zekele
Rough_Rock
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2005
- Messages
- 92
For those who work full-time or part-time, what do you do? Do you enjoy it? Did you have to go through a lot of schooling to get to where you are? Is it easy to balance your job with your personal life?
I am asking this as someone who is dissatisfied with her professional life. I am a research technician at a state university laboratory that is studying Alzheimer''s disease. It sounds like noble work, but I feel like I am working myself into the ground without really making any progress in my research project. Since my position is low-level I get a lot of "desk work" heaped on me that is really difficult to juggle with lab work, and I always work overtime and am tired all the time. I''m on vacation right now (yay!!) but I feel like if I stayed in this job, I would never be able to work a regular, low-stress schedule to make time for a family. That is partly what is driving my unhappiness; I want to start a family in the next few years, and every night when I get home at 8 or 9 p.m. I think to myself, "If I had a child, I''m coming home just in time to put them to bed." They say that if you want to work in science, you will never work a regular schedule. I''m so unhappy with my job right now that I am thinking perhaps I should not be in science. I''ve actually had a few nights on this vacation where I haven''t gotten any sleep because my mind was racing, stressing about my job
And did I mention that I get paid peanuts?
I want to change careers, but preferably stay in a health or science-related field. Right now I am thinking of entering a training program to be a diagnostic medical sonographer (aka ultrasound technician). It sounds like it is flexible, doesn''t have the stresses associated with a research project-driven job, and pays much better. If anyone has any input on this, I''d like to hear it, but mostly I''d just like to hear from people who are satisfied with their jobs (or if you aren''t, why not?).
I am asking this as someone who is dissatisfied with her professional life. I am a research technician at a state university laboratory that is studying Alzheimer''s disease. It sounds like noble work, but I feel like I am working myself into the ground without really making any progress in my research project. Since my position is low-level I get a lot of "desk work" heaped on me that is really difficult to juggle with lab work, and I always work overtime and am tired all the time. I''m on vacation right now (yay!!) but I feel like if I stayed in this job, I would never be able to work a regular, low-stress schedule to make time for a family. That is partly what is driving my unhappiness; I want to start a family in the next few years, and every night when I get home at 8 or 9 p.m. I think to myself, "If I had a child, I''m coming home just in time to put them to bed." They say that if you want to work in science, you will never work a regular schedule. I''m so unhappy with my job right now that I am thinking perhaps I should not be in science. I''ve actually had a few nights on this vacation where I haven''t gotten any sleep because my mind was racing, stressing about my job

I want to change careers, but preferably stay in a health or science-related field. Right now I am thinking of entering a training program to be a diagnostic medical sonographer (aka ultrasound technician). It sounds like it is flexible, doesn''t have the stresses associated with a research project-driven job, and pays much better. If anyone has any input on this, I''d like to hear it, but mostly I''d just like to hear from people who are satisfied with their jobs (or if you aren''t, why not?).