Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dental hygienist. I make $50 an hour and I work part-time. My hours are 9-4 with an hour paid lunch break.
That is not at all typical. Is that your hourly rate no benefits?
PRN status?
There is no way you are salaried at $50/hour as a dental hygienist
She's probably a contractor. I was going to go this path (DH carries very good benefits) the rate that many dentists are paying for Temps is $500/day. No benefits, 1099, but a ton of flexibility and choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dental hygienist. I make $50 an hour and I work part-time. My hours are 9-4 with an hour paid lunch break.
That is not at all typical. Is that your hourly rate no benefits?
PRN status?
There is no way you are salaried at $50/hour as a dental hygienist
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dh is a statistics analyst/programer and had great work-life balance. Works from home, has time to work out and take care of errands during work hours on most days.
Every day?
I find it amazing there are that many employers that trust employees to work from home every single day.
Anonymous wrote:Dh is a statistics analyst/programer and had great work-life balance. Works from home, has time to work out and take care of errands during work hours on most days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another very happy nurse here. Even right out of nursing school I never had a problem getting night and weekend shifts so that I could be home with the kids during the day. I've gotten by with very minimal day care. It will be very hard on you when the kids are young, you'll be exhausted, but it's so worth it for the family. Unless you go on to be a CRNA, you won't be rich, but you can easily make low six figures working full time and feed your family. There's always potential for extra hours or a supplemental per diem job in case you need extra income.
I honestly thank my lucky stars every day for my nursing license and the flexibility that comes with it. I've never missed a field trip, school performance, doctor's appt, etc. I never have to call in sick or scramble for day care when there's a snow day. When the kids are older I can always transition into day position as a nurse manager or educator if I choose. I can't recommend nursing enough.
I am not the OP, years ago I once thought of going back for a nursing degree. I am rather glad I didn't though. I'm in my mid 50s now though. My feet hurt! I don't think I could be on my feet for so many hours at my age!! Most of my friends who are in their 50s now and have nursing degrees work for schools, camps, or in administrative jobs. I am curious.. what do nurses do when they are my age and their bodies ache?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a patent agent friend. GS 14 12 years out of school. Works out of home all week, meets the kids bus everyday and has a booming photography business.
this is just the patent agency, though -- they ran out of space and kicked their senior employees out. Most of them work work from. That said, after the recent scandal, their computers and time management are monitored like you wouldn't believe. Not sure how PP's friend gets out of doing her job and taking pretty pictures instead, but as a taxpayer, I'm dismayed. That's the definition of waste, fraud, and abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Another very happy nurse here. Even right out of nursing school I never had a problem getting night and weekend shifts so that I could be home with the kids during the day. I've gotten by with very minimal day care. It will be very hard on you when the kids are young, you'll be exhausted, but it's so worth it for the family. Unless you go on to be a CRNA, you won't be rich, but you can easily make low six figures working full time and feed your family. There's always potential for extra hours or a supplemental per diem job in case you need extra income.
I honestly thank my lucky stars every day for my nursing license and the flexibility that comes with it. I've never missed a field trip, school performance, doctor's appt, etc. I never have to call in sick or scramble for day care when there's a snow day. When the kids are older I can always transition into day position as a nurse manager or educator if I choose. I can't recommend nursing enough.
Anonymous wrote:Dental hygienist. I make $50 an hour and I work part-time. My hours are 9-4 with an hour paid lunch break.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah retail is horrific especially around the holidays. Don't really get much choice even if you are a senior person.
Anonymous wrote:Retail. Hospitality.