Re: Thinking about going for my CNM - questions...
Nursing school can be quite stressful - I won't lie to you - but entirely doable if you put your mind to it and are determined. I went into nursing school at age 23 (the pre-req's - I had no prior college experience), and did it with a very unsupportive husband and two small children. Luckily, I did not have to work for the first 3 years of college. I picked up a part-time job in my last year of school though, and it was as an OB tech at a local hospital. That was my "in" to get into L&D. I started in L&D right after nursing school graduation. It's where I've been ever since.
After graduation, I left and filed for divorce from my now ex-husband. Nursing was my saving grace. It opened up a whole new world to me. It built my self esteem, gave me the financial ability to leave my abusive spouse, and was definitely my dream job. I knew all along that I wanted to work in L&D - there was no other field I was interested in!
And now, 8 years after I graduated from nursing school and left my ex-husband, I am a fulltime student to be a CNM, attending Frontier School of Midwifery. It's almost all home-based learning, which is perfect for me and my busy life. I work fulltime as an RN on L&D, plus school FT, plus being a mom (my older children are teens, and I now have a 5 yr old as well!). Needless to say, I lead a very busy life.
If you put your mind to it..........you can do it. Without taking that leap of faith and applying for the nursing program back when I was 23 yrs old, I would not be where I am today in my life. I am secure, self-reliant, financially stable, have a high self esteem, am in a loving relationship, and have a beautiful little girl that I would not have had if I had stayed where I was in my life back at the age of 23. Nursing opens your world to so many new and exciting possibilities -- not just your career, but also your personal life.
As for your husband - he sounds like mine was. Unsupportive, negative. My ex was abusive in emotional and verbal ways......and when I was strong as a nurse, he became violent in physical ways. He saw that he was losing that weakling that I used to be. He used to say that he was going to quit his job and stay at home when I worked as a nurse, so he could be even lazier. Needless to say, that never happened. I left him before that could happen!
You have to do what is right for you - and for your family. I don't mean to come across as suggesting that your husband is abusive - I don't mean that at all. I was just sharing the hardships I faced, and how nursing was such a positive light in my life and literally saved me.
Nursing News