career –
What else can you do with a nursing degree - besides nursingRating: (votes: 0) I fully accept that it's me. I just can't do the job. It doesn't mean that I am not smart or that I am a failure at life. It just means I chose the wrong career. Consider it like a marriage that doesn't work out. I'm seriously considering a divorce from nursing. Nursing doesn't like me and honestly, I don't like it. I thought it was what I wanted because everyone said what a good field it was and I have many family members who are RNs. And in my circle, going into health care is what people do. But I got into it and early on realized it wasn't for me. I tried to make it work. Toughed out nursing school and put myself out there to work. But it's not working. I need to cut my losses and leave, accept my mistake, accept my failure at this endeavor, and learn from it so I can grow as a person and be a contributing member of society. I don't know where to go from here. Going back to school is out of the question. My debt load is high from school and I've defaulted on them because I haven't been able to hold a nursing position for more than three months in the three years I've been licensed. Not quite sure what my options are given my education. I admire your perspective & congratulate you on your insight. As a nurse educator, I wish that there was some sort of objective assessment that could determine whether nursing is the right career choice. Side note - recent neuro-biological research has provided very clear evidence that the ability to multi-task is highly variable. If you are a natural multi-tasker, it's not hard to master the mythical "time management" skills - the key to thriving in most patient care settings. If this is not part of your chromo-net, the job will be much more stressful and difficult. This has nothing to do with intelligence. Some of the most brilliant folks cannot concentrate in the midst of chaos & need to focus on one thing at a time; it's just how their brains are hardwired.Unfortunately, Nursing education (like other 'technical' degrees such as medicine, architecture, etc) is very focused on the end game - passing NCLEX. But the good news is that we're the liberal arts of health care because Nursing curriculum does include a much wider variety of content than other clinical degrees. Have you thought about moving into a tangential, more data-driven health care role via certification in Case Management, Informatics or Quality/Safety? What about Occupational Health? Best of luck to you! |
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