experience –
Two Dreams?Rating: (votes: 0) ![]() Hi!I start by saying that i don't know your reality (i don't know, for example, working load, working time, and so on).Having said that, i can tell you my experience and what I see/have seen.After graduated I did voluntary work for 4-5 yrs.I quit this activity primarily not because it was subtracting time to my family but because it was depriving me too time for other activities and other hobbies to which I didn't give up.However I personally know many nurses that, in addition to your work at hospital, devote your spare time to voluntary work and so on with no problem with their family.I hope I have answered your question.Good luck! (Excuse me for possible grammatical or writing mistakes) Comment:
I think you'd find most people (not just nurses, but people in general) have more than one goal, ambition, or direction for their lives. Since I think we all recognize that being a nurse for humans and caring for wildlife are not even loosely available as job options for a nurse, your question is really more along the lines of "once I become a nurse, will I have time in my life for my other goals and ambitions", yes?And that's an easy answer: you will always have time for whatever your passion is, whatever drives you, whatever makes you happy (outside of work, which is the point of your thread). A job is a job is a job. Whether you love your job or hate your job, it CANNOT be an all-consuming thing for you, that's just not a healthy life. Even if you love what you do, you really must do something ELSE outside of work for a general release of stress and refresher of your soul How much time that is, however, is dependent upon your other obligations in life: home, spouse, children, parental commitments, religious organizations, social organizations, and on and on.We all have 24 hours in a day. How they break down is individual. Good luck to you!
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