Why I'm Leaving the Nursing field and Nursing School

Nurses General Nursing

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Hello there! I'm not looking for validation or approval, just wanted to get this off my chest and perhaps reach out there to fellow peers who might relate. I'm 35, have a BA degree in English, and made a career change to nursing 5 yrs ago b/c I love working with people & wanted to have a stable job. I've been a lpn for 5 years now and going through school and had this gnawing feeling that nursing wasn't right for me & expressed it to people around me, but was always told (by people who are not nurses), "Nursing is such a rewarding career, you'll make great $$ once you get your rn & you'll always have a job! Don't quit, you can make it through." I didn't quit, made it through lpn school, and have been very dissatisfied with my career choice.

My 1st job I worked in a 48 bed hell hole, lost sleep became depressed, suffered through chronic panic attacks, and cried before, during, and after every shift. I cared about these patients, but there was just too many of them to really make a difference and help them, let alone give care safely - I was a med robot. I quit, landed a job in a Dr's office which was much better, but the pay was horrible. It's also a dead end job, so I got through my prereqs and quit that job to enter a lvn-rn adn bridge program.

I get good grades, my instructors say I'm doing great in clinicals. I care about patient safety. I decided to leave nursing school in my 3rd semester adn program. I feel so relieved and at the same time sad. Relieved b/c I feel that I can no longer ignore that gut feeling I have telling me to run the other way from this field. Sad because I've invested years working and taking classes to get me to this point only to find that I really don't want anything to do with becoming a rn and I refuse to waste anymore time trying to convince myself that when I start working it'll get better, or to adjust my attitude. I've been bottling up my anxiety, crying before and after clinicals and class, tired of the sleepless nights full of dread of returning to the hospital, pretending to keep it together at clinicals isn't working for me anymore.

The hard work, blood, guts, poop doesn't bother me. It's the stress levels, the belittling from nursing instructors, the fact that rns will take the fall for any mistakes, the rns from the hospitals at clinicals telling me that I'm crazy, to want to become a rn, the hostile environment nurses must work in, the lack of jobs for new nurses who can't even get their 1st job! There is a reason nurses get paid well - it has to do with the amount of abuse and BS they must put up with.

At this time I'm looking for a career change. Into what, I'm not sure yet. I'll probably do lpn homecare until I can transition into something else if I don't find a job right away. Perhaps a lab assistant, pharmaceutical sales, or even working in the fashion industry, which I regret ever leaving in the first place. I'm ready to find work that makes me happy, or less miserable at the least.

Thanks for reading :)

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

I too hated floor nursing. Dreaded going in and in fact would rather have banged my head into the wall then go. So I made a change. I am now on year 2 of 3 of a BSN to DNP program. I teach clinicals to ADN students 2 days/week. So far so much better. Really can't wait to graduate and be completely finished with school. Good Luck!

Are there any agencies or websites that advocate FOR nurses? I have questions I cannot find answers to.

Thanks.

The threads always interest me.

I'm a second-career nurse who's been around the circle of the seasons enough times to be dragging my feet to slow the circles down (with a nod to Joni Mitchell).

I'm essentially a mercenary... I went into nursing primarily to find a well-paying job with a modicum of stability and that is what I've found. I'm often displeased with how the system runs but, because my heart isn't in it, I've little problem shrugging my shoulders and saying, "it is what it is," collecting my pay and leaving it at the door on my way out.

I didn't create it and I can't change it but I can profit from it while remaining detached from it.

There are some things each day that I appreciate... generally an interaction with a colleague nurse or physician, and occasionally a patient or family.

There are many things each day that I detest... but I can engage in activities that I detest without taking them into me or owning them.

Some will say that I must be a lousy nurse or on the road to burn-out... neither is the case. I get a lot of positive feedback from patients and colleagues and, 4 years in to job and 50 times around the circle, I have enough experience and wisdom and self-awareness to know what I can and cannot handle.

This is my job... not my life, not my calling, not my hobby... just my job. I do it as best I can and really don't stress about all of the system-induced deficiencies... they are what they are; they preceded me and will remain long after I'm gone.

I really think that one risk factor for burnout is caring too much and bringing one's heart to the game. The company gets my mind and my body for a set period of time but they don't get my heart and soul at all... those are for me and for my family.

OP, best of luck to you. I hope you find your pasture... I've learnt that none of them are that green and even the greenest are dotted with cow pies.

=♪♫ in my ♥, I agree with you very much and I would say that your philosophy is exactly what I was referring to that nursing would demand the best of personal domains. The ability to bring excellence to your tasks and remain unattached is a difficult one to achieve. It is really Zen! Requires much emotional maturity and can also draw upon the spiritual. Thanks for your post.

