Published
After 8 years working full time, I quit to work per diem and on call. I work at least 23-36 hours a week. I just got a job offer with full benefits for 95000 year, desk job. I am a NP who adjunct faculty and work on the floor and one day at the clinic. I have enough to do, but don't know if I should give it all up for this full time job as a manager? I think I work harder now, but I have a lot of freedom and flexibility. I think I bring in about 75-80 a year now. Thoughts?
I did something similar. I quit a $93K a year contract job (55 hours a week). Now I have a permanent 20 hour a week job with less stress that still gives me health insurance and take the occasional per Diem shift (maybe one day a week) to keep my clinical skills up.
I can't tell you how much less stress it is. I made this choice after completing chemo. It is less money. But my quality of life has improved so much.
fwiw i think you definitely made the right choice! 24 hours on call? "this job is more important than your family?" what?! no.
& imho you actually have MORE security and stability when you have multiple streams of income, like you do now. if you're teaching and working per diem at a few different places, if for whatever reason one of those jobs/companies has layoffs, or someone in management has it in for you, or whatever, it's okay - you've still got another job or two to keep you going; THAT is legit job security! :)
I've only read the first page of replies, but that sounds like a VERY steep price to pay for $15K/year, even a high price for cushiness and benefits. 10-7 is going to be your full day and a good chunk of your evening, plus needing to be on call AND willing to put your job ahead of your family? I mean I'm all for being 100% committed to work during work hours, but in the big picture no job trumps family. I think in your situation if I needed the benefits for my family, I'd get a full-time (or benefit-eligible part-time) clinical job over an office job that demanded so much.
toomuchbaloney
16,055 Posts
I am thankful that the ACA has made it easier for people to make these sort of personal choices without sacrificing the ability to obtain affordable and meaningful health insurance. Pre-ACA you pretty much had to have FT employment to have a decent health insurance policy affordable to the middle class.