Cheriti Sellers, RN, gave up a career in substance abuse counseling for a life in nursing.

Hometown nursing –Ā Mustang native celebrates career change

story and photo by Bobby Anderson, Staff Writer

Cheriti Sellers, RN, was sitting in her masterā€™s class like she had so many times before when God began to whisper in her ear.
It was clear to the then-substance abuse counselor that God was leading her in a different direction. It was actually one she wanted to go in years before.
Now, four years into a rewarding nursing career, Sellers sees how the route sheā€™s traveled is the one sheā€™s supposed to have been on all along.
Four years ago Sellers left behind a career in alcohol and drug counseling and enrolled in Oklahoma City Community Collegeā€™s traditional nursing program.
The loss of her father during high school solidified her pursuit to help others.

ā€œIā€™ve wanted to go into nursing since I was in high school,ā€ Sellers said. ā€œMy thing was I wanted to go cure the world. Life turned and I ended up in drug and alcohol working with adolescents.ā€
Family studies and gerontology work soon followed and before she knew it Sellers was headlong into a masterā€™s program as a family therapist.
Thatā€™s when she heard the whisper which was as jarring as a scream.
ā€œI decided I was just done. I was ready to move onto something different,ā€ Sellers said. ā€œNursing, especially ER nursing, kind of brought both worlds together for me.ā€
Countless cuts to the stateā€™s mental health budget pushed counseling providers to the brink trying to figure out how to deal with an ever-growing need with a shrinking budget.
Private sector work wasnā€™t much better.
ā€œIt was a lot of emotion,ā€ said Sellers, who not only worked for an agency but also ran a 24-hour crisis line while holding down a private practice. ā€œI was running a lot. There was a toll on my family. There was a toll on me.ā€
ā€œI just said ā€˜I donā€™t think I wanted to do this for the rest of my lifeā€™ and I got up and walked out,ā€ Sellers continued. ā€œI just felt like God was telling me there was more for me to do somewhere else and I was done there. I felt like I had done what I needed to do in that field.ā€
That decision was never followed by regret. There were no second thoughts.
She became certified as a science teacher for grades five through nine and entered the classroom thinking this was her next move.
God whispered again.
On a Tuesday she was teaching. The following Tuesday she was an OCCC student and learning.
ā€œIt was pretty fast and I havenā€™t stopped since,ā€ Sellers said.
Now, Sellers works at St. Anthony Healthplex Mustang.
Itā€™s a job she truly adores for so many different reasons.
ā€œI know that I make a difference, especially working here,ā€ Sellers said. ā€œI go to football games on Friday nights. I go to Wal-Mart. My roots are here in Mustang. Iā€™ve lived here my entire life. My family was here since the Land Run. This is my town.ā€
ā€œWhenever I go to those places and they say ā€˜Youā€™re the nurse who took care of meā€™ they know me. They remember us and itā€™s nice.ā€
Sellersā€™ family – including a husband of 23 years this June and four kids – think momā€™s job is the best. The three boys and one girl have non-stop schedules but they always know where to find mom – especially when she needs a Sonic iced tea in the afternoon.
ā€œThereā€™s a lot more family time,ā€ Sellers said. ā€œWhenever I was counseling my phone never stopped ringing. My life never stopped.ā€
The Mustang native admitted that she felt she couldnā€™t stop answering her phone in her previous life.
Calls came in at all hours. Often, they were of life and death importance.
Sometimes it was someone drunk in a Wal-Mart parking lot who desperately needed to make it to a crisis center or teenagers calling because they didnā€™t know where to go.
ā€œI couldnā€™t not answer my phone,ā€ Sellers said. ā€œI was tired a lot. There was a stress. I felt like I was responsible for tons of life. Here, whenever my shift is done I know that life is in good hands and I can go home and clock out mentally and physically.ā€
ā€œIn my previous career I couldnā€™t do that.ā€