Quickie Careers: Are They Worth It?

 Quickie Careers: Are They Worth It? ...by Bill Knell

Before you take the short cut to a career at a training school that promises to make you a professional in less then a year, stop and count the cost. You're on the way to becoming a Registered Nurse or Professional Technician in the medical or dental fields. You have your education planned out, but then you start to think about all the hassles, the cost and subsequent pay. Then you see one of those ads in the paper for a school that will make you a medical or dental assistant or some other part of the support staff for those fields in just a matter of months. The cost is more in line with the wage expectations and you will not have to go to school for two or four years. So, you go for it.

Despite the fact that the want ads do not match what the school says is a huge demand for "trained professionals" needed in the field they are willing to train you for, you decide to take the plunge. Less then a year later you have your certificate. The school even sends you out on job interviews, but suddenly you are aware that the big wages you're expecting just aren't there. Neither are the jobs. Most positions you are sent out to apply for turn you down for applicants with experience. Welcome to the nightmare world of quickie careers.

If you happen to be smart enough to have planned out a career path which includes a college education, stick to it! I'm sure there is a need for medical and dental support staff members, but be aware that there always has been one and it may not be as huge as many claim. Hospitals and doctors long on patients and short on cash will always attempt to solve critical nursing or doctor shortages with money that comes from cutting support staff members in all departments.

Even the word "professional" when used to describe medical or dental support staff members is misleading. Professionals are usually people licensed by a state or federal governing body after passing a test. Most training schools scam their applicants by saying that after graduation and the successful completion of their studies, they automatically become a member of a "professional" organization. These are usually fee-collecting mail drops that offer a nice certificate you can renew each year.

To be blunt, people that work in a restaurant kitchen are either chefs, cooks or everyone else. If you want to make any serious kind of money, you have to be a chef or cook. By comparison, if you dislike secretarial work, don't become a medical assistant. Most combine the skills of a secretary, office manager and nurse's aid or practical nurse and end up doing two or three jobs at once without being compensated in a meaningful way. If you can deal with that, go for it.

Paralegals, Veterinary Assistants, Radiology Assistants and so on, all follow pretty much the same path. They work hard and do much of the dirty work professionals can't be bothered with for a relatively small amount of money. In a larger city, the pay may be better, but you're living and transportation expenses may erase that benefit. I am not trying to belittle anyone or any job. But if you have the opportunity to go to college for the time needed to become a licensed professional in almost any field, move heaven and earth to do it and forget any shortcuts. I cannot tell you how many people wish they had.

I met a woman who I'll call Carol. She attended a Medical Assistant's School in New York City. It is a well-known school that has been operating for over twenty years. One of the ways they get people to attend is promising to find them a job after graduation. At first the training seemed professional enough, but Carol was shocked when it came time to start taking tests. Most of the tests were open book or the instructors provided the answers to the questions for the students to study the day before the exams!

Even worse, most of the totally incompetent students were merely pushed along with everyone else toward graduation. The final straw came the day before graduation. Carol, who was a bit overweight, was asked by the school administrator to sign a waiver, which stated that she might not be able to find a job because of her weight! If Carol didn't sign, the school would not provide her a certificate.

No matter where you are in life, you can step back and start over and don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise. Before you sign on the dotted line and lock yourself in to months of career training, do some research. Find and talk with working graduates of the training school you are thinking about attending. Ask them if they feel that the school has helped them to meet their career goals? See if the training is up to par and make sure that the school and teachers are accredited or licensed.

Always consult the Better Business Bureau in your area to see how many, if any, complaints have been filed against the school. Check out any opportunities for free training that temp agencies might offer in the same field. Finally, decide if the career being offered is something you'll be about to live with everyday. If you hope for advancement, explore what opportunities there are before you commit.

. Bill can be contacted on FACEBOOK.

BILL KNELL'S BOOKSTORE Informative, Provocative, Exciting Books (ebook and paperback formats) by Bill Knell and others…

Bill Knell's books are available on Ebay (Rating 5/5), Walmart, Amazon, Lulu, GoodReads, Kobo and more. Some titles are available in Spanish 

Radio Personalities that book me as a guest for their shows call me The UFO GUY.‭ ‬This book covers my early life experiences and investigations.  As you’ll soon discover, my life has always been surrounded by the paranormal and unusual events. People that have experienced the unexplained have been drawn to me, and I to them. - Bill Knell

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This is not just another Vampire Story. It's the amazing tale of a powerful being bent on revenge. Discover how a common man became The Dark Master and move with him through the centuries until he winds up in New York City. It's there that we meet the fascinating characters that interact with him over one hundred years. It's there that he reaches into the heart of the New York City Mob and pulls out a man in need of his unique powers. Stay off the streets of NYC at night… He's hungry!

