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Starting Your Nursing Career After Graduation: What Every New Nurse Needs to Know

FNA Editor by FNA Editor
April 21, 2025
in Nursing News
2

Starting Your Nursing Career After Graduation: What Every New Nurse Needs to Know


Welcome to Your Next Chapter, Nurse

By Ifeoluwa Dorcas Ojebode | Fellow Nurses Africa.

The halls have quieted. The oath has been spoken. The gown is folded away. Your certificate is finally in hand. The applause now echoes only in memory.

So… what happens when the music fades and the silence begins?
When the ceremony ends, and the real journey begins?


Life After Nursing School Hits Differently

There’s nothing quite like the thrill of graduation—the proud moment you become “Nurse You.” But then comes reality. Your name is now officially on the NMCN register, but job offers don’t immediately follow.

Welcome to the real world of nursing.
Where your identity is no longer tied to lecture halls or clinical rotations, and yet everyone expects you to know your next step—without ever teaching you how to take it.


Two Graduates. Two Journeys. One Dream.

For the BNSC Nurse:

You were told internship comes next—but no one said how difficult it would be to secure a slot. You begin the loop of brown envelopes, cold calls, silent waiting rooms, and unanswered emails.

If you land an internship: Congratulations. That one year is gold. Show up. Show interest. Let every rotation sharpen your clinical edge.

Still waiting? You’re not alone. Your moment will come. Stay ready and stay hopeful.

For the SON-RN Nurse:

You’ve earned your license and gathered experience. But in today’s job market, most employers want a degree. So, you begin working and schooling—balancing lectures with shifts, textbooks with patient charts, and ambition with exhaustion.

It’s not easy, but it’s not for nothing.
You’re building something that will last.


The Japa Factor: Nursing Abroad Dreams

Between the job search and academic hustle, the ‘japa’ dream begins to grow. You hear stories of nurses in the UK earning in a month what you might earn in a year. You join Telegram groups, attend webinars, take IELTS, and start planning your exit.

If that’s your path—own it, prepare for it, and do it right.
Whether you stay or go, focus on becoming a competent, excellent nurse. Because excellence travels. Your skills, your compassion, and your reputation go ahead of you.


The Lessons They Didn’t Teach in Nursing School

Let’s be honest:
Nursing school prepared you academically—anatomy, pharmacology, procedures—but it didn’t teach you how to:

  • Survive on a salary that barely covers transport.
  • Advocate for yourself without being called “disrespectful.”
  • Handle difficult coworkers or toxic work environments.

These are the unwritten lessons of the field—the kind you only learn by living it.

“You’re not weak because you’re tired. You’re just adjusting to a world tougher than the one you trained in.”


Thriving in Your Early Years as a Nurse

1. Start Small, But Think Big
Your first job might be in a small clinic or come with low pay. See it as a foundation, not a final destination.

2. Be a Lifelong Learner
Your license isn’t the end—it’s the beginning. Read. Ask questions. Enroll in courses. Stay current.

3. Balance Is Key
Studying while working? Pace yourself. Prioritize rest. Burnout doesn’t give warnings.

4. Own Your Identity
Introduce yourself proudly. You earned that title—don’t shrink to make others comfortable.

5. Guard Your Heart
The system won’t always be kind. But don’t let it harden you. Let compassion remain your superpower.


Your Nurse Starter Kit (No Textbooks Needed)

  • A solid, well-organized CV
  • Multiple copies of your certificates and license
  • A notebook for drug names, new procedures, and lessons learned
  • A mentor or safe space to talk honestly
  • A humble spirit and teachable mindset
  • Unshakable belief in yourself

Final Word: You’re Not Falling Behind. You’re Becoming.

There will be days you feel stuck.
Days when your classmate lands a UK job while you’re still waiting for an interview.
Moments when you wonder if it’s all worth it.

It is.
This messy, confusing phase is where the best nurses are made.

In the waiting. In the unknown. In the becoming.

“You’re not falling behind. You’re forming. Rising. Becoming the nurse you’re meant to be.”

So stand tall.
Show up with curiosity.
Lead with compassion.
Grow with purpose.

You might not have all the answers, but you’ve already taken the most important step—you’ve started.


What’s One Thing You Wish Someone Told You Before You Became a Nurse?
Share your thoughts and let’s pass the light forward.

Welcome to nursing.
Welcome to purpose.


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Comments 2

  1. Temiloluwa says:
    10 months ago

    Thank you so much for such insightful words.

    Reply
  2. Nr. Pelumi says:
    10 months ago

    This blog post resonates deeply with me. As a new nursing graduate, I wasn’t fully prepared for the reality of the internship application process. It has truly been one of the toughest phases of my life. I quickly realized that this stage wasn’t just about what I knew, but more about who I knew. From dealing with parcel agents to moving from one hospital to another within my state, the journey has been exhausting and disheartening.

    At a point, I gave up hope—the process seemed less about merit and more about connections. But just when I least expected it, a door opened. I received an offer yesterday, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to finally begin my internship.

    To anyone going through this phase, please don’t give up. The process may be unfair and draining, but your time will come. Keep pushing, keep praying, and stay hopeful. Your breakthrough might just be around the corner.

    Reply

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