career –
Unsure nursing is for meRating: (votes: 0) It is incredibly common for new nurses to feel as you do! The first year of nursing always contains plenty of growing pains.....accompanied by tears, anxiety, fear, worry, and just about every other emotion that can come your way.There are many career paths in nursing, as I'm sure you know. Not every nurse is going to be happy in all of them. Most are happy in one or two, some enjoy everything they ever did, but most often, it's some trial and error that gets us all to where we feel we're "supposed to be".Right now, you're learning the ropes. Applying the theoretical knowledge you gained in nursing school, learning how to work that into real-life situations and treatments. It takes time to figure it all out, and the more you "put it together", the more valuable you will be in the future.I expect you're working a general med-surg floor in an acute-care hospital....? If so, it's a good place to learn the ropes, figure out what is what. From there, you can explore other avenues within the hospital itself; once you are a good candidate for transfer (having had successful evaluations, etc) you can try out something else! And if the hospital where you are now doesn't have something of interest....look elsewhere.For now, do your best to see what you're doing as a continuation of nursing school, and work it to your best learning advantage Comment: Your feelings are pretty typical of a new grad once the newness wears off, the realization that nursing is hard kicks in, and you realize that you don't love your job. My solution was to look for a better job once I finished my first year and a bit. Don't be too quick to believe the "love your job". If it is a job that pays, it won't be because it is lovable. Try aiming for a job that is satisfying. A job that gives you satisfaction is a more realistic goal.Comment: honestly i don't know what kind of person would like nursing. there are people who genuinely like it i'm sure, but there are heck loads that hate it, and even more who now do it just because "they need roof under their heads and food for their children", so it's just a job, not really something they enjoy; for me, i wouldn't be doing this if i could turn the clock back to college days.like above poster said, nursing has so many fields, and I only so far have known the bedside care. i would like to try the business/desk side of job like research, cm, ur, audit, etc just to see if i like that kind of stuff better.you're new grad though, and you're young like me, so it's going to take time to find what you want to do; it's really rare for someone to do what they love to do as their work, really really rare. the real goal for most us is finding something you somewhat enjoy, and that is already hard enough haha. best wishes in internshipComment: Normal feelings. I am 4 months into my first nursing job and rarely go home without thinking I probably missed something. Did I? Probably not. But there is a ton of self doubt at first.Comment: How do we overcome this self doubt? That's the biggest thing that's eating me up inside. Any suggestions of things you've done that helps?Comment: Time and practice will take care of the self-doubt. Plus, look at how far you have come!!! You know more now than you did 6 months ago, so that is something to be proud of. Who are you comparing yourself to---the more seasoned nurses have learned the basics and are now progressing on with their careers. If you are looking to them for inspiration that is fine, just don't belittle yourself in the process. Do somethings for yourself---we as nurses tend to ignore the more enjoyable things that we could be doing. Life is not all work, do some fun things that you like. Any new nurse really does not begin to feel comfortable until about 5 years into the field. As far as being fearful of hurting a patient, remember all the basics you were trained in, med passes with the rights, learning how to put together the clinical picture of the patient will help you feel like you have more of a handle on things. Review your Med-surg books, look up a diagnosis of someone you took care of and see if you can correlate it all together. When looking at lab results see if you can figure out the rationale of why the labs are abnormal etc. Nursing is a challenging field, it does test everyone, prepare yourself and you will feel better about it. It will start to come together, it takes time. Hang in there!!!Comment: Quote from newgrad1988How do we overcome this self doubt? That's the biggest thing that's eating me up inside. Any suggestions of things you've done that helps?Comment: Quote from newgrad1988Well now here I am, a nurse and I'm not so sure I love it.Comment: Hi, I am still a nursing student who is doubting her choice, I have no motivation to carry on. How do you get over this hump. I have wanted to do nursing for years but have had to put it off due to having kids etc. Any tips would be great
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