Why did you take up nursing? What's your story?

Every nurse has their own story to tell about how or why they chose to enter the nursing profession. Some may have been inspired by a personal experience with healthcare, while others may have been drawn to the idea of caring for others. Some may have stumbled upon nursing by chance, while others knew from a young age that it was their calling. Whatever the reason, each nurse has a unique narrative that led them to become a caregiver. These stories are a testament to the diversity and passion within the nursing community and the profound impact that healthcare can have on our lives.

Please be as detailed or as short as you wish. It'll be interesting to hear everyone's stories.

What wonderful stories..Mine is simple ..At 32 y/o i went to school and became an aide and after 1 year I thought I can not see myself doing this at 50 so I took the ACT and applied. The day before my interview I dreamed that when they interviewed me and asked me Why do you want to be a nurse? My reply was "because I think I will look good in white" I sat straight up in bed sweating and believe me that was NOT my response during the interview..

My story is similar to some people here, but yet still different. When I was a little girl we were farmer's in the mid-west (IL),I had lots of horses and all the other little creatures running around in the country. When the vet came out to tend to the animals I was always there to be his helper (nurse) . In HS I decided nursing was the job for me because I knew there would always be sick people to take care of. In College I started a nursing program and because we were poor my family gave me no financial support and I ended up working too many hours and not enough hours of sleep so I failed the first semester of nursing school twice. The program only let you try 2 times then you were not allowed to enter that program. However I was not about to go back home so I started respiratory school at the same college and passed with A's and B's. I was a RRT for 6 years and then finished an AS degree in nursing in 2001 and have been a RN ever since Aug. 2001 when I passed my boards. There were several nursing instructors at that school who told me that maybe I should try something else besides the medical field. Well, I am now an ICU RN who works in a trauma ICU at a level one trauma center in east tenn. and if I say so, I am pretty darn good at it!!! I now have aspirations to try flight nursing. Thats my history!

My mom was diagnosed with schizophrenia when I was 4 years old. After she was institutionalized and I grew older, I was horrified at the treatment she received. (this was in the 70's and early 80's). Because of my experience, I developed a compassionate heart for people who are ill -- whether it be physical or psychological. I always knew I would end up in a "helping" field, but my first choice was social work and/or teaching. After talking with various teachers and social workers, I decided my best bet would be nursing. I'm still in nursing school, but I feel like I'm on the right track! :wink2:

my daughter died from a brain tumor and made me promise to become a nurse to help other people. She was ten when she died.

snursemate

Could you tell me what forensic nursing is? How would you get into it? sounds interesting. Thanks

I was in my back yard one evening with a nice fat possum on the grill. I heard a noise and looked up to see a spacecraft directly above me. In an instant, I was transported into a dimly lit area equipped with strange equipment. Then a 3 ft tall being with a single eye in the center of his neck...or what I though was a neck, kicked me in the shins. As I jerked my leg up out of the way, several of the little critters pushed me back on an exam table. The next few hours were a blur as I went in and out of consciousness. Before I knew what was happening I was graduating from nursing school. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

:smokin: Is that you with the crackpipe in your mouth?????

After getting accepted into a prestigious pre-med program, I leant back, thought about my dream of becoming a neurosurgeon and started calculating how long I would be in school for and how many debts I would have before it would be over.....("ugh" was the thought that came to mind)....A week later I started looking for nursing schools and I have never once regretted it or looked back and wished I had done it differently.

hehe,i am a student nurse who is going to graduate soon...what i want to get from allnurses.com is the sharing stories from all kinds of nurses from everywhere...and i want to hear some advice from you..

Very interesting thread. I am just getting prepared to starti the pre-reqs to even get in the nursing program after RSV season is over.

I was always somewhat interested in nursing, but never pursued it. Then I developed severe pre-eclampsia and had my daughter 9 weeks early. While the LDRP nurses were nice, I want to be a NICU nurse. The good nurses are not what motivated me, I can only hope to be as good as them. My motivation is actually the 3 bad nurses my daughter had. I know I can be a much better nurse than them, because if nothing else I can be nice to the parents (and not so rough with 2 lb babies--one of these nurses slammed a supply cart into my daughters incubator and didn't even respond to the A/B/Ds it caused, the charge nurse did)

I was tired of dating waitresses, thought I'd give nurses a try.

