How to Answer: What is something that is rewarding to you about being an addiction nurse?
Advice and answer examples written specifically for an Addiction Nurse job interview.
25. What is something that is rewarding to you about being an addiction nurse?
How to Answer
Working a field where addictions is the focus can often have days that feel very difficult, even heartbreaking. However, there are times that something happens that can give you a feeling of assurance that all that you do is not in vain. Sharing how you feel about your job and something that makes you happy or makes you feel rewarded shows the interviewer that, despite the difficulties the job brings, you can still find the positive in what you do.
Written by Heather Douglass
Entry Level Example
"I love being an addiction nurse. I don't love the fact that we are needed, but because we are, I pour everything into my job. One of the most rewarding things for me is seeing someone who graduates from rehab and decides to initiate counseling or some type of 12-step program for himself. Taking personal initiative to continue with therapy and make a conscious effort to get sober and clean and to stay that way takes a lot of effort for the addict, and seeing that is more rewarding than I can even explain."
Written by Rachelle Enns
Answer Example
"This job is rewarding to me in so many ways. More than anything, I am happy and thankful when I see someone who has been my patient who actually follows through with a rehab path after detox, and begins counseling and then chooses to stay in a life of sobriety free from drugs and alcohol. There have been times when some of my previous clients have stopped by just to tell me that they are ok and that they are living a clean life and how their lives have changed. This is one of the most rewarding feelings I have ever experienced."
Written by Heather Douglass
Experienced Example
"There are so many rewarding things about being an addiction nurse. When a patient is admitted for detox or rehab, they are often angry and/or feel very broken. Many of them have lost all sense of themselves as they were once known. Seeing them begin to break through the heartache and the difficulties that their addiction has caused and work toward recovery is very rewarding. Seeing a glimmer in someone's eye who had seemed to have lost all hope is worth every difficult day."
Written by Rachelle Enns
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