Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
You may be smart enough to be a doctor, but you lacked the ambition.
This is just mean. Not the PP and not a nurse nor a doctor (not even anywhere related to the medical field) but I don't think that all nurses became nurses and not doctors because they lack ambition. They may lack the desire to become a doctor but that's completely different. Does everyone who chose not to become a doctor lack ambition in your opinion? A nurse is a completely different job than a doctor--its not like nurses chose to become nurses because they didn't feel like they wanted to be a doctor so a nurse was the next best thing. They may have chosen nursing because they like helping people on a more one-on-one level, maybe they liked the flexible hours for great pay and benefits or maybe they chose the field because it has incredible job security---none of these things are true for doctors. Its the same reason I work in a law firm but have no desire to be a lawyer--they may make more but they work twice as much and they all seem to hate their jobs.
I call BS. I never knew a law librarian, paralegal or legal secretary who wouldn't have wanted a JD if he or she could. What would be the point? I also don't think people with great grades and MCATs decide to be nurses instead of doctors for the reasons you outline.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
You may be smart enough to be a doctor, but you lacked the ambition.
No, I never wanted to see people for five minutes a day. I like taking care of people and helping them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re: the teacher argument. A number of close family friends are teachers and here's my take. During the school year they work very hard. Often from 7am to 6pm, when you consider planning, meetings, etc. That said, they DO get a LOT of vacation time. Two weeks at Christmas (that's all I get all year at my job in the private sector), a week for spring break, all holidays, snow/hurricane days, and the summer (which is more like two months for most). And most of that vacation time is not spent working.
There are also other things like the fact that during they day they rarely if ever go out to lunch. They can't hop online and shop for a gift or read DCUM. Often they can't even go to the bathroom when they need to.
So in short - they work very hard but get a lot of time off.
I work those kinds of hours 12 months a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
You may be smart enough to be a doctor, but you lacked the ambition.
This is just mean. Not the PP and not a nurse nor a doctor (not even anywhere related to the medical field) but I don't think that all nurses became nurses and not doctors because they lack ambition. They may lack the desire to become a doctor but that's completely different. Does everyone who chose not to become a doctor lack ambition in your opinion? A nurse is a completely different job than a doctor--its not like nurses chose to become nurses because they didn't feel like they wanted to be a doctor so a nurse was the next best thing. They may have chosen nursing because they like helping people on a more one-on-one level, maybe they liked the flexible hours for great pay and benefits or maybe they chose the field because it has incredible job security---none of these things are true for doctors. Its the same reason I work in a law firm but have no desire to be a lawyer--they may make more but they work twice as much and they all seem to hate their jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
You may be smart enough to be a doctor, but you lacked the ambition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
You may be smart enough to be a doctor, but you lacked the ambition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a librarian. Many people don't understand why someone would need a master's degree to become a librarian. Most people think I check out books for a living or only need to know the Dewey Decimal System to do my job.
You beat me to it. You also forgot about shushing peopleAnd when you aren't checking out books, you have a lot of 'free time' to read on the job.
I wish...[/quot
Same here! I love that there are several of us on here.![]()
Are you suddenly hot when you let down your bun and take off your blinders?
Anonymous wrote:Lobbyist here:
Regarding being married to the job, one can be but I think for me and those I know, lobbying ebbs and flows. For example, I'm in a very small part of health care and my job is "warm" right now. It will be hot late spring, and summer and will likely be cold late summer through the end of 2012. Right now I do about 40 hours. I"ll work more during the hot time but that's temporary and a bit less during the cold.
I am not evil, I do "eat out" a lot but now that I have a child, mostly lunch. I am not "high powered". I am medium powered at best in a TINY part of health care.
Anonymous wrote:Re: the teacher argument. A number of close family friends are teachers and here's my take. During the school year they work very hard. Often from 7am to 6pm, when you consider planning, meetings, etc. That said, they DO get a LOT of vacation time. Two weeks at Christmas (that's all I get all year at my job in the private sector), a week for spring break, all holidays, snow/hurricane days, and the summer (which is more like two months for most). And most of that vacation time is not spent working.
There are also other things like the fact that during they day they rarely if ever go out to lunch. They can't hop online and shop for a gift or read DCUM. Often they can't even go to the bathroom when they need to.
So in short - they work very hard but get a lot of time off.
Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
Anonymous wrote:Nurse---people tend to think a) not smart enough to be a doctor and b) sleeping with the doctors. Infuriating (and not true!).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an engineer but not mechanically inclined. So I won't always know how to put something together correctly on the first try.
Can you load a dishwasher properly? My husband is an engineer and can't figure out how to do this at all.
Sure can! Maybe your husband is a full time con man and a part time engineer.![]()