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OK, now it's MY TURN to rant uncontrollably!
Had to go to a shift today. The agency that I work for has a policy that they can't say anything to you (it's in our contract we sign) or fine you, if you can't go to a shift. Anyway, I had been cleaning & packing to move in a few days. Must have done too much (didn't think I did?) because later on, my right shoulder muscle started really throbbing & was really tight; uncomfortable & annoying & painful. So I do the right thing by me & by safety standards for any patients I may have come in contact with - I ring & say I don't think I will be safe enough to go to my shift. No problems, I apologise, then hang up. 2 seconds (literally) the phone rings, and one of the coordinators is saying I have to get a medical clearance; she was not friendly. I say yeh, OK, if I can get into a doctors, which I did manage to do. I didn't think much of it earlier.
But now later, I have been sitting here & stewing. I have NEVER called off (or called in sick) for a shift near the beginning of a shift, unless I AM SICK or have a very, very good reason. The only other time I called in sick was when I had sudden, severe gastro symptoms (which has never happened to me before).
What do these employers WANT from us!?? They literally SUCK US DRY of our humanity! They will tell you any old BS to get you into their company. I worked my BUTT OFF to get through study & exhausted myself - literally - I was ++ sick for about 4 weeks. I worked AND studied, which nobody out there wants to do anymore, especially young people, judging from the posts we get here. I moved to another state where I didn't know anyone & got the experience I needed. I didn't have to come back here, but family reasons etc compelled me to. Now I thought this agency was different from all the others, what a laugh!
I have been sitting here REALLY thinking: what do we REALLY get from nursing? I no longer have friends call me to ask me to events or BBQs etc; heck, my own brother hardly bothers calling me because he knows I'm always working. Nursing is VERY isolating & anti-social. I work long & weird hours, & travel quite a bit to get to work... STILL. I feel like I have sacrificed literally EVERYTHING for my career - friends, intimate relationships - & where has it got me? Life long study debts to get another qualification that will probably only earn me a few thousand more after HIGH taxes in my country. I STILL work shift work & am really disliking it now (it never bothered me much before, as it was part of getting experience). I don't tell my family nursing tales anymore, because they don't believe me so I shut up. I changed to only do afternoon shifts now, thinking that would help. It has mucked up all my sleeping - I can hardly get out of bed the next day before 10.30am because I'm so tired, I can't move. I have severe indigestion (on meds now) have had bloods done, nothing showed. I take a multivitamin every day. My eating has gone out the window; I either overeat (before I go to work as I may not get a break for a long time), or I just skip meals now - eating & cooking seems like too much bother. Study is just out and out boring me now, I don't have the mindset for it. I compare my friends to myself on Facebook - when I used to have an account. They are all happy, married, travelling overseas & HAVE A LIFE! The thought of getting up early to exercise (not that I have any spare money at the moment for the gym), just shatters me - I just can't do it now. And when I do try to exercise, I don't enjoy it now.
I've HAD IT with nursing! Is is THE most life-draining, soul-destroying, anti-social, bull**** job I have ever done in my life. We are not treated as professionals, just an accessory that has been tacked on to the doctor. You always see TV shows about great doctors & new doctors etc but never about nurses; have you noticed that? (Oh unless you count cameo stories woven around nurses on shows like ER).
We are not heroes and never will be. Nursing is a wasted career. It is a waste of time and money and energy. I so wish I could have done something in history where I could have travelled, & actually have the TIME to meet other, professional people, but am too old now. I find, personally, many nurses don't have time to meet others, don't want to associate with other nurses because it's just too depressing to listen to their whining, or don't make the effort to socialise. The number of times I have tried to start up support/coffee groups to meet other nurses, well; I can't count them now.
It's just started raining again outside now. Even the weather has gone bad again! I really feel like I'm slowly losing my sanity trying to keep this 'life' together doing nursing as a so-called career. I feel it has all been such a waste of a life. I wasted my youth being conned by people saying 'nursing is a brilliant career; you will always have work; you will always have security.' I know people who work/have worked in supermarkets who have a better and more secure career than a RN.
