It’s been exactly 29 days since I finished taking the board
exam. 29 days of bumming around. Sure, I found the first week enjoyable,
spending time with my friends, shopping, watching movies, reading, and writing:
things I have not indulged myself too much on for the past 2 months preparing
for the exams.
Then the second week came and I got bored out of my mind at
home.
Sure, it was tolerable but well, really, you can only do so
much: watching TV, house chores, eating, playing diablo3 in the wee hours of
the night. Sure I was perfectly content with being curled up in bed all day,
reading. But my hand was itching to write.
And the home environment wasn’t very productive for me at
all. I found myself staring at a blank page for hours at a time. It was
terribly, terribly frustrating.
That’s when a friend of mine asked if I wanted to get a job.
Well… in all actuality, my mom didn’t want me to work yet and I thought, before
the board results came out, I would bum around and just read and write at home,
maybe even volunteer at the local health centre. But like I said, I wasn’t very
productive.
So I agreed.
I sent my resume to a company my friend recommended. I got
scheduled for an interview the next day. I asked my cousin to come with me,
considering she, too, was looking for a job. I opted to keep in mind that if I
get hired, it would be temporary: until my board exam results come out and I
get my license.
Although I wasn’t taking job hunting seriously yet, it got
me thinking of my not so distant future as I sat waiting to be interviewed for the fourth time by the fourth company. It
made me realize that looking for a job isn't easy, especially if you’re
inexperienced.
It got me thinking about the board exam: What if I didn’t
pass? I’d have to take it all over again. Too much time will go to waste. But
then again, if I did pass, would I get a job? There’s a reason there’s an
increasing decrease in nursing students for the past few years. There are too
many nurses in the country with nowhere
to work.
I started thinking, what if I didn’t take practicality into
consideration when choosing my course and studied mass communications or
English lit instead? Where would I be right now?
But then, I thought, I’m already here: a nursing graduate.
There’s no use for regrets. Besides, I want to practice my profession. I want
to be a psychiatric nurse. I want to be a forensic nurse. I want to work as a
writer in a magazine. I want to write and publish a novel someday. I want to
own a café, a restaurant, a bar, an establishment. There are a lot more things
I want to make of myself.
But how do I get from point A to point B? To point C? To
point D? To point E?
So now, I’m rambling.
But my point is this: I’m scared.
There are too many questions I don’t know the answer to. There
are too many changes, too many fears. But
I’m never gonna know until I get
there, will I?
So I’ll be gritting my teeth and go where the wind takes me.
I’ll keep dreaming. I’ll work my way through it. I’ll get to
where I want to be, where I should be.
I know I will.
But until then and right now,
It’s still a new chapter of my life: Uncharted Territory.
Damn right, that’s what it is.

I think you chose the best out of the three courses you have mentioned. :') Writing can be a hobby, a sideline and eventually, be a full time job. But until that time comes... *shrug*, you know what to do with your time ;)
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