Quitting Nursing School

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So I am in my second semester junior year in my BSN program. This is my second degree, so I spent a year taking a few prerequisites part-time before getting accepted into this program. It's one of the top ranked programs in the nation and part of me feels terrible that I took a spot that some other person would have loved to have had. My first semester was challenging and terrifying but I wound up with a 3.5 and did pretty well. I got a student nursing position over the summer and it completely rocked my confidence. I didn't feel ready for 8 patients of my own after only having 4 clinical days my first semester. I wound up leaving the job about a month in because I was so unhappy. I went back this semester and my Adult Health Med/Surg class and clinical just has me wrecked. I have never hated my life so much. I have yet to find one redeeming thing about nursing. I'm waiting for that moment of awakening where I say this is why I did this. It has not come. I have no desire to study, I feel defeated. Most of all I don't feel like this is me. College my first time around was a challenge and annoying, but I never hated it to this level. I am crying every night (and I am not a person who cries...ever!). My heart rate is out of this world, I have an ulcer, and I can't function. I know I am depressed. I am just a wreck. The weirdest thing of all is that all this time I never really saw myself in the future being a nurse. I thought it would be nice, but as I planned my life in my head, I never saw myself being a nurse. I went into this hoping to make good enough money, help my family and have the skills to be able to care for my parents in home when they age. I didn't do it because I love nursing. I love animals and the outdoors. My goal is to move to North Carolina in May of 2014 with my sister at a brewery that is opening there. I have my CNA and now I am thinking of quitting school and working full time as a home care CNA. Make money instead of pour it all into school doing something I'm not even sure I will actually do in life and if I do I may hate it. I had a decent amount of aid through this semester, so I haven't broken the bank paying for school so far and don't have any debt. However, my grants end this semester so I will have to pay a lot more for my last two semesters (especially since I plan to move and cannot take advantage of the preceptorship programs since I have to committ time to the local hospital after graduation). I feel quitting is right for me, but I also have doubts. Have I wasted my time? So many people have supported me in this and I hate to let them down. Will I be able to support myself doing something else? I havenever quit anything in my life, but I've also never been so unhappy. Any advice?

I am about to finish my second semester of nursing school. I thought about quitting a month ago and decided to gut it out. I don't understand why nursing school has to be so brutal and unpleasant! In what planet does crying and having mental breakdown are normal? My neighbors (ER physician and pediatric nephrologist) saw me cried so many times they thought someone had died in my family. I told them about nursing school and they chuckled at the absurdity and the intensity. They assured me nursing school is so different from the real world. I hope so. If nursing school is an indication of what I have to deal with everyday as a RN, I really don't know if I want to endure it.

I know you posted this awhile ago so I just want to know if you are happy with your decision? I am thinking about leaving nursing school because the longer I stay, the more I think this is not for me. The stress and insanity are just not reasonable to me. I don't know, I have two more semesters to go so it is kinda too late to quit. I do fantasized about a different path...

Question... And I'm not being sarcastic but I really wanna know... What makes nursing school so hard for you? I mean, for me, it's a lot of info but I don't understand why people are having breakdowns and crying so often?

I'm just curious. Maybe my program is different? I donno *shrugs*

Research papers, weekly care plans, more care plans, tests, exams, some sort of deadline to meet every week while operating on lack of sleep...I don't know, maybe I am too intense. Maybe I should be ok with mostly Bs. Some of my classmates handle the stress better than me but they all cried. Jessatkinson86, what are your strategies? I would like to be more relax but find it really hard in such an intense program.

My friend is in an ADN program and she is so much happier. She second semester was 8 credits :/ Meanwhile, I am dealing with 15-17 credits per semester so I am a little fried right now. The silver lining is I have really amazing friends from school and I do look forward to see them.

Specializes in ICU.
Question... And I'm not being sarcastic but I really wanna know... What makes nursing school so hard for you? I mean, for me, it's a lot of info but I don't understand why people are having breakdowns and crying so often?