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True TALES of people who experienced a parallel Earth event.

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The belief in life after death is a common belief among most of the world’s civilizations and that may have been the birth of the idea of ghosts and spirits. The Vampire persona has evolved from many true and untrue facts, legends and myths. At various times vampires, real and imagined, have been considered fiends, supernatural beings, shape-shifters, mentally disturbed deviants, satanic servants and fetish followers...

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WARNING: Sexual Situations

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What they will not tell you about marriage and relationships

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WARNING: Sexual Situations

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This is a true story about Sex Workersl.I know because I witnessed most of what you will read about. The rest I gleaned from long conversations with some of the people involved… WARNING: SOME EXPLICIT DESCRIPTIONS 

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Kailey Fields offers readers fresh and very human fiction stories that are unique, yet relatable.


The seeds of her self-doubt had been sown in her early years. She'd been relentlessly bullied in school for being different, for her passion for gaming, which had been dismissed as a “boy thing.” That hurt had left deep scars. Creating Lemonade had been a shield, a way to deflect the negativity she faced in the real world. It was a safe space where she could be celebrated for her skills, her wit, and her personality, instead of facing ridicule.


The air hung heavy with the scent of damp earth and decaying leaves. Each step crunched on the forest floor, a sound amplified in the suffocating silence of the Blackwood Forest. My breath hitched in my throat, a thin plume of white mist disappearing into the inky blackness. The only light came from my lantern, a feeble spark against the overwhelming darkness that pressed in from all sides, swallowing the forest in its shadowy embrace. Above, the branches of ancient trees twisted like skeletal fingers, their gnarled silhouettes scratching at the moonless sky.

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The darkness claimed me, swallowing me whole. But in death, a twisted metamorphosis occurred. The venom of betrayal, the searing agony of death, transformed into a cold, unrelenting fire. I became a specter, an instrument of vengeance. The chilling weight of my decomposing body became a burden that fueled my relentless pursuit.

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Grandma Elara's tales filled the quiet evenings at her house. The aroma of woodsmoke and simmering herbs hung heavy in the air, mingling with the scent of old books and the comforting warmth of her presence. Her cozy old house seemed to hum with a gentle energy, a place where ancient stories and timeless secrets intertwined. The antique furniture, each piece telling a story of its own, seemed to come alive as she spun her tales, the very atmosphere of the house adding to the mystique of the Ceasg and its watery realm.

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Cerelia, a museum employee with a penchant for the obscure and a healthy dose of skepticism tempered by an insatiable curiosity, had been cleaning the newly acquired collection of ancient artifacts. She was meticulous, and painstaking in her work, a sharp contrast to the hurried pace of the city outside the museum walls. She liked the quiet solitude of the museum, a world apart from the noisy urban jungle. She found solace in the relics of the past, each object whispering a story of bygone eras.

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Aislinn felt it too, a growing sense of unease, not just from the tales of a missing Prince, but from the visions teased by the necklace. The shadowed figure, the one with piercing eyes and a cruel smile,haunted her dreams and even invaded her waking moments. He was connected to the necklace, a palpable sense of threat radiating from the glowing pendant. The prince's fate, she now realized, was entwined with her own. And somewhere, a darkness waited, a darkness that the necklace seemed both to warn her about and guide her towards. The quiet village of Oakhaven, with its familiar rhythms and predictable patterns, could no longer contain her. 



The seeds of her self-doubt had been sown in her early years. She'd been relentlessly bullied in school for being different, for her passion for gaming, which had been dismissed as a “boy thing.” That hurt had left deep scars. Creating Lemonade had been a shield, a way to deflect the negativity she faced in the real world. It was a safe space where she could be celebrated for her skills, her wit, and her personality, instead of facing ridicule.

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She traced the lines on her palm, searching for a familiar scar, a birthmark, anything to tether herself to a stable identity. Nothing. Even her own body felt slightly different, as if her reflection in the warped mirror across the room was an imposter. The subtle variations – the way her hair fell, a new freckle on her cheek, the faintest shift in her eyes – were enough to unsettle her further. It was as if she was perpetually teetering on the edge of a precipice, the ground constantly shifting beneath her feet.

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