
Carol now works as specialist mental health coach and mentor, but life has taken her to many interesting job roles both within and outside of nursing. In this candid and compelling piece, she reflects on her career progression and the importance of going where your interest takes you.
What will you be doing in 5- and 10-years’ time? These used to be common questions in job interviews, suggesting that certain qualities make a person worthy of the job - having your future totally mapped out, having the strategic steps towards the ‘ultimate’ goal broken down, and having the discipline to stick to the plan.
If you are that person, that’s great, and I have respect for you. I, however, am definitely not that person!
Looking back over the forty or so years of my nursing career, I am not dissatisfied with what I have achieved. I guess it depends on what measure of success of you are using. If the objective is to have the highest nursing status, or to earn the most money, then maybe the 5- and 10-year plan approach is the most appropriate.
However, the nurse who is rigidly sticking to ‘the plan’ despite what life is throwing at them, may find themselves constantly fighting their way through a world of stress and unhappiness. Motivations can change as life unfolds, and there is an argument for cutting yourself some slack, listening to what is right for you at the time, going with the flow, or thinking outside the box and taking some risks.
All nurses know about the need for self-compassion and avoiding burnout, but are these just academic concepts? Or are we applying them to our every-day nursing reality?
From Psychology Student To Mental Health Nurse
There are many paths to fulfilment in a nursing career, and I think it is ok if your path meanders and takes in different terrains along the way.
Using my own career as an advert for journeying through nursing off the beaten track, I must confess that even my entry into the profession was not conventional for the time. I started my nurse training after graduating with a degree in psychology.
This is very common in mental health nursing now, with graduates able to undertake a two-year master’s degree rather than the usual three-year undergraduate programme, but in the early 1980’s I was looked upon with much suspicion. Nursing was very much seen as a vocation – nurses were born, often following in the footsteps of their parents at the same hospital, nursing for the privilege of caring. They did not tend to be created out of the blue, having made a calculated decision about what the profession could do for them.
I went into nursing as a strategic move towards becoming a psychologist, as I had lived it up at college and didn’t get good enough grades to go straight into it! Nursing schools were based in hospitals and the first one I applied to turned me down as they didn’t think I would stick it out. To be fair, even my own mother asserted that I would never make a nurse!
Changing Attitudes Towards Graduates
I was accepted at the second school I tried and, although I found the theoretical side of training comfortable, the clinical staff on my placements generally gave me a hard time. There was a perception that graduates would only be interested in a fast track to management and would be reluctant to get their hands dirty.
This view was asserted on a larger scale nearly twenty years later when nursing had become all graduate entry, and nurses were accused in the media of being “too posh to wash”. It was said that this generation of nurses believed personal care should be delegated to less qualified staff. I feel this was certainly unjustified in my case, and for most of the graduate nurses I have worked with since.
About this contributor
Specialist Mental Health Coach and Mentor
A Mental Health Nurse for over 40 years, I have worked in different sectors and many clinical settings, with people across the lifespan. My passion is helping nurses to develop, and my senior roles of Lecturer, Practice Development Nurse, Learning and Development Manager, Modern Matron and Clinical Nurse Specialist, have culminated in my NHS retirement occupation of Coach and Mentor. I am also a Doctoral student researching retention in mental health nursing.
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Matt Farrah
one year agoI loved reading this Carol. Thanks so much for sharing it. It actually inspired me to think about and share ... read more
I loved reading this Carol. Thanks so much for sharing it. It actually inspired me to think about and share my own wonky career path on Linkedin!
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