"Just" a nurse? You can do so much better!

Published

When I announce my choice of career, I often get looks of disappointment along with the, "But... you're too smart to be a nurse. You should be a doctor," line, or, "Oh, you couldn't get into med school?" This especially tend to happen on the Asian side of my family. Most of these people are victims to the presteige job stereotype and tend to view nurses as single moms and high school dropouts who don't have the brains to go beyond organized domestic work. I have a neighbor and friend who's great but pulls the above line all the time despite my requests for her to stop, mostly in front of others. In response, I wrote a letter that will serve as a template to others should the need arise.

Dear -----,

I would like to discuss a problem concerning your opinion of my career of choice. When discussing my decision to be a nurse, you tend to respond something along the line of, "But... why not be a doctor? You're to smart to be a nurse," in a disappointed manner. I acknowledge your intention to compliment me as being intelligent, and I appreciate your high opinion. In actuality, you are insulting the field of nursing and therefore insulting my choice of career. I once requested that you please cease to question my career, but you have continued to bemoan how I am "not living up to my potential," so I am writing a letter to explicitly voice my grievances and request once and for all for my choices to be respected.

I would expect another person of an underappreciated career choice to have some empathy. Artists are sometimes stereotyped as academic failures and slackers who enter the field because they can't get real jobs, that art is a useless field that is instated for academically inept people, and that any idiot can draw. This is especially projected in the fact that art programs are being cut from school curriculums. How would you feel if I scoffed at your career, or bemoaned you for "not living up to your potential" to get a Ph D in fine art, or that you should have entered a "real career" like law, medicine, or business? It would be hurtful and insulting, especially if you knew the person had no idea about the field and was basing his opinion on nothing but a stereotype.

To put it bluntly, we nurses put up with a lot of ****. Patients, delusional doctors, patients' relatives, and people who stereotype us as doctors' handmaidens and nymphomaniac mistresses all wear on our nerves. I choose to be a nurse because I want to enter the medical field and help people, as well as build a successful career. To stereotype the nursing field as settling for a plan B if one can't get into medical school or not living up to one's potential is hurtful. Sure, some people may enter the field when that happens, but there are a lot of people who find the field rewarding and challenging. Nursing, a career too easy for smart people? Spend a few hours in the ER and then tell me that all the brains and abilities lie in the doctors. One of the things that attracted me to Sam was the fact that he's spent all too much time in the hospitals and fully appreciates nurses. Anyone who's ever been in the hospital will quickly learn that we are the backbone of the healthcare system, as well the patients' direct caretakers. The life of the doctor is glamorized, and you as well as 99% of the population fall for that. I'm not downplaying doctors, nor do I see them as "sour grapes." We're the ones who keep the doctors from messing up, as well as the ones who really have contact with the patients. Nursing is not tantamount with failure or underachieving, it is opportunity and dedication.

I am not angry with you, and I hope that we can continue the friendship. I simply wish for you to respect my wishes and realize that your stereotyping of the nursing field is wrong and insulting.

Sincerely,

------

How does it sound? Is it too bitchy or vindictive? Should I add or delete anything? Thanks!

My aunt asked, "Don't you want to be a PA?" Uh, No.

I think there are so many directions you can go being a nurse. The general public really doesn't understand this.

I have to say I love my grandmother though. We have 2 MD's in the family and 1 in Med School, but when I told her I was going to nursing school she was OVERJOYED and so excited for me. How's that for support :)

Specializes in Rodeo Nursing (Neuro).

This isn't a problem I've run into a lot. Most of the people who matter to me are proud of my going back to school and getting my ASN, and respect my choice to be a nurse. A few nurses I know have said I must be nuts, but they've said it in a nice way--sort of. (I'm beginning to see their point, although I love what I'm doing. I do wonder at times if I couldn't have challenged myself to do something easy, but it's kinda late for that, now.)

My standard reply to the doctor question is "Why go to all the trouble to become a doctor, when I can just marry one?" Of course, that might not sound so ironic if I weren't a 49 yr old bachelor (with cats). Still, it's kind of fun to keep people off balance.

Wow, that's amazing that someone would say that to you! I'm getting the opposite remarks here. How wonderful it is I want to become a nurse and how hard it is for the schooling, and the job. Also, a few of the "Oh, you'll be SO rich!" comments also. :uhoh21: Uh, I could probably make more staying in the accounting field like where I was headed, but, we'll never know now.

It's funny because I hate telling people I am an Administrative Assistant, "secretary" is all they hear. "You're so much smarter than that!", when I have had some VERY demanding positions, but, never got recognized for my hard work.

I want to be a nurse because I want a job I can be PROUD of. I know I will feel pride in telling people I am a nurse, and I hope I can respond gracefully if someone ever questions my career choice.

I have had similar experiences with my parents and I am 31! Throughout high school my sister and I were typical overachievers. It was pre-determined that I would be a doctor and my sister would be a lawyer. Well my sister is a lawyer and I am an accountant (disappointment #1)However, I had always wanted to be a nurse. I wanted to go to the local vo-tech HS to take the LPN program. You can imagine how well that request was received. I had to have an occupation that could be bragged about.

When I told my family last year that I was reducing my work schedule to part time in order to go to nursing school the immediate reaction was "if you're going to do that, why not medical school?". You are too smart for nursing...you'll make less $, etc. (All of the same things that have been mentioned by other posters).

I don't understand where this comes from. As a mother, I want my children to do what feels right for them and will make them content with their lives.

Maybe its an "older generation" or cultural issue only--money is more important than being happy.

Specializes in Inpatient Acute Rehab.

When people tell you that, just tell them that nurses are the spine of physicians!!

