← Return to In pursuit of who, what, how, and why: Meet @pb50

Newsfeed Post
Comment receiving replies
Profile picture for pb50 @pb50

Yea I think my MOS was titled Electronic Communication specialist. The Marines really really didn’t want women, were the last branch to accept us and many never made an attempt to be fair. I was attached to the 3rd Air Wing - where the big egos lived 🙂 So I spent my time in a little building fixing radios the army had left behind when they upgraded. And still I loved it 🙂 I have always seen it as a win if I get an opportunity to add my footprint where women didn’t walk before. Even in a room the size of a storage shed repairing outdated and shot up radios 🙂

Nixon used to park AF1 at El Toro and take a helicopter to San Clemente.

Jump to this post


Replies to "Yea I think my MOS was titled Electronic Communication specialist. The Marines really really didn’t want..."

"I have always seen it as a win if I get an opportunity to add my footprint where women didn’t walk before."
------------------
As a man ... that was how I felt about nursing. I was pushed and pulled in another direction though. I liked the patients and the bedside care the most. The life and death stuff was more exciting. It put things into perspective because I only had an autoimmune disorder.

I wanted to be assigned to any patient on corticosteroids when most of the nurses didn't want to take care of those patients. The nurses I worked with knew I took prednisone and said if I ever needed to be hospitalized they wouldn't take care of me. They weren't serious but they knew prednisone wasn't good for me. They always wanted to know how much prednisone I was taking.

Some doctors would rather that I crunched numbers for their medical research. I couldn't tell the doctors that I mostly felt that the data they collected was garbage because the nurses didn't follow the research protocol precisely. I was caught in an in-between world of medical research and patient care.

Some of the research projects were downright dangerous to the patients. I had to recruit those patients so I felt responsible for them. The research needs to happen though ... otherwise nothing changes.

I also did some managed care for an insurance company for a year or two. That wasn't a nice world because all they cared about was the cost of medical care.