I have yet to find my niche as well. I think that if I had known nursing was so dysfunctional I would have chosen something else. It has to get better (I keep saying to myself :)

Specializes in Pediatrics, High-Risk L&D, Antepartum, L.
"As a student these threads are depressing."

I can remember reading through some of these posts back in the day and thinking... WTH?? Why are they complaining? They are making money and GOOD money and should shut the heck up and leave if it makes them so unhappy so some of us nursing students could take their jobs and be thankful. Now that I am an employed nurse, I still feel that way. I just will never understand people who are unhappy. I mean life is a choice. If you hate it, leave. Just like the OP. Simply bow out and rock and roll to what makes you happy, or figure a way to not let it get to you. I feed my family, I pay my mortgage and I write those checks knowing I can cash them thanks to the patients that some would consider a hassle.... to me, they are my lively hood and I am theirs as well. You make a choice every single day to be happy or to complain and hate your life. I chose the first.

And how many years have you been a nurse? Just curious if you've been abused long enough to understand. Many nurses are underpaid, overworked, horrible benefits and eventually it gets to you. I did leave floor nursing because I was tired of the abuse...now I'm working on a higher degree so that my nursing degree can really pay the bills and give me hope of a decent future.

Specializes in Peri-Op.

Work is not about doing what I love. I work so I can live, work is my paycheck and I disconnect from it when I leave the job. Find other things you enjoy in life outside of work. I go to work, do the best I can at my given job, get paid. If you are happy outside of work, you will be happy. Don't make work, any work, your life and our happiness. If you can't find personal happiness, you will never find professional happiness. Kid yourself in thinking otherwise but it won't happen.

I have found through the years if you take a positive attitude with you to work, you perpetuate positive vibes through everyone on the job. If your negative, the opposite happens. This works anywhere. The people that are just negative to the none will always be there and they fall away to the side.

I also wanted to add that I love my job and always have. I'm happy digging a ditch though, as long as I'm getting paid. I am also happy personally(internally with myself) too though

I really hope this was said in sarcasm.

sorry if I offended you in any way.

I don't mean any sarcastic thought no harm.

You are not the only one. I also want to get out of nursing as soon as possible. Hopefully by next year I can be completely out of nursing...

or at least work 1 or 2 days per week.

Specializes in "Wound care - geriatric care.

yes, this is a particularly rotten time to become a nurse. Wow, who would have thought. After all the effort and money one has to invest to become a RN at least you expect to find a job and not even that is likely these days. What I find amazing is the complete lack of support I encounter after nursing school. I remember one day I was laughed at from a HR secretary at a Kaiser facility, "you RN's are a dime a dozen" she said said with a smirk.

Hospitals and health care facilities have completely dismantled nursing training programs except for a few. when they do have one it's only a half dozen openings to which 1000+ applicants fight over like a bunch of starving refugees would fight over a sac or rice. Hospitals almost completely lost interest in training new RN's as if they had nothing to do with the process creating new nurses. They instead try to squeeze impossible work loads of the RN's they have creating this chaotic and toxic environment. In order to accomplish that they use the old fear tactics "do this or else", "you know how hard is out there" and the managers just keep drinking the cool aid thinking their bosses are broke. How sad.

To add to this problem, nursing is not like other professions you can start doing something else that is related and keep your connection to the craft. Nursing is one of the most regulated professions out there. In other words, there is no way to get in unless you are hired as an RN, very few exceptions and if it takes too long for you to get any experience at all the harder it gets, if you are older it's even harder. You really need a lot of luck or connection or both.

Could this be reverted? Maybe but no one knows when. Surely in 10 years from now a substantial number of RN will have to retire but we could be in this for a long long time.

Yes. Today do what you love...and forget about the money. If you know what nursing is and are willing to fight the fight go ahead but if you are thinking about security and money you might be seriously disappointed.

Specializes in Hospice / Psych / RNAC.

I read some of these responses and I just want to say "WHAT PAY! What a joke. Just think after ACA takes off and the poor MA's will be taught all the nursing skills and all the RNs will be taking the Docs place (well, we do anyway) and the paperwork. OMG, I saw an MA filling out Rx's at my urologist the other day...silence. I wouldn't dare ask how much they are getting; too embarrassing.

Specializes in Hospice / Psych / RNAC.

I read some of these responses and I just want to say "WHAT PAY!" What a joke.

:yes:

I feel like you novo.... Im a new student as well.... but at the same time I have been there as a teacher...At the time I was a teacher I thought I have to get another career...Low pay ...long hours.... bad administrators....Well guess what that's called life..I look back on teaching now and miss my children ...my summers....and the pay wasn't that bad..there are to many areas in nursing to go into to say all nursing jobs are bad....get over to the travel nurse forum ...those are some happy nurses man....;)

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