John, I have enjoyed reading your emails and commissurate with all  your 
thoughts. I too have done a "flip flop" a little later than you, early 40's.  
Thanks for enticing the dialogue on this list. IT is a great list to belong to. 
I have forwarded many of the replies to students who are behind me in the 
program at our school.  I am on my first level II fieldwork.  During the three 
years, I have always proclaimed, "It gets easier"  I am really challenged in 
the setting I am in but I love learning and I am very satisfied and I too take 
in on as a challenge!!! Kudos.  You will be there before you know it
 
Karen Tesarek
Occupational Therapy Student
"We must focus on the possibilities of life instead of the limitations"
Norman Cousins-1983

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of John Campbell
Sent: Tue 2/26/2008 7:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [OTlist] Conflicted



Thanks a lot for your responses and encouragement. I can't tell you 
how helpful it is.

I'm not really turned off to the lack of recognition that OT receives. 
If anything, I welcome the challenge of educating the world and 
pushing it to the forefront of social recognition. Choosing OT has 
been a huge, soul-searching process for me (I'm sure all of you can 
relate, especially the mid-career changers), and if I do go that way 
(as it looks like I will), I'm in it whole hog, to absolutely throw 
myself into it with passion and do what I can to further the profession.

Regarding the whole changing diapers thing, I understand not wanting 
to say "that's not my job" and waiting for the already overworked 
nurses to get around to changing your patient's diapers. I wouldn't 
want to put the patient through that. I think my overactive 
imagination may be building it up into a bigger thing than it is, 
really.

At the same time I really would like to avoid being in a setting where 
that's routine (and not the exception), but from what Ron says it 
sounds like there's plentiful options due to the variety of OT 
environments and demand. Honestly part of me wants to dive into 
geriatric rehab and try to really help make significant contributions 
to those who I think are too often dismissed due to their age, but I 
guess changing their diapers comes with the territory.

Ron, I've heard it's advantageous to be a male OT out of school from a 
couple of people. A female OT I spoke with mentioned that women often 
do it on a part time basis (juggling family and other 
responsibilities) while men tend to commit more to it full time, so 
employers tend to snap up men when they surface. Not sure how true 
that is, but you'd probably have some idea.

Thanks folks!
John

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