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Day in the Life: Night Shift Travel Nurse

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Have you ever imagined what the day-to-day life of a Travel Nurse Feels like? Let me show you a Day in the Life a night Shift Travel Nurse. Let's get ready for this night shift. Shift one out of three. I only have two more weeks left on this assignment. So soon I would be saying bye to this hospital. Bye. Bye. Let me wake up and hit the gym first thing I only have two weeks left at this current assignment. I'm actually working around eight shifts in the next two weeks. So I'm pretty much working three shifts on, one shift off, four shifts on, one shift off, and then one on, and then I'm done. They didn't need me for overtime this week, so I'm picking up two shifts next week. So I'll be working five out of seven days next week. Which is gonna suck. It is my last week, and I might as well go out with a bang and pick up five out of seven shifts. That kind of says something that they need me so much right before I leave. But whatever. I'm just here to make t

You Loosing Motivation? Need a Sign to Keep Going in Nursing School?

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 If you need a sign to keep going in nursing school, let this be it.  Not only was I making six figures after my first year of nursing, but also as a nurse, you only have to work three days a week.  If you're smart, you can actually have eight days off in between shifts. So I've been able to go on tons of vacations.  There's great work-life balance when it comes to being a nurse, depending on what job you have. Because some nursing jobs will literally want to make you pull out your hair.  Which goes on to my next top topic of as a nurse .  If you don't like your job, there are thousands and thousands of nursing jobs that you can try. If you think you made a mistake by going into the specialty that you chose, you can always quit and get a new job.  Which leads me to my next topic of you always have job security, no matter what as a nurse. So you can see all these people losing their job, struggling to find a job.  But as a nurse, you will always be needed. There will nev

I switched my career from Construction to Tech within 1 years

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 I quit my job and landed the role as a Python developer slash machine London scientist in November 2021.  I quit my job as a quantity surveyor and did research into roles of better paid and job satisfaction. I came across the data science role.  I was also reading a book called AI Superpowers Supergiants and it just a lead to get into data.  So I started doing my research into in-person courses and I came across the Wagon Data Science Bootcamp which at the time cost just under 7 k but they offered a scholarship, one full scholarship, which I applied for when I got and this was December 2021.  So I started the course in January 2022, completed the course in I think it was March, and then I started applying for roles and doing personal projects, mostly in computer vision.  Apply for my current role in June 2022, offer the role in July 2022, and started in August 2020. The story was first published on TikTok by  Eloho.codes

Starting a new career in my 30s actually makes a hell of a lot of sense.

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 Let me explain why.  So I did the whole uni thing when I was 18. I went to university.  I got a degree in psychology.   Now, at 18 years old, I didn't know who the hell I was, and I for sure didn't know what the hell I wanted to study or spend the rest of my life doing.  I personally don't feel like an 18-year-old is qualified to know what they want to do for the rest of their life.  I mean, when you were 18, did you know who the hell you were?  I'm only 34.  And it's only now that I feel like I know myself a little bit.  So starting a new career in my 30s makes all the sense in the world because now I know who I am.  I know what I like, I know what I don't like.  I know how I want to work.  I know where I want to work.  I know the kind of job that I feel will be most compatible in terms of me as a person.  It's all about redefining your success, redefining your personal goals, redefining what is fulfilling to you. These are things that I can do in my 30s t

Career Change Mistakes you Need to Avoid if You want Success

If I could do my career pivot all over again, I would avoid these 3 mistakes. I'm George. I'm a career coach for corporate millennials, and I also made my own big career pivot from corporate HR to independent career coaching about 2 years ago.  I would do these 3 things differently. The first mistake I made was feeling embarrassed to tell people that I was job searching in the first place.  I was afraid that looking for a new job looked like a scarlet letter among my friends in my community and that it said something negative about me and my abilities, so I stayed quiet for a while. But really when you think about it, it is the most natural thing for humans to evolve and look for new opportunities, and I wouldn't bat an eye at someone else telling me that they were job searching, so why did I feel like it was weird or embarrassing to tell other people that I was looking? The second mistake was applying to the same types of jobs I already had on my resume.  If I wanted to ma

Meet the ER Doctor Earning $400,000-$450,000 per Year: Interview in Miami Florida

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ER (Emergency Room) doctors' salary varies by state similar to the variances in the general doctor salaries in the U.S. However, a quick snippet shows that Salary Ranges for ER doctors in the US range from $33,120 to $450,401, and the average is $75,687. Let's step into the adrenaline-charged world of Emergency Room doctors as we sit down with a seasoned ER doctor who unveils the captivating facets of this dynamic profession. Discover the journey, motivations, and financial rewards that make being an ER doctor more than just a job—it's a passion-fueled calling. Join us as we unravel the secrets behind the scrubs in this exclusive and revealing interview! 💉🌡️✨ Interviewer : How are you doing? ER Doctor: I am doing good. Which career are you in? Interviewer: Wow! And how much money do you make per year? ER Doctor: About 400 or 450,000 a year. Interviewer: That's impressive. And how many years of experience do you have? ER Doctor: About 10 now. Interviewer: Wo

Seizures: mental health experience with seizures and other complications while treating schizophrenia

I will give you my personal experience with  Seizures mental health experience with seizures and other complications while treating schizophrenia. I got seizures from mental health drugs that gave me a harrowing ordeal.  In recent times, there has been a noticeable surge in a disconcerting trend—people seemingly eager to associate themselves with specific mental illnesses. It appears to be the latest fad, a curious inclination to declare proudly that one has sought therapy and received a diagnosis. As someone personally diagnosed with bipolar type one, ADHD, and severe anxiety disorder, I feel compelled to emphasize that there is absolutely nothing glamorous about grappling with a mental disorder. My personal experience took a dark turn after I was prescribed a drug (I will not mention it here) but it was an exceptionally high dosage and had fatal side effects that the physician did not warn me about.  This medication, typically used for treating schizophrenia and epilepsy, unraveled a