brotherbloat said:
However, moving to a city where you know no one is hard. It seems that most people I've met (all of them, actually) have their support networks in place, and it's taken me almost two years to make one good friend (who I met on Craig's List.)
Moving to a city twice the size of any you've ever been in, with an almost alien culture, a full day's plane flight (~4 hours, layover, ~5 hours) and four thousand miles from family, is definitely hard. You've got me there. It's taken me two and a half years to go on one excursion sans hubby -- with friends HE originally introduced me to. Oh, and he was mildly jealous afterward (bitter that he had to be at the hospital while I was having fun).
Yes, I hate my job, but the problem is that I'm studying for the MCAT and applying to med school this summer, so my job is in the hosptial, b/c I wanted to get some full-time clinical exp. Problem is, my job is extremely boring and pointless, and actually I'm looking for a new one. However, when you have an MA in a totally different field plus a past career that has nothing to do with science/ medicine, it is very hard to get hired in a "good" job in your new career area. Currently I'm looking for both medical and non-med positions, but when you have a background in something totally different, it is very, very hard to get your foot in the door in a new field.
You mean kind of like looking for a university position or with a bachelor's in physics? Oh, yeah, I mean if you were to try doing that you might find that the only job you're "qualified" for despite your years of hard and intellectual work is one a monkey could do (xeroxing and making coffee, whoo!)
When my husband was trying to find "clinical" positions after his first round of apps was rejected he actually ended up doing reception at a pediatric clinic. He got great exposure to the business side of medicine, and a little exposure to the medicine side of things, and as one of the hardest most conscientious workers they'd ever had at the front desk, the clinic loved him (and they increased their profits substantially while he worked there!)
So I am just feeling very worthless, b/c my job is so completely lame, and I miss my hubby very much, and as hard as I've worked to make new friends, it's been a slow, depressing, uphill battle in that regard. Since I'm studying for the MCAT (2nd time) I'm trying to keep outside distractions to a minimum (i.e. hobbies.)
If hobbies are a distraction, friends are a distraction.
However, my question to you all is do you ever feel worthless and alone, or is it just me who often feels this way? When you don't get much quality time with your spouse and you basically have no friends, what can you do?
Hmm. What can I do. Well, I can get up long after he leaves and hang out on the Internet until it's time for me to go. I can walk to work with my eyes wide open breathing deeply and looking for signs of Spring. I can putz around at my job, throwing myself into the tasks I enjoy and procrastinating from the ones I don't until lunchtime. I can go to the gym for most of my lunch break, then scarf down a nutritious lunch. Lather, rinse, repeat the putzing until it's time to go home. Enjoy my walk, come home and enjoy my pets, take care of chores around the house, fix an interesting and healthy dinner (I think it's lentils and brown rice with a side of Swiss chard tonight!), then read or watch a movie or knit or do needlework or play with my dog or hang out on the Internet (I'm going to avoid the latter tonight!) And by then it'll be time for bed.
Sounds like a plan, but I'd better get started!
😀