Please...if you're young & reading this, PLEASE DO NOT go into nursing. It is too late for me & I'm in a huge rut, but it's not too late for you. Choose a career that will let you travel, where you have normal or near normal working hours and where you make decent money to live on, if not heaps of money. Shift work is not worth your sanity, trust me.
I feel old, creaky, cynical, and used up by the BS nursing managers & lecturers who lied to us all about EVERYTHING to do with nursing.
It's now my goal to try & convince others on here to not take up nursing or to get out. And I am getting out; don't know if I'll study next year but I WILL get out into something else.
Stay tuned for more of this saga! Thanks for reading..... :)
I've just read this whole topic!
Firstly, I too have been in the same situation as the OP and also those who loved their jobs and it is easy to say "get out" when you have a great job.
I had a great job, thought it would never change (oh how wrong I was), felt like I was valued, enjoyed my job and felt I was able to use my skills. It was great and I was respected by the doctors and other nurses. Then it all changed, the way we practiced nursing on the ward. It got worse and worse. I would go home and feel run down, tired and stressed. I changed to part time for a while and hung on. After i resigned, 5 people resigned shortly after me. In a way that was good because it made me realise it was not just me who had had a gutful.
Like the OP was over nursing, had nothing good to say about it ect and so took a part time job in a non nursing area and now work casual/agency nursing. I feel better for it and everything is working out okay. I am better off finacially but job satisfaction wise, I have less stress ect but do still miss the old job and it's almost been a year now since I left.
I have decided the only way to survive is to make it work for you, which is what i do and am now just focused on the money aspect. I do my nurisng job to the best of my ability but there is no way I could do it full time. I get to chose when and where I want to work. I can fit it around my other job too and dont feel tired, stressed or come home crying!
I am just planning to carry on like I am until I get sick/bored of it and feel better about nursing. then i will look into doing something different in nursing if i have my spark back.
I have been like this a number of years ago, and left the hospitals for 6 years working in a clinic and then went back into the hospitals for a couple of years. Then went overseas to work and had a bit of fun and did some travelling around Europe.
I agree shift work stuffs up your social life. I have met nurses who have been out for less than 3 years and are sick of shifts and no life so are doing something else outside of nursing.
I have not discounted dialysis or radiology or a clinic job but am happy at the moment and so have no plans to find that perfect nursing job just yet.
BTW, I do one day of 9 to 5 and it's not all it's cracked up to be...maybe because I am still doing shifts around that day...maybe because I have only been doing it for less than a year and still adjusting. Some days it's good some days it's not. I think if you do 9 to 5 it would have to be every day not around shift work.
You doing better, Carol?Don't let anyone negate your feelings or experiences.
I am pulling for you.
Ditto here, Carol :)
One thing that helped me a lot (which doesn't sound possible in the market today, but for what it's worth...) was to sort of rotate around between acute, LTC, and either psych (adolescents....they still have a shot at a semi-normal life....at least where I was, the adults were train wrecks- back in the days of MONTHS inpatient psych) or drug/alcohol rehab..... also had a bit of head injury rehab and pediatrics in the mix....kept me from getting too stomped on, and also kept me learning, and using stuff from other places in the new place (ie- when an IVDU suddenly drops a temp from 103 to 97, and the off-going shift nurse reporting that it's so great he's doing better .... hello sepsis...). Or being the only nurse who isn't terrified of the PICC or doing dressing changes... Then go to LTC and have some acute neuro to use w/some informal teaching re: CVAs and deficits being responsible for some behaviors, not that the poor geezers are out to make the CNAs suffer- LOL
Changing it up saved my sanity a LOT. But from the sounds of things these days, that's not much of an option. Even 7 years ago, jobs were not hard to get. Don't know what it's like in OZ... but something will show itself as being a possible solution :) You have support here, Carol.
I'm very sorry that you are feeling this way.
You have legitimate complaints. And sure sounds like you're ready to be done. I've had a few nights where I could have vented just as long.
However, to those of you posting about your bitterness re: "not knowing" about how difficult nursing would be...
What did you expect going into nursing in the first place?
I don't know how you could have such rose colored glasses (for lack of a better term... it's 4am ) on in the beginning of your careers... You got through school, obviously. If school and clinical practice didn't give you a clear vision of what nursing would be... I'm not sure you quite understood.
