Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So be a speech pathologist during the school year and train dogs during the summer. That way you still get all the health benefits and retirement etc. of being a school employees.
By the way, that's what my mom did. Speech pathologist who worked with show dogs during the summer.
I get what you’re saying but it’s not quite the same. I want to help injured or sick animals, not show dogs for profit. I’m an introvert and I will inevitably burnout from being an SLP. I always wanted to work with animals but I have an ethical dilemma that I feel when it comes to profiting off of helping animals… which is why I didn’t choose to go into that and I chose to foster instead.
Anonymous wrote:OP I can understand you. I am a PT who did 5 years Bachelor, 2 years Master and plus various specialized certifications. I feel at times ..,, in USA the PT/OT/SLP profession is undervalued .. especially constant payment cuts and changes in Medicare and contracting companies make our lives miserable . I have friends in UK NZ Canada and Australia and though they have their own struggles , they never feel like they are not called . Atleast you are lucky that you don’t have any assistants. But PTs and OTs have assistants and in job market , they are willing to hire a PT assistant than a PT . I can’t help but feel at times why I made this career choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So be a speech pathologist during the school year and train dogs during the summer. That way you still get all the health benefits and retirement etc. of being a school employees.
By the way, that's what my mom did. Speech pathologist who worked with show dogs during the summer.
I get what you’re saying but it’s not quite the same. I want to help injured or sick animals, not show dogs for profit. I’m an introvert and I will inevitably burnout from being an SLP. I always wanted to work with animals but I have an ethical dilemma that I feel when it comes to profiting off of helping animals… which is why I didn’t choose to go into that and I chose to foster instead.
For an introvert the basically one-on-one work of a SLP is great. You need to reframe your thinking OP. You seem to have crap-colored glasses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So be a speech pathologist during the school year and train dogs during the summer. That way you still get all the health benefits and retirement etc. of being a school employees.
By the way, that's what my mom did. Speech pathologist who worked with show dogs during the summer.
I get what you’re saying but it’s not quite the same. I want to help injured or sick animals, not show dogs for profit. I’m an introvert and I will inevitably burnout from being an SLP. I always wanted to work with animals but I have an ethical dilemma that I feel when it comes to profiting off of helping animals… which is why I didn’t choose to go into that and I chose to foster instead.
Anonymous wrote:So be a speech pathologist during the school year and train dogs during the summer. That way you still get all the health benefits and retirement etc. of being a school employees.
By the way, that's what my mom did. Speech pathologist who worked with show dogs during the summer.