• Kiara (5/27/2011)


    Jake Shelton (5/26/2011)


    I'm quite happy now Jan, don't get me wrong, BUT....just because I've moved on from the poor experience that doesn't mean I forget it. The article just brought up a LOT of bad memories.

    I can also assure you that most GP's in England earn comfortably something between 80 and 130K GBP, depending on location. Salaries for those in private practice are about double, then if you want to hire the specialists of the medical field, the "Rock Stars" as our friend Craig puts it, you're not looking at getting much change back out of half a mil p/a. Those figures are gross, pun only barely unintended.

    As for your final-job question, there are aspects of my new field that take time to develope, and there isn't anything I can do to speed the process (and though there were corners I could cut, I wouldn't). I could take a contract without it impeding on it. Lastly, I guess it's satisfaction; I don't depend on the money from IT any more, and so I'd get a big kick out of my last gig being one where I'm not in constant fear of the sack, far from it.

    But it WOULD be my last gig in this beastly profession. I'm just lucky to walk away with my good spirits, dignity, integrity and, most importantly, soul intact.

    I guess what I don't understand is why you're bothering to hang out here on a SQL Server forum if you've left the field, had a bunch of bad experiences in it, and don't want to work in it any more.

    Like I said, satisfaction. The article popped up in my Inbox, the title piqued my interest, I read it and replied. Not every member of this website spends 37.5 hours per week handcuffed to an instance of SQL, or even per month.