Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Numbers men: my wife said she wanted the rule of 6 - height, size, salary and then she met me: 5’10, 7 figures for years and 8 plus with girth!
Sorry Charlie! Most women prefer to be tickled rather than choked.
Different poster here and I may be generalizing based on my own limited experience, but I’ve actually gotten out of the friendzone just because a woman found out I was well endowed. Tickling is nice but I also think they enjoy being “choked”.
I’d rather be tickled “repeatedly” than choked “once” if you get my drift.
Anonymous wrote:Lumberjack
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Numbers men: my wife said she wanted the rule of 6 - height, size, salary and then she met me: 5’10, 7 figures for years and 8 plus with girth!
Sorry Charlie! Most women prefer to be tickled rather than choked.
Different poster here and I may be generalizing based on my own limited experience, but I’ve actually gotten out of the friendzone just because a woman found out I was well endowed. Tickling is nice but I also think they enjoy being “choked”.
I’d rather be tickled “repeatedly” than choked “once” if you get my drift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know what's actually in demand, but if i had to do it again, I would prioritize high finance, followed by doctor specialties with regular hours, such as anesthesiologist, dermatologist, and orthodontist, because they have high income-to-hours-worked ratios.
You think anesthesiologists have regular hours? I’m intrigued at your logic.
No one needs an anesthesiologist besides an OR. Do you think no one staffs the OR on weekends, night, or holidays?
It's all very scheduled. And it's usually flexible.
I’m married to an anesthesiologist. It is a good job, but it is neither predictable nor flexible.
Daughter of anesthesiologist. Totally agree. My dad worked for a university hospital - so it was particularly crazy.
I would say that maybe an anesthesiologist in private practice would have more stability/predictability depending on the surgical practice they were paired with - but in my experience - every time I’ve been for one of those simple, outpatient surgeries - it’s been a CRNA and not an MD doing the anesthesia.
I often wonder what people mean when they say that a job as a physician is “flexible.”
As an ER physician I say my job is flexible in that i only work per diem so I let the hospital know the days each schedule block that im available and they put me onto shifts on those shifts only (if they need someone one those days). So if, say, I want to travel the entire month of July I just don’t mark myself as available at all in July. (I also don’t get paid….)
But it’s not flexible in the sense of , oh sure let me pop out for a quick hour for the dentist or to see the school play and then run back to work. When im scheduled, im ON. And I can’t even take phone calls from my kids sometimes. I’ve told them to call the nurses station if it’s an emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Numbers men: my wife said she wanted the rule of 6 - height, size, salary and then she met me: 5’10, 7 figures for years and 8 plus with girth!
Sorry Charlie! Most women prefer to be tickled rather than choked.
Different poster here and I may be generalizing based on my own limited experience, but I’ve actually gotten out of the friendzone just because a woman found out I was well endowed. Tickling is nice but I also think they enjoy being “choked”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know what's actually in demand, but if i had to do it again, I would prioritize high finance, followed by doctor specialties with regular hours, such as anesthesiologist, dermatologist, and orthodontist, because they have high income-to-hours-worked ratios.
You think anesthesiologists have regular hours? I’m intrigued at your logic.
No one needs an anesthesiologist besides an OR. Do you think no one staffs the OR on weekends, night, or holidays?
It's all very scheduled. And it's usually flexible.
I’m married to an anesthesiologist. It is a good job, but it is neither predictable nor flexible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Numbers men: my wife said she wanted the rule of 6 - height, size, salary and then she met me: 5’10, 7 figures for years and 8 plus with girth!
Sorry Charlie! Most women prefer to be tickled rather than choked.
Anonymous wrote:Numbers men: my wife said she wanted the rule of 6 - height, size, salary and then she met me: 5’10, 7 figures for years and 8 plus with girth!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Idle rich.
Winner, winner chicken dinner!
Anonymous wrote:Idle rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know what's actually in demand, but if i had to do it again, I would prioritize high finance, followed by doctor specialties with regular hours, such as anesthesiologist, dermatologist, and orthodontist, because they have high income-to-hours-worked ratios.
You think anesthesiologists have regular hours? I’m intrigued at your logic.
No one needs an anesthesiologist besides an OR. Do you think no one staffs the OR on weekends, night, or holidays?
It's all very scheduled. And it's usually flexible.
I’m married to an anesthesiologist. It is a good job, but it is neither predictable nor flexible.
Daughter of anesthesiologist. Totally agree. My dad worked for a university hospital - so it was particularly crazy.
I would say that maybe an anesthesiologist in private practice would have more stability/predictability depending on the surgical practice they were paired with - but in my experience - every time I’ve been for one of those simple, outpatient surgeries - it’s been a CRNA and not an MD doing the anesthesia.
I often wonder what people mean when they say that a job as a physician is “flexible.”