Dear John,
  Figure out how you can best contribute to humanity and get on with it.  Being 
a caregiver has many rewards and many opportunities regardless of how you are 
plumbed below the belt.  If you want to work full time then you will work full 
time.  If you want to work outside of the house part time and inside the house 
part time then you will do so.  
  Good luck,
  Roxanne

Ron Carson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  Hello John:

I think what you say is true. But more importantly, I think being a male
OT just bring a certain "maleness" to a female dominated profession. I
think most employers realize the importance of having a male presence in
the work environment.

Ron

----- Original Message -----
From: John Campbell 
Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2008
To: [email protected] 
Subj: [OTlist] Conflicted

> 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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Roxanne
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