una_dogger
Well-known member
Charlos, try Bard College in Annandale on Hudson.
For me its all about quality of life, and that quality for me centers on living close to nature. I left Johns Hopkins after only a few weeks because I couldn't wrap my brain around a job in a prestigious hospital being more important than what was really important to me.
For me, living my life in a way that is not authentic to what makes me a whole person is not a way to live, in fact, its a slow death.
Just before I turned 40, my Mom told me something along the lines of , "You are a beautiful person with an envious lifestyle -- you don't need to settle down any more than you need to settle for less, you don't need children, you don't need to buy a house".. and that meant the world to me, being the middle child in a family of quote-en-quote "sucessful" kids in the traditional sense of marriage, family, white picket fence in the burbs. (not knocking those who manage to have all of these things and an outdoor life)
For me it goes beyond trading a career choice to be closer to the outdoors, I consider the outdoors the primary choice and the career has to fit the model that supports that. Low to no commute, rural surroundings, the quiet sounds of nature vs the buzz of civilization; they need to be there too.
My life is in constant flux, a constant state of refinement, as much as I take the time to appreciate the beauty around me, I'm also aware that there is more of the world I want to see, and I'm willing to make career choices that will support my adventurous spirit. Trading in a ten year career in ecological reasearch and environmental chemistry for a clinical laboratory science career was one of the boldest moves I think I've made. It allows me, as Maddy said, to chose the hours I work, clock in -- do my work and feel I'm making a positive contribution--then clock out and go enjoy my life. Being in health care allows me to live anywhere.
Great thread.
For me its all about quality of life, and that quality for me centers on living close to nature. I left Johns Hopkins after only a few weeks because I couldn't wrap my brain around a job in a prestigious hospital being more important than what was really important to me.
For me, living my life in a way that is not authentic to what makes me a whole person is not a way to live, in fact, its a slow death.
Just before I turned 40, my Mom told me something along the lines of , "You are a beautiful person with an envious lifestyle -- you don't need to settle down any more than you need to settle for less, you don't need children, you don't need to buy a house".. and that meant the world to me, being the middle child in a family of quote-en-quote "sucessful" kids in the traditional sense of marriage, family, white picket fence in the burbs. (not knocking those who manage to have all of these things and an outdoor life)
For me it goes beyond trading a career choice to be closer to the outdoors, I consider the outdoors the primary choice and the career has to fit the model that supports that. Low to no commute, rural surroundings, the quiet sounds of nature vs the buzz of civilization; they need to be there too.
My life is in constant flux, a constant state of refinement, as much as I take the time to appreciate the beauty around me, I'm also aware that there is more of the world I want to see, and I'm willing to make career choices that will support my adventurous spirit. Trading in a ten year career in ecological reasearch and environmental chemistry for a clinical laboratory science career was one of the boldest moves I think I've made. It allows me, as Maddy said, to chose the hours I work, clock in -- do my work and feel I'm making a positive contribution--then clock out and go enjoy my life. Being in health care allows me to live anywhere.
Great thread.
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