I'm just curious. Maybe my program is different? I donno *shrugs*

Right there with you. My classmates were having breakdowns all over the place and I wasn't. I really think it was my reading speed. I read faster than anyone I know, which means I could get all the readings done if I wanted to, and get them done on time and actually retain things, and get my eight hours of sleep per night and still have free time to do whatever I wanted. I watched a lot of Netflix and did a lot of hanging out with friends in nursing school. However, it did take some of my classmates nearly killing themselves and getting 2-3 hours of sleep a night to get their work done. I coasted through my program and graduated with a 3.86, which could probably have been much higher if I had bothered to work harder, but a lot of my classmates worked themselves into such states that most of the people I sat with at lunch were trading stories about their antidepressants and anxiolytics, and they never budged above a 3.4-3.5. I really believe the biggest differences between low stress and high stress students are intelligence, reading comprehension, and reading speed. Anyone can be successful as a nurse and in nursing school if he/she is willing to put the effort in, but if you don't read fast and aren't the brightest light bulb in the world, nursing school is very difficult. That's my theory, anyway.

Right there with you. My classmates were having breakdowns all over the place and I wasn't. I really think it was my reading speed. I read faster than anyone I know, which means I could get all the readings done if I wanted to, and get them done on time and actually retain things, and get my eight hours of sleep per night and still have free time to do whatever I wanted. I watched a lot of Netflix and did a lot of hanging out with friends in nursing school. However, it did take some of my classmates nearly killing themselves and getting 2-3 hours of sleep a night to get their work done. I coasted through my program and graduated with a 3.86, which could probably have been much higher if I had bothered to work harder, but a lot of my classmates worked themselves into such states that most of the people I sat with at lunch were trading stories about their antidepressants and anxiolytics, and they never budged above a 3.4-3.5. I really believe the biggest differences between low stress and high stress students are intelligence, reading comprehension, and reading speed. Anyone can be successful as a nurse and in nursing school if he/she is willing to put the effort in, but if you don't read fast and aren't the brightest light bulb in the world, nursing school is very difficult. That's my theory, anyway.

I respectfully disagree. I have a 4.0 right now in my program. I have no problem reading and comprehending, and I am pretty intelligent (at the risk of sounding arrogant maybe?). My stress comes from test anxiety, constant deadlines, and a home life that includes two small children. Test anxiety is the biggie for me.

It's a little offensive to say I stress because my reading comp and intelligence are below yours. Some people have irons in multiple fires.

Specializes in Forensic Psych.
Question... And I'm not being sarcastic but I really wanna know... What makes nursing school so hard for you? I mean for me, it's a lot of info but I don't understand why people are having breakdowns and crying so often? I'm just curious. Maybe my program is different? I donno *shrugs*[/quote'] Don't you have classmates? Even if you're stress-free, I'd think you'd have seen and heard the reasons people are stressing out around you....
Question... And I'm not being sarcastic but I really wanna know... What makes nursing school so hard for you? I mean for me, it's a lot of info but I don't understand why people are having breakdowns and crying so often? I'm just curious. Maybe my program is different? I donno *shrugs*[/quote']

Because it's stressful. I'm not saying I have breakdowns often but between working 40+ hrs. a week and family responsibilities, sometimes crying is a good release. There's nothing wrong with it.

Don't you have classmates? Even if you're stress-free I'd think you'd have seen and heard the reasons people are stressing out around you....[/quote']

I have class mates and I don't see many crying or having break downs, or hear about it either. Almost all of us are working or mothers. Maybe it's just the different program demands. Yes we all have a little test anxiety but that's normal, nothing to puke over. I just constantly read on here about people having breakdowns and it just makes me wonder.

I believe it all depends on the Nursing Program demand and Students individual obligations.

Specializes in Forensic Psych.
I have class mates and I don't see many crying or having break downs or hear about it either. Almost all of us are working or mothers. Maybe it's just the different program demands. Yes we all have a little test anxiety but that's normal, nothing to puke over. I just constantly read on here about people having breakdowns and it just makes me wonder.[/quote'] Hmm. Well, it could definitely be an issue of programs, but I tend to think it's more personal than that. The people I know who have freaked out (myself included haha) usually had more going on. Deaths in the family, working too much on top of school, bad grades/fear of failing, being sick, stuff like that. I don't think I've ever seen (or heard about) someone having a panic attack purely because of the basics of school.

I'm stressing right now because I only have three days off of work before finals. Three days to cover 3 semesters of material isn't much. But at the end of the day, there's only so much I can do.

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