Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP and teacher here; just have to add my voice to the chorus: I arrive most days at 7:15 a.m., and a good day is when I can leave by 4:30. This day includes a 45-minute lunch of which 20 minutes go to helping students who need extra help. At home I generally put in another couple hours of work each evening (grading, contacting parents, lesson planning, writing required teacher comments, completing required paperwork, etc.) If that's a "short day," please explain what you consider a long day.
7 AM to 11 PM for ten years , weekends as well in order to make law partner. One two week vacation a year. Working from 5AM through 2pm the following day every third day for three years of medical residency( 36 hr shifts every third day). working 7A-7:30p three to five days a week, every other weekend ( same hours) plus either christmas,and fourth of July or New years and thanksgiving for the life of your career ( nurse)
Hmm. Teacher here. I have three doctors and two nurses in my immediate/near-immediate family (parent, siblings, cousins and in-laws). (No Biglaw lawyers though!) None of them work many more hours than me
in total for the entirety of their careers. They worked many longer
shifts (such as the 36-hour one you mention) during training. My sister who is a nurse is the first to admit that she doesn't work as many hours as I do. A typical nurse's schedule includes three long shifts, but
the total number of hours isn't longer. Medical residents work very long hours but when their residency is over, that is generall no longer the case (obviously depending on specialty).
If you really in fact
worked 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. plus weekends for ten years (and I am skeptical of that claim because no, I don't believe that you actually literally did nothing but work except for 11 p.m.-7 a.m.; such a claim strains credulity, since I am fairly sure that you also ate meals, made personal calls, took off for a doctor's appointment or other personal matters, did some internet shopping, etc., whereas teachers, when they are at school, because of the nature of the job, are literally working the entire time with next to no breaks), then guess what--you "win." If accurate, that would indeed be a longer day than teachers work. (Of course, you probably get paid many times what teachers earn.) In fact, that would be an insanely long day. Of course, that doesn't mean teachers don't work a long day; it only means that some Biglaw associates work ridiculously long days (for tons more money).