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Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future (very serious thread, but jokes are welcome, since its C&C afterall)

Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future (very serious thread, but jokes are welcome, since its C&C afterall)

I would look into college strength coach. See if you can do some work with the athletic teams now and get a idea what its like.
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future

avidinternet said:
See right here you are wasting time and money and potential income revenue for several years that could get you ahead in the game.

Not to mention debt that you will rack up with the education bills.( before anyone starts, I did go to and complete college)

But it's good you are trying to figure it all out for yourself. Kudos to you for that.

Family is an invaluable asset when planning your future and how to navigate in the financial world.

My family talked about business with us our whole life so we grew up knowing that we could make it on our own and that we have to be able to depend on ourselves in order to make any real bank.

But a lifetime of financial wisdom cannot be shared in a post.

The yourself thing is seriously true advice and not meant as a pep talk.
the degrees and schooling is paid for by my parents, and done for my parents. they want me to be educated and go through the school systems, and they support me financially, so that is what im doing. and i think your at least partially wrong that having a respected degree and taking time in schooling is a waste. at the very least, i will be able to learn more, know more, and i feel it will help me to do more.

there are certain fields you just CANT go into without a degree, such as sports medicine and physical therapy type jobs.

now adays a college degree is like having a highschool degree. its just expected and necessary, unless you are starting a new business or marketing a new idea, etc
can you elaborate on why you feel schooling is a waste of time? (im extremely lucky in that i will be debt free, at least for undergrad)
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future (very serious thread, but jokes are welcome, since its C&C afterall)

Dial_tone said:
I would look into college strength coach. See if you can do some work with the athletic teams now and get a idea what its like.
this is exactly one of the things iv been looking into. i visited a friend recently who works out with an ex college strength coach who now trains on his own mostly for up and coming highschool athletes, and some college athletes train with him over the summer too. his job was fucking amazing to me and im going to hopefully be talking with him more, and if everything works out in my favor, doing an internship with him.

i didnt play any football in highschool or college though and im wondering if thats something that will have me taken less seriously when it comes to athletic strength coaching
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future

SublimeZM said:
what kind of worries? all i do is worry about shit, im a worryer not a doer, and that's something i need to change, big time
I'm the same way. As for worries, if I do go to school for something, I'm worried about not being able to pass tests because I've always done horrible on them, thus leading to failing classes. What the hell I would do for work while going to school. Wondering if what I go to school for will be the right thing. Just allot of different shit.
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future (very serious thread, but jokes are welcome, since its C&C afterall)

If you're interested in endocrinology, you'd better hit the premed route quick. It's pretty much a MD/PhD specialty, very intense and long. But BIGMEDICINE pays more than BIGLAW, so it's quite prestigious. Just fucking competitive as hell.

That's all I can really help with here.



:cow:
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future

crazyjoe said:
I'm the same way. As for worries, if I do go to school for something, I'm worried about not being able to pass tests because I've always done horrible on them, thus leading to failing classes. What the hell I would do for work while going to school. Wondering if what I go to school for will be the right thing. Just allot of different shit.
yeah same, i was a wiz in highschool and would study my ass off in college and know everything only to just completely fuck up on the tests and get them back and have no idea why the fuck i wrote or did what i did.

at some point tho we gotta stop worrying and just do, and take a risk, its easier for me to say since im younger and supported by my parents, but we should keep in contact with eachother and help eachother out and give eachother status updates, since we both seem to have similar goals
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future (very serious thread, but jokes are welcome, since its C&C afterall)

Wikipedia article on endocrinology as a profession:


Endocrinology as a profession

Although every organ system secretes and responds to hormones (including the brain, lungs, heart, intestine, skin, and the kidney), the clinical specialty of endocrinology focuses primarily on the endocrine organs, meaning the organs whose primary function is hormone secretion. These organs include the pituitary, thyroid, adrenals, ovaries, testes, and pancreas.

An endocrinologist is a doctor who specializes in treating disorders of the endocrine system, such as diabetes, hyperthyroidism, and many others (see list of diseases below).

