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- Jan 26, 2006
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I posted on this thread several months ago and got some pretty thoughtful feedback, so I thought I'd try my luck again. This time, my question is less practical, rather a query as to whether my head's in the right place.
I'm in my mid twenties and for the past few years have been working in the human rights arena. I'm a field investigator in an active war zone, documenting atrocities against civilians. It is meaningful work to say the least (and one not many people my age get to do), but is crushingly frustrating not being able to make a real difference beyond writing reports, and, furthermore, I find the most fulfilling parts of my job interacting with the victims. I'd love a job where I could help people longer term, rather than saying "thanks, see ya" after someone has shared such detail with me. I'd always bounced around the idea of a mental health career, but the feeling is stronger now. The logical path in my current field is law school, which deep down I don't think fits me. Am I fantasizing, or are these valid reasons for choosing a mental health career?
On the practical side - I'm 26 and I have almost no background in psychology, save for a freshman year course. I don't think I've seen another field where the educational and career paths are so convoluted and contradictory (and which are subject to such debate. from an outsider's standpoint it's amusing). The question: where do I start? What kind of programs does someone like me have a realistic shot of acceptance to?
I'm in my mid twenties and for the past few years have been working in the human rights arena. I'm a field investigator in an active war zone, documenting atrocities against civilians. It is meaningful work to say the least (and one not many people my age get to do), but is crushingly frustrating not being able to make a real difference beyond writing reports, and, furthermore, I find the most fulfilling parts of my job interacting with the victims. I'd love a job where I could help people longer term, rather than saying "thanks, see ya" after someone has shared such detail with me. I'd always bounced around the idea of a mental health career, but the feeling is stronger now. The logical path in my current field is law school, which deep down I don't think fits me. Am I fantasizing, or are these valid reasons for choosing a mental health career?
On the practical side - I'm 26 and I have almost no background in psychology, save for a freshman year course. I don't think I've seen another field where the educational and career paths are so convoluted and contradictory (and which are subject to such debate. from an outsider's standpoint it's amusing). The question: where do I start? What kind of programs does someone like me have a realistic shot of acceptance to?