class. Whenever someone feels the need to inform me how great their grades are, or were, I tend to take their discussion with more than one grain of salt.

Specializes in Trauma, Orthopedics.

OP I am glad you are happy and fulfilled in your decision to leave so quickly.

I could never imagine giving up so quickly on something I put so much time/money/effort into because of one lousy job. I hope you continue to be happy instead of continuing to career hop. I have a friend from school who has had about 5 different careers....she's 37. She seems to be unhappy no matter what she does.

Specializes in ICU / PCU / Telemetry / Oncology.
I have a friend from school who has had about 5 different careers....she's 37. She seems to be unhappy no matter what she does.

When I was unemployed 6 years ago, I completed a computerized career battery test at the local state employment office. It basically asks you all of these weird preference questions and it results in a printed report explaining the industries where your skills would be best utilized. Ironically, the career I was trying to leave was my lowest ranking industry, and among the top were health care and business. I started volunteering at a hospital a couple of months later and discovered nursing. 6 years later, I could not be any happier being a nurse! :)

Your friend might benefit from this assessment tool.

Specializes in Step Down, Cath Lab, Health Coach, Education.

Hi sweetgeorgia my life sounds like what happened to you right now. I would really like to email with you to know how you did it. I have a Bachelors in Business Administration, I regret not continuing with the Business Degree. Please contact me. I just need some guidance on how you did it. Because I am ready to quit nursing. Please email me [email protected] Thank you so much and congratulations.

I am happy for you OP but it seems that you went to nursing for the wrong reasons. Job stability and pay are no reasons to me or even changing major because "I could not find a job". But that's my personal opinion. I am saying this because I met so many people going for these reasons and honestly I would not want them to take care of me.

Surely, there are other areas of healthcare we can enter with your nursing degree. especialy with our BSN

+ Add a Comment