Work
The medical specialty of endocrinology involves the diagnostic evaluation of a wide variety of symptoms and variations and the long-term management of disorders of deficiency or excess of one or more hormones.

The diagnosis and treatment of endocrine diseases are guided by laboratory tests to a greater extent than for most specialties. Many diseases are investigated through excitation/stimulation or inhibition/suppression testing. This might involve injection with a stimulating agent to test the function of an endocrine organ. Blood is then sampled to assess the changes of the relevant hormones or metabolites. An endocrinologist needs extensive knowledge of clinical chemistry and biochemistry to understand the uses and limitations of the investigations.

A second important aspect of the practice of endocrinology is distinguishing human variation from disease. Atypical patterns of physical development and abnormal test results must be assessed as indicative of disease or not. Diagnostic imaging of endocrine organs may reveal incidental findings called incidentalomas, which may or may not represent disease.

Endocrinology involves caring for the person as well as the disease. Most endocrine disorders are chronic diseases that need life-long care. Some of the most common endocrine diseases include diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism and the metabolic syndrome. Care of diabetes, obesity and other chronic diseases necessitates understanding the patient at the personal and social level as well as the molecular, and the physician-patient relationship can be an important therapeutic process.

Apart from treating patients, many endocrinologists are involved in clinical science and medical research, teaching, and hospital management.


Training
There are roughly 7,000 to 8,000 endocrinologists in the United States. Endocrinologists are specialists of internal medicine or pediatrics. Reproductive endocrinologists deal primarily with problems of fertility and menstrual function - often training first in obstetrics. Most qualify as an internist, pediatrician, or gynecologist for a few years before specializing, depending on the local training system. In the U.S. and Canada, training for board certification in internal medicine, pediatrics, or gynecology after medical school is called residency. Further formal training to subspecialize in adult, pediatric, or reproductive endocrinology is called a fellowship. Typical training for a North American endocrinologist involves 4 years of college, 4 years of medical school, 3 years of residency, and 3 years of fellowship. Adult endocrinologists are board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) in Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism.


Professional organizations
In North America the principal professional organizations of endocrinologists include The Endocrine Society,[12] the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists,[13] the American Diabetes Association,[14] the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society,[15] and the American Thyroid Association.[16]

In the United Kingdom, the Society for Endocrinology[17] and the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes[18] are the main professional organisations. The European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology[19] is the largest international professional association dedicated solely to paediatric endocrinology. There are numerous similar associations around the world.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endocrinologist#Endocrinology_as_a_profession

Hope that helps a bit with a brief overview of that area. Highly prestigious.



:cow:
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future (very serious thread, but jokes are welcome, since its C&C afterall)

samoth said:
Wikipedia article on endocrinology as a profession:


Endocrinology as a profession

Although every organ system secretes and responds to hormones (including the brain, lungs, heart, intestine, skin, and the kidney), the clinical specialty of endocrinology focuses primarily on the endocrine organs, meaning the organs whose primary function is hormone secretion. These organs include the pituitary, thyroid, adrenals, ovaries, testes, and pancreas.

An endocrinologist is a doctor who specializes in treating disorders of the endocrine system, such as diabetes, hyperthyroidism, and many others (see list of diseases below).

Work
The medical specialty of endocrinology involves the diagnostic evaluation of a wide variety of symptoms and variations and the long-term management of disorders of deficiency or excess of one or more hormones.

The diagnosis and treatment of endocrine diseases are guided by laboratory tests to a greater extent than for most specialties. Many diseases are investigated through excitation/stimulation or inhibition/suppression testing. This might involve injection with a stimulating agent to test the function of an endocrine organ. Blood is then sampled to assess the changes of the relevant hormones or metabolites. An endocrinologist needs extensive knowledge of clinical chemistry and biochemistry to understand the uses and limitations of the investigations.

A second important aspect of the practice of endocrinology is distinguishing human variation from disease. Atypical patterns of physical development and abnormal test results must be assessed as indicative of disease or not. Diagnostic imaging of endocrine organs may reveal incidental findings called incidentalomas, which may or may not represent disease.