People are not themselves when they are feeling less than 100%; crabby, insulting, depressed, anxious, needy, checked out, not understanding, not caring about anyone else's needs. You chose to be in a career where you are RESPONSIBLE for such people. And a handful of them, nonetheless.
I'm not trying to be rude. It just seems that this kind of response was prevalent among this thread.
Yes, I'm only in my 4th year of nursing.
Yes, I'm only 25.
Yes, schooling has changed since many of you have been in school.
But in all honesty, what was it that made you think if would be such a glamorous job in the first place?
I'm very sorry that you are feeling this way.You have legitimate complaints. And sure sounds like you're ready to be done. I've had a few nights where I could have vented just as long.
However, to those of you posting about your bitterness re: "not knowing" about how difficult nursing would be...
What did you expect going into nursing in the first place?
I don't know how you could have such rose colored glasses (for lack of a better term... it's 4am ) on in the beginning of your careers... You got through school, obviously. If school and clinical practice didn't give you a clear vision of what nursing would be... I'm not sure you quite understood.
People are not themselves when they are feeling less than 100%; crabby, insulting, depressed, anxious, needy, checked out, not understanding, not caring about anyone else's needs. You chose to be in a career where you are RESPONSIBLE for such people. And a handful of them, nonetheless.
I'm not trying to be rude. It just seems that this kind of response was prevalent among this thread.
Yes, I'm only in my 4th year of nursing.
Yes, I'm only 25.
Yes, schooling has changed since many of you have been in school.
But in all honesty, what was it that made you think if would be such a glamorous job in the first place?
Just out of curiosity, if you hadn't seen the threads that negate the OPs feelings and venting, would you have a different response?
Or was it easier to continue the ongoing trend because there was so much of it??? :)
Someone really needs a hug, & maybe a stiff one (drink). Carol, you are obviously an intelligent, compassionate, and rational person. You'll figure it out, and you obviously deserve to be a lot happier than you are. I'm a newer nurse, so I still am able to romanticize and idealize the sacred art of nursing to some degree. I also works Nights in Psychiatry, which makes it that much easier to tolerate my job. Even though I'm out of the loop, so to speak, I still recognize the reality of what you've experienced in this field and know that I would probably never be able to work any other shift in any other specialty as an RN. Unfortunately, you seem like the poster child for everything that is wrong with this profession, which is substantial, in terms of its soul-deadening aspects. No career is exempt from this phenomena, though, and people that are utterly happy with their jobs are weird and the exception. The reality and the bill of goods we were sold are much more divergent and disheartening than most other professions, however, in that we expected to be paid to care and make a difference and define ourselves by our daily work experiences as opposed to being paid to be **** on and disappointed by our roles/impact/the way we are perceived. Kinda like marriage (just kidding).
I'm lucky - I like my career enough, the direction it's heading. I often enjoy my family, and the direction that's heading. I may have missed it for all the bitterness and regret, but is nursing the only career you've had? I've gone through several, and they all sucked and made me feel the way you do now for various reasons. I haven't always been this close to being satisfied with my life. In fact, it's been a pretty rough and circuitous road. I like to think that maybe part of what drew me (us) to nursing in the first place is some innate, entirely human impulse that not everyone in this world possesses. Despite it all, Carol, I hope you retain that. If only to forestall that murder spree you've been plotting. Good luck, either way.
She wasn't venting. Venting is saying, wow my day sucked today bc this happened....She was putting down nursing as a profession...saying it's not respected and the worst job anyone could have and actually going out of her way saying that her mission in life is to stop people from going into nursing. That's messed up on so many levels and downright insulting!
I meant that I did not feel respected as a PROFESSIONAL PERSON who has worked in hospitals & health facilities for 26 odd years (I've lost count actually). I don't want to see anyone young get stuck in nursing, as they may hate it. I have always encouraged others to follow their dreams, be it nursing or not, but to get another degree first, then maybe do nursing.
Look at the facts: many other professions are seen as PROFESSIONALS. I have friends who are teachers, engineers, building managers, etc. They get A LOT of respect in their job; they post on Facebook all the time. When I first was going into nursing, everyone was aghast - they actually said to me: why on EARTH would you want to be a nurse??! They couldn't understand it at all, & tried hard to talk me out of it. But if you say 'I'm going to be a teacher, whatever' everyone gives you a pat on the back and probably a party too.