Specializes in Infection Preventionist/ Occ Health.
I was once one of those people who didn't understand nursing and thought that I would be selling myself short to go to nursing school when I was more than likely capable of medical school. I spent time checking out every healthcare field besides nursing, music therapy, physical, occupational, speech, dietician you name it I researched it. And over time I realized that what I wanted to do incorporated all of these things. I wanted to take care of the whole patient, understand their condition and all the interrelating factors. Nursing is where I ended up and as I learned more about the field I realized that I would much rather be a nurse than a doctor. Nurses look at the whole person and are with them each step of the way, we get to know the patient and their needs and understand the treatments. I am in school still, but have worked as a tech and know that nursing is where I am supossed to be. I love to take care of people and do a good job and use my critical thinking skills to do it. It is not a pud job. Some people really don't know what nurses do, they see them in the doctors office and see them simply take a blood pressure or jot down notes and thats what they think nursing is. It is time for people to better understand nursing and I would say that it is our job to caringly help them to understand the nurses role in healthcare. I don't know that much about the history of nursing but what I do know inspires me. As a profession I think there is a growing respect for the profession and there have been steps made to recognize nurses as professionals, but society will take time to catch up and see nursing for what it is.

I can totally relate to this! When I got to college, I thought I'd be selling myself short by becoming a nurse. So, I became a medical technologist because it was "harder" (more math, more chemistry) and ended up not liking it because there's no patient contact. Now, a few years later, I'm back in school to become a nurse. I guess some of us have to learn the hard way that it's more important to follow your heart than to worry about what other people think.

1. First and foremost of all...because nurses get to deal with the WHOLE patient (including, sometimes their WHOLE family) not just some of his/her symptoms.

2. Because until there was a genuine, educated (for the day) cadre of nurses, medical science could not have progressed. (If there had been no one to recover patients, for example, surgical advances would have been futile.)

4) Because back when doctors were still just apprenticing and there were no established criteria for an MD degree, admission to nursing school required a high school diploma, and the course of study was a structured three year program.

3) Nursing is one of the toughest under-graduate majors.

4) Nursing requires knowlege of a wide range of social sciences and physical sciences.

5) Nursing is a Renaissance Science, and a highly collaborative discipline.

6) Because nurses are the glue that keeps a modern health care system together. Without nurses the system is a highly sophisticated machine with no drive shaft and no wheels. Runs great, but gets nowhere.

I love docs. I'm married to one. One of my daughters is in Med School, but I've never had any desire to be anything but a great nurse.

Way to go 1Tulip! Well said!

1. First and foremost of all...because nurses get to deal with the WHOLE patient (including, sometimes their WHOLE family) not just some of his/her symptoms.

2. Because until there was a genuine, educated (for the day) cadre of nurses, medical science could not have progressed. (If there had been no one to recover patients, for example, surgical advances would have been futile.)

4) Because back when doctors were still just apprenticing and there were no established criteria for an MD degree, admission to nursing school required a high school diploma, and the course of study was a structured three year program.

3) Nursing is one of the toughest under-graduate majors.

4) Nursing requires knowlege of a wide range of social sciences and physical sciences.

5) Nursing is a Renaissance Science, and a highly collaborative discipline.

6) Because nurses are the glue that keeps a modern health care system together. Without nurses the system is a highly sophisticated machine with no drive shaft and no wheels. Runs great, but gets nowhere.

I love docs. I'm married to one. One of my daughters is in Med School, but I've never had any desire to be anything but a great nurse.

So true!! :)

Specializes in Medical.

I don't get this from family and friends, but I hear it every now and then from other nurses!!! I've tried responding with sweetness, but now I say "It really disappoints me that you, a nurse, so devalue your own profession that you think it's possible for a nurse to be too smart." I usually mnage to say this calmly, but on occasion I can't manage to refrain from injecting the outrage and indination that I feel.

Actually, I'd like a bit of help on explaining why being a doctor isn't all it's cracked up to be. The doctor stereotype is one that is ingrained in peoples' minds that no amount of convincing will change. Any more big points on what we nurses do?

I don't hate doctors, please don't get the wrong idea, it's just that I don't like the fact that a doctor is automatically assumed to be the standard of perfection, and anything short is failure.

Thanks everyone for your support!!!

IMO, the doctor spends a small (10-15min) amt. of time with their patient. The nurse assigned to a group of patients often ends up noticing the intricacies of the pt's physical condition and notifies the doctor accordingly. I also think that we nurses are there on the "front lines" and truly obtain a whole picture of the pt's needs-and notify the doctor if we need to. We get to know them for a brief amount of time-but much longer than their doctor. Does that help?

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.

Perhaps the response to an individual's career choice is influenced by the educational level and socioeconomic status of the family members.

I am the only child of two working-class parents who completed high school and went no further. I have about sixty cousins and no one in my family has completed college (with the exception of my 32-year-old RN cousin). I was accepted to three universities while still a senior in high school, but did not attend because my parents refused to co-sign the federal financial aid paperwork. I ended up entering the workforce immediately upon high school graduation.

I began attending LVN school last year at the age of 23. I was able to obtain a Sallie Mae loan to finance the tuition because I had established credit over the 5 years since high school graduation (I'd already had a mortgage and credit cards by this time). My family was supportive of my enrollment in LVN school; however, they always asked questions such as "What kind of job can you get with a science class?"

My point is that well-educated families, especially those with many doctors and lawyers, might frown upon nursing and fail to realize the amount of education that is needed to be an RN. Less-educated families with few college graduates might see nursing as a prestigious career; however, they might not realize the amount of knowledge that is needed to become a good nurse.

Good luck to anyone who is considering the nursing profession, as it is a bona fide profession.

+ Join the Discussion