Endocrinology involves caring for the person as well as the disease. Most endocrine disorders are chronic diseases that need life-long care. Some of the most common endocrine diseases include diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism and the metabolic syndrome. Care of diabetes, obesity and other chronic diseases necessitates understanding the patient at the personal and social level as well as the molecular, and the physician-patient relationship can be an important therapeutic process.

Apart from treating patients, many endocrinologists are involved in clinical science and medical research, teaching, and hospital management.


Training
There are roughly 7,000 to 8,000 endocrinologists in the United States. Endocrinologists are specialists of internal medicine or pediatrics. Reproductive endocrinologists deal primarily with problems of fertility and menstrual function - often training first in obstetrics. Most qualify as an internist, pediatrician, or gynecologist for a few years before specializing, depending on the local training system. In the U.S. and Canada, training for board certification in internal medicine, pediatrics, or gynecology after medical school is called residency. Further formal training to subspecialize in adult, pediatric, or reproductive endocrinology is called a fellowship. Typical training for a North American endocrinologist involves 4 years of college, 4 years of medical school, 3 years of residency, and 3 years of fellowship. Adult endocrinologists are board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) in Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism.


Professional organizations
In North America the principal professional organizations of endocrinologists include The Endocrine Society,[12] the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists,[13] the American Diabetes Association,[14] the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society,[15] and the American Thyroid Association.[16]

In the United Kingdom, the Society for Endocrinology[17] and the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes[18] are the main professional organisations. The European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology[19] is the largest international professional association dedicated solely to paediatric endocrinology. There are numerous similar associations around the world.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endocrinologist#Endocrinology_as_a_profession

Hope that helps a bit with a brief overview of that area. Highly prestigious.



:cow:
thanks for the info man, good to know. ideally this seems like a fun job, but may be a bit too challenging for me. im gunna see how i do in my undergrad, to maybe get into med school. i know for a fact i can and will get my degree in bio engineering, but am worried i just wont be able to pull off the grades needed for medschool. i already cut back to just the weekends for my MJ smoking during the school year, but ill probably cut back even more...and find ways to be more organized and get on top of my shit. im feeling really motivated today, which i hope lasts
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future

SublimeZM said:
the degrees and schooling is paid for by my parents, and done for my parents. they want me to be educated and go through the school systems, and they support me financially, so that is what im doing. and i think your at least partially wrong that having a respected degree and taking time in schooling is a waste. at the very least, i will be able to learn more, know more, and i feel it will help me to do more.

there are certain fields you just CANT go into without a degree, such as sports medicine and physical therapy type jobs.

now adays a college degree is like having a highschool degree. its just expected and necessary, unless you are starting a new business or marketing a new idea, etc
can you elaborate on why you feel schooling is a waste of time? (im extremely lucky in that i will be debt free, at least for undergrad)

Because time is money. Money that you are not earning and time that you are wasting whilst treading water in the schooling system giving them your parents money. (That is the schooling systems business see...)

My parents paid for my education too and I went because they wanted me to as well, just like you are doing. Unless you are going to be a Doctor or a Lawyer etc. school is largely a waste of time as you will probably never actually use what you learn there.

If you started making money today and kept accumulating wealth and compounding it the entire time you plan on spending in school, what do you think your financial statement would look like at that same point and time in the future when you are done with school and have no assets?
 
Re: Are any of you EFers in the fitness industry that can help me out with my future

avidinternet said:
Because time is money. Money that you are not earning and time that you are wasting whilst treading water in the schooling system giving them your parents money. (That is the schooling systems business see...)

My parents paid for my education too and I went because they wanted me to as well, just like you are doing. Unless you are going to be a Doctor or a Lawyer etc. school is largely a waste of time as you will probably never actually use what you learn there.

If you started making money today and kept accumulating wealth and compounding it the entire time you plan on spending in school, what do you think your financial statement would look like at that same point and time in the future when you are done with school and have no assets?
i see what your saying but luckily as long as i apply myself and work hard, my parents will be willing to support me.

which leaves me to only be concerned with finding something i want to/love to do and once i find it, then start making money and supporting myself.
 
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