Specializes in CVICU, PICU, ER,TRAUMA ICU, HEMODIALYSIS.

I am 57 years old, been a nurse since 1975. When I was a little girl, my mother ALWAYS impressed on me the importance of going to college and having a career with which to support myself, "in case anything happened to my husband". (This was the 1950's you see.) I loved science, biology, and in 8th grade, my science teacher had us learn all the bones of the body. I was hooked. I wanted to know more. My parents weren't rich, student loans were rare, and only the Valedictorians got things like the National Merit Scholarship (one was given to each senior class.) I didn't even consider becoming a doctor back then although I might have if I had been born 10 or 20 years later. I decided to become a nurse and once I made that decision at around age 12, I never considered doing anything else. I had no idea how much money nurses made and I didn't care. I knew they got paid something and that was all I cared about that. I can honestly say that the first 24 years were great; I am truly one of the best nurses I know (NO BRAG, JUST FACT!) I always left my patients cleaner, happier, more comfortable, in less pain, or at least solved some minor problem that had been driving them nuts. My personal goal, my ethics if you will, that I lived and worked by were to find at least one thing each shift, with each patient that I could fix, resolve, make better in some way. My patients and their families loved me and so many times I would hear the words, "Will you be back tonight?" or "You really love your job, don't you?" or just "Thank you so much, dear". Unfortunately, in 1999, my nursing career began to deteriorate. I still don't really understand what I did or did not do. First, one nurse who had 10 years less experience than I but was an excellent nurse, began to complain about various things I did. Once he said I failed to answer a light and walked past it. Then he said I left an empty syringe on a patient's overbed table (I had been using 30cc syringes to irrigate a TURP patient's clotted foley catheter and the entire night had been one disaster after another.) I FORGOT. Then I was working in the same hospital's ER where they did not have an MD in house; we had to call him in when we got a patient. (It was a very small hospital) I had a patient come in who told me she had taken 3 Vicodin and 3 20mg Paxil because she had had an argument with her lover and wanted to relax. Then she was afraid that she might have taken too much and came in to be checked out but SHE SAID SHE DID NOT WANT TO SEE A DOCTOR BECAUSE SHE KNEW IT WOULD COST HER MORE AND SHE HAD NO MONEY AND NO INSURANCE BUT SHE WORKED AND DIDN'T WANT A BILL. SHE SAID SHE WOULD LEAVE IMMEDIATELY IF I CALLED THE DOCTOR TO COME IN. I was in a quandary about what to do so I asked the Charge Nurse who had worked in the ER too. I had never worked in an ER where there was no doctor in house before and I was uncertain as to what was my liability. I said I thought it would be better to try to keep her there to observe rather than have her leave and have something happen to her later; the Charge Nurse agreed. The patient agreed to stay until we were certain she was out of the woods. She left 3 hours later with no ill effects and she was charged for a Nurse Exam. I was fired and it was turned into the State Board who gave me a Letter of Censure. Then in 2001 a doctor I went to see with new insurance as a new PCP to refer me to an orthopedic surgeon for a severe knee injury accused me of being drug seeking and wrote in my chart that I was an RN that was probably addicted to narcotics and since it was the first time I had seen him, I probably went to new doctors all the time getting narcotics. He did not turn me into the State Board of Arizona until ONE YEAR LATER WHEN I WENT TO SEE MY NEW PCP (after my knee surgery I did not require the services of a PCP for another year). IT WAS THEN THAT MY NEW PCP ASKED IF I HAD HAD A PROBLEM WITH NARCOTICS WITH THE PREVIOUS PCP WHO HAD WRITTEN SUCH IN THE MEDICAL RECORD THAT WAS SENT OVER FROM HIS OFFICE. I wrote him a nasty letter and it was then that he turned me into the State Board who could not find any proof either with any of my former employers for the past 10 years, nor with my previous doctor who I had had for 8 years. STILL THE STATE BOARD KEEPS THE COMPLAINT ON RECORD AND LISTS IT WHENEVER SOMEONE CALLS THEIR AUTOMATED SYSTEM TO VERIFY LICENSES. Now I wish I had become ANYTHING BUT A NURSE. NURSES HAVE NO BACKBONE. THEY ARE PETTY, THEY ARE JEALOUS OF EACH OTHER, THEY WILL TURN ANOTHER NURSE IN WHERE A DOCTOR WOULD RARELY IF EVER TURN ON ANOTHER DOCTOR. EVEN WHEN I WROTE A FORMAL COMPLAINT TO THE ARIZONA BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS ABOUT *************, THEY DID NOT ADDRESS THE ISSUE OF HIS RUINING MY CAREER AND DEFAMING MY CHARACTER. THE SIMPLY SAID THAT HE COULD PRESCRIBE PAIN MEDS IF HE WANTED TO OR NOT. (I HAD TOLD HIM THAT THE ONLY PAIN MED THAT I CAN TOLERATE IS PERCOCET WHICH HE REFUSED TO PRESCRIBE SO I WENT HOME WITH NOTHING TILL I WENT TO THE ER 3 DAYS LATER WHERE THE MD DID GIVE ME PERCOCET AND IN FACT OFFERED ME MORPHINE OR DEMEROL BUT I CAN'T TAKE EITHER OF THEM.) I have seen many, many nurses turn on each other; I have seen many nurses treat each other poorly while they "suck up" to all the doctors, something I have never understood, since the doctors are not their employer, and since no doctor would ever put HIS license on the line to defend a nurse's license.

