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Yet another burned-out nurse question...Rating: (votes: 0) Is saying YOLO appropriate for this? LolHonestly I think you should do what you need for yourself. You will only hurt yourself and maybe even your patients if you cannot give nursing your 100%. There will always be jobs (even in crap economies) and with your experience I'm sure you'll find one, whether its in nursing or something else. Go for it, it would suck to live the rest of your live with regrets and "what ifs" and resent nursing. Comment:
You need to do what you need to do for you. With as much experience that you have, and not being in debt, you could do any per diem or part time gig you want to after your "me" time. Doctor's office, urgent care, school nursing or case management to name a few--it may just be institutional nursing that has gotten you burnt--but you won't know that until you take some time, then take some time to think about what you like--If you were not going to be a nurse, what were you going to do? If that is something like writing, uhm, hairdressing.....I don't know, it is funny what people would like to have been if not for a nurse--then maybe you can think about online courses, or something of that nature. I have also known nurses who got their masters in social work and became LICSW. You could then work in a school, as a social worker in a hospital if you miss the atmosphere, or counseling. Good luck to you!!
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I can relate. I haven't been a nurse as long as you but I have been in direct patient care for 11 years with 5 of those being a nurse. I was going back to school for a graduate degree next fall but I'm so burnt out I have decided to get another bachelors in something else then go to grad school in 2014. You have to think about yourself. I'm not saying to be selfish but if your heart isn't in it then you aren't doing yourself or the patients any favors. And again I can relate. I work the bare minimal now to pay bills and squirrel away some money. I used to work a lot of OT but I physically and mentally can't. I would love to take some time off and do something fun. So if you can do it then I say go for it!! And this will allow you to discover what you are truly passionate about.
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Congratulations on being insightful enough to know you need a life-change and being brave enough to pursue it! I think it is a positive move and believe you will learn a lot about yourself and what is best for your future.
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Sounds fantastic, I'd certainly do it!!!
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I say follow your heart and travel! Take some time for you and the answer to what steps you should take with your life may come to you when you have the time to focus on YOU. You are lucky not to have different things tying you down and taking away this opportunity. Traveling and seeing a different part of the world may give you a fresh new outlook on life that you are looking for. Good luck with whatever you decide
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I admire your intestinal fortitude. Go for it!!
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I just wrote a burnt out nurse post myself. Only I'm almost 7 years, not 17!!!If you can take the time for yourself, do it. I'm a single parent, not an option for me, but I can tell you, if I could, I would break, get myself back, rested and in the right state of mind.Perhaps you can be per diem. Work one weekend a month. Some spending money, no real commitment and the time to do what you need for yourself.Best of luck. I can definitely sympathize
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You are in an enviable position. Examine what nursing means to you.There are MANY avenues available to you. Sadly, hospital nursing is NOT what it was when you (and I) started. We are slaves to corporate American greed.It is no longer do-able to stay at the bedside.And that's OK!After 25 years of floor nursing... that progressively became unsafe for me and my patients.. I found two positions that enabled me to stay in the field. I telecommute for an insurance company and travel for a medical supplier as a super user for their equipment.It can be done. Feel free to PM me.
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I've only been a nurse for 2 years, and I notice burnout setting in. I travel frequently, but even this is not helping my mindset when I return to work. Like you, I have been soul searching, actually making lists, and putting a plan in motion. Nursing in and of itself is not the issue. The politics, endless documentation and unsafe ratios is. I've also considered returning to school for a totally unrelated degree. Good luck to you, whatever you choose!
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If I had the money to take off work for a year, I would do it in a heartbeat! I think it will you wonders for you, I say go for it.
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I have learned that life is too short to put big dreams on the backburner. Surely you too have seen the people who died with a whole bucket full of dreams they wished they had done.You have your finances in order, you are not be irresponsible...go for it!Best of luck
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