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thread: Mid life career change crisis!... how to take the plunge!

  1. #1
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    Mid life career change crisis!... how to take the plunge!

    Ok so i am talking 30-40's changing careers in a full 180! omg

    bascially my career i have been in it for 11 years, and it has been good, and i love what i do
    but it often leaves me emotionally drained, and physically exhausted. plus i dont find it family friendly (with shift work and weekends).

    I have toyed with the idea of a career change - and supported DH through his at 31 also.

    But:

    i have no idea what i want to do

    another 3 year degree seems to long to do part time and puts me off

    Grad entry or post grad sounds good but not sure if any of the courses available excite me enough

    i tried distance ed degree last year (llb) and i was enjoying it but had some issues arise which resulted in me pulling out, and scared to tried it again but would like to



    what made you take the plunge?
    are you glad you changed careers (esp if there wasnt really anything wrong with the one you were in?)

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Mar 2006
    7,046

    PP - what do you currently do? Is there a field within your profession you can go into? I know in my profession there are lots and lots of different avenues - education, OHS, Health Promotion etc.

  3. #3
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    hi MG!
    I am an RN, there are possibily other avenues but im not sure if i want to stay in health??

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    8,369

    What do you want to do? If you have a degree, many skills are transferable, depending on where you wanted to take it.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Jul 2008
    summer street
    2,708

    Could you do community nursing? Or a nurse practitioner? What about a diploma of midwifery and try to be a mchn?

    Many gp surgeries employ nurses too.

    My sister is an rn and the shift work sent her bonkers. There are more 9-5 jobs in nursing though. Have you contacted an agency?

  6. #6
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    i dont want to study nurse practitioner and as a casual it is had to be signed off by a governing body to gain admission to the course anyhow.
    mid is an option - although i dont want to be a midwife, but understand the importance in my current role as a paed nurse.
    however i need to be available for 4 days a week rotating roster for prac for 12 months and with no childcare not an option unti both kids are at school.
    gp looked into it - to be honest i think it will bore me and for the pay i could get more money in an unskilled job - its disgusting the why RN's are belittled by the gp system.
    i was looking into a masters of child health nursing to get into residental kind of care centres and thats as far as i got lol!

    FB - i dont know what i want to do, i have lots of "that would be fun or interesting" jobs i think about - journalism/copywriting/law/ but they are all big education commitments and not sure i am ready for full on uni all over again (on top of kids, and work etc).

    and all the things i would like to do dont involve pay lol! ( ie charities, red cross international aid etc) and well.... can pick the money tree in the back yard!

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Jan 2005
    Down by the ocean
    6,110

    When I enrolled to study in my early 20's I thought I was going be the oldest in the course, but there was quite a few in their late 30's or 40's and they were taking the plunge with a career change. Up until a couple of years ago I was in contact with one (she'd be in her late 50's now) and she was loving it!

  8. #8
    Registered User
    Add fionas on Facebook

    Apr 2007
    Recently treechanged to Woodend, VIC
    3,473

    This is the way I'm approaching my career change from corporate communications. I've looked at what sort of stuff I think about in my spare time, what I'm passionate about/interested in. I used to spend a lot of time on BB. Why? Because I'm interested in people's lives, interested in how people raise their kids. Also interested in education policy and issues like obesity. I'd like to make a positive difference to people's lives, especially children's lives. I'm not cut out to be a social worker so the best fit for me is social policy. I've applied to do a Masters in Social Policy Research.

    What else do I spend my time doing? Real estate porn. I'm always looking at houses online. I'd love to renovate houses but that requires a lot of capital and I don't want to take that financial risk right now. But if the social policy research doesn't eventuate, then I figure I will do a short course in real estate and become a real estate agent. Yes, I know this is a world apart from social policy but I'm a Gemini.

    Apart from waffling on about myself, my real point is to say ... what d'you spend your spare time thinking about - that will tell you what your passions are. Hone your passions into a career and I reckon you can't go wrong.

    And if I can start a new career (at the bottom) with study at nearly 43, then anyone can. You only live once.

  9. #9
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    Thanks girls... What do I think about in my spare time....
    I think about decorating organizing and designing my house, I think about organizing things for people ie I love it when dh emails and says I need you to find out the. Best way to do something... The planning organizing and presenting it.

    But I don't know what that means lOl

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Mar 2006
    7,046

    There's a lot you can do with your nursing without being too health focused (sounds weird but true!). There is ohs, research, policy, education etc etc.

    But if you like decorating, why not have a look at an interior design course? Good luck finding something!

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Jan 2009
    5,235

    hi MG!
    I am an RN, there are possibily other avenues but im not sure if i want to stay in health??
    I believe you can do teaching in 12 months if you are a qualified nurse incase that might interest you.

  12. #12
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    ive looked into that and the units of the nursing degree so not satisfy the 1 year teaching course

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Mar 2006
    7,046

    Really? I thought it did? I thought you could go on to do post grad in education?

  14. #14
    Registered User
    Add leckert on Facebook Follow leckert On Twitter

    Mar 2008
    still on the teaching contract roundabout
    1,952

    Post grad in education usually requires a three year degree at a minimum. I know to be registered as a teacher you must have done 4 years of uni (at least that's the case in SA and we changed over in the past 5 years sometime from 3 years of uni so it was inline with national standards)


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk so may be slightly confusing

  15. #15

    Mar 2004
    Sparta
    12,662

    If you like organising you can be a planner - events management, virtual assistant, travel agent...... they're all about planning stuff to a certain degree.

  16. #16
    Registered User

    Jan 2009
    5,235

    Really? I thought it did? I thought you could go on to do post grad in education?
    I have a friend who is a RN and she was going to do it so I don't know?

  17. #17
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    melb
    8,498

    I was under the impression that any 3 year Bachelor level course was only 1 year to do a grad Dip.
    My brother did a 3 year music course and then a 1 year grad dip ed.

    What about school nursing?? nurse immunisor?? community health nursing (more education based).

    Good luck its hard to know what is right to do. Doing MCHN now part time and it is full on and massive strain on life at present but hope at end of it hours will make a happier life for all!

  18. #18
    Registered User

    Aug 2007
    Sydney
    1,691

    I teach Bush Regeneration and Environmental Management at TAFE and we always have a handful of nurses enrolling in our courses each semester. They look tired and a little bit crazy and say “I don’t want to deal with people, I just want to be outside with the plants” . Nurses make excellent bush regenerators.

    All the very best for your new adventure.

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