Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worked PT while my kids were little and loved it! The best (and worst) of both worlds. Don't be surprised by the worst - SAHMs look down at you for working, working moms look down at you because you only work PT... But it is all worth it!
SAHMs dont do this. If you need to tell yourself that for whatever reason, that is on you. I am a SAHM and most of my friends who Ive met from being a mom are working moms. It truly makes no difference to me when I meet someone if they work or not. Seems like you are looking too much into what SAHMs think.
Anonymous wrote:I worked PT while my kids were little and loved it! The best (and worst) of both worlds. Don't be surprised by the worst - SAHMs look down at you for working, working moms look down at you because you only work PT... But it is all worth it!
Anonymous wrote:Just stay home. You used to be a nanny. You got a doctor husband now. Most nurses who married doctors don’t work anymore.
DH went to an Ivy League med school and residency. There were all these PA students who married residents or dated med students. Many of them never even worked at all. They just got married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You've only been an NP for a year. That will be problematic for you if you SAH then go back after some years. Pretty much any other applicant is going to be considered before you. Even a new grad, because they likely also have worked as an RN for some yrs and have all their academic and clinical training fresh in their brain. You will be left with a weak resume and no recent experience.
You will be much better off keeping your foot in the door in some way. Either work as an NP part time or if there is a university near you with a nursing program, consider teaching. Teaching one class or a skills lab will require little time but still keep your resume from looking quite so bleak.
OP did say she was working as a nurse through her NP program. That means she worked as a nurse for 2-3 years and she was an NP 1.5 years before getting pregnant. I think she should do part-time too. I don't think you can teach aa class unless you a doctorate of nursing.
I don’t think it was 1.5 years before pregnant. She worked 1.5 years working before she had the baby.
OP said she was trying to get pregnant for a while so she must have been trying to get pregnant while in NP school.
Sounds like she met her DH while she was a nurse and went to NP school after she got married and tried to get pregnant in NP school but it took longer than she anticipated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You've only been an NP for a year. That will be problematic for you if you SAH then go back after some years. Pretty much any other applicant is going to be considered before you. Even a new grad, because they likely also have worked as an RN for some yrs and have all their academic and clinical training fresh in their brain. You will be left with a weak resume and no recent experience.
You will be much better off keeping your foot in the door in some way. Either work as an NP part time or if there is a university near you with a nursing program, consider teaching. Teaching one class or a skills lab will require little time but still keep your resume from looking quite so bleak.
OP did say she was working as a nurse through her NP program. That means she worked as a nurse for 2-3 years and she was an NP 1.5 years before getting pregnant. I think she should do part-time too. I don't think you can teach aa class unless you a doctorate of nursing.