IF I HAD MY DRUTHERS, I WOULD BE AN ATTORNEY; I HAVE EXCELLENT CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS AND CAN EASILY SEE ALL SIDES OF NEARLY ANY PROBLEM OR ISSUE. I am sorry for everyone who goes into nursing today. It is not what it used to be. The people who go into nursing often go into it solely because its a guaranteed job and there are so many different fields one can choose. Recently, my husband had to get an injection in his doctors office. When he came out he was white and furious. When I asked him why, he said that the nurse inserted the needle VERY SLOWLY, CAUSING HIS MUSCLES TO SPASM AND THEN INJECTED THE MEDICATION SLOWLY AS WELL. I would have liked to have asked her where she went to school and who taught or did not teach her how to give injections. I THOUGHT EVERY NURSE WOULD KNOW THE BASICS OF GIVING AN INJECTION. I GIVE MY HUSBAND INJECTIONS ONCE A MONTH AND HE NEVER FEELS THEM. Also, after having a cardiac cath, a nurse came in and told my husband to sit up so she could listen to his lungs; I wasn't in the room at the time, but he knew that he was not to sit up or bend his leg and he refused. When I got back, he told me what she had done and I went and found her and explained why she could have had him hemorrhaging to death. Another time, after spinal fusion, my husband had a foley catheter in place. A nurse came to take it out and WAS NOT GOING TO DEFLATE THE BALLOON FIRST!! My husband told her "don't you have to let the air out or something?" She then went and got a syringe and removed the saline before pulling the cath.The quality of nurses has deteriorated tremendously over the past 10 years or so. Please don't think I am going to be one of those OLD NURSES who thinks I know best, but I have seen so many errors by nurses in the last few years that I worked that I have a living will stating that I am not to be taken to any hospital under any circumstances, for any reason. Just let me die.

Specializes in Med-Surg.

My mom has been a nurse for thirty years and I just loved science and how the body works as a kid. I use to read all of her medical nursing books and as all of us as nurses are I am a very caring individual and give 150% to my patients.

When I did retail my customers were so excited that I was going to be a nurse and felt sad to lose me as photo specialist but loved the fact that I was to be a nurse. a good career choice they would tell me.

I love being a nurse, at times it can be frustrating and thankless but for the 2% that don't appreciate the other 98% make up for them.

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