If you WANT an argument, believe me, you can have one, because you will not win one with me & will be wasting your time. Come to think of it, I'll probaby be wastin MY precious time. I have worked with world class, irascible (to say the least) plastics & other surgeons - and am not easily intimidated. I would love to have an argument with you in person!! If only I could...
And I will continue to tell younger people to consider another career, unless they really WANT to do nursing. How old are you by the way? Have you cared for really ill patients? Or patients threatening suicide or who are psychotic, or have you worked in an insanely busy ED/ER where there are NO BEDS IN THE STATE AT ALL, & the ED is overflowing?? Nurses do a lot of work that we are not credited for. For example, if a patient has surgery and recovers against all odds, who gets the credit on the media? The surgeon; nurses are not even mentioned! We do INSANE AMOUNTS of work, much of it dirty, hot and sweaty stuff & we are in the background. Stop and think for a minute: who runs hospitals? Not the doctors; they can't wait to get away to the gym or to play golf - they leave their work to their over worked registrars & interns. All the physios, social workers etc leave for the weekend and nurses are left to deal with it all. Who do the doctors defer to for beds, or when they have questions, etc? The nurses or NUM, or nursing bed coordinator. Nurses have too many responsibilities and aren't recognised either professionally or financially. We are not treated as professionals - I will argue that any day or night. We need to make the public more aware of what we actually do; they need educating re our important duties. Hospitals and countries would grind to a halt if we all decided to strike; you can't do without nurses - ever!
And have you never had a bad day? Where psych patients go off, where a baby has died & you spend half your shift sitting with a grieving mum, where you've cared for 65 patients in one night? Obviously not or you would know why I was being irate. That is the hard work I have done & that I'm talking about; the important stuff we do that no-one seems to care about.
And I'll tell you something else: I HAVE AS MUCH RIGHT AS YOU or anyone else to post on here, matey!
Has anybody thought how fortunate THEY are to not be going through a really rough time, or is it just better to go on the attack?
Nobody else out there ever had such a crappy day that nothing seemed salvageable? Instead of chewing out someone who HAS, why not at least be willing to either show a bit of support, or just go away and read something else...???
Just a thought....
:chair:
Good Morning, Gil
607 Posts
Yes, PP, she was venting. She was expressing her feelings regarding the profession. Because you have pride for the profession, I guess I can see your perspective and why you feel insulted that she would talk people out of what you think is a great profession. I love nursing, as well, take pride in what I do, BUT that is because I am currently having a good experience, feel both my unit and the nursing area I chose are a good fit for me, my manager appreciates me, and my preceptor is very helpful. (and, maybe because I'm a newer nurse
just kidding). It really is like night and day comparing my 2 nursing experiences thus far, and if I had stayed at my previous position forever, I definitely would have been burnt out and would not feel as I do now. I love going to work now because I feel supported, I learn something new every day, it is rewarding, I feel as though I can be thorough with my pts d/t the lower ratio (even though they are higher acuity), and my employer as a whole respects the work we do and gives us many learning opps targeted just for us, and many different opportunities to get involved. I have no intention of leaving this employer. I feel very fortunate that this is the case (because it is not for many), and I look forward to going to work for those reasons. You probably work for a similar employer; at the end of the day, just feel thankful. Have you never worked for an employer (nursing or otherwise) that was as the OP described? If you haven't, then maybe that's why you really don't understand her post.
She clearly has worked for employers that do not appreciate the work she does, and when she calls off once (which she never does, is very reliable), they give her a big song and dance. She feels as though she made a mistake and doesn't want younger people that she cares about in her family or otherwise to do the same. I hope that the OP finds an area of nursing that she enjoys, doesn't make her feel isolated from her friends, and hopefully she will feel rewarded in what she does.
OP, have you considered public health nursing? I know it requires nursing experience, so you would have the edge there. That's a M-F deal, and the public health nurses on here rave about it. I would tell you that ICU is awesome (because it is!), but that requires shift work, and it sounds like you need a 9-5 no weekends, no holidays position at this point in your life. Best of luck! Hope you can use some of your PTO time!!