Time to ask for more money. That should make things bearable short term while they look for a job elsewhere. Probably should ask for a week of paid sick leave due to the effect workplace threats have had on your mental health. Could use that week to start the job hunt.
No point staying around. The cunt has already shown her hand. She will be waiting patiently for the opportunity to strike again once the odds tip back in her favor. Milk them for all they have and move on.
Be as kind and loyal to people as you can until they give you a reason not to.
If this ever happens to any frogs here, you now have immense leverage. You were ready to walk, and now all the negotiating power is in your hands.
… Dentists make BANK folks, it’s a hell of a lot more lucrative than most doctors make, and it’s hardly a stressful job. And their malpractice insurance is hardly a drop in the bucket.
Hey brother, checking in to give you a different scoop on dentistry.
...It's stressful as fuck. No one likes a worried / not confident dentist, so we all act* to a certain extent. Please ask your dentist next time how often he/she feels stressed. I've seen polls ranging from 50-70% of dentists feeling burned out or stressed with a range of 15-26% that had considered suicide at some point. There's a reason why we have the highest suicide rate out there (or 2nd highest).
Stresses off the top of my head are small mouths, patients that can't be seated back, running behind schedule, unhappy patients, difficult cases, threats of litigation, cosmetic dentistry, root canal files breaking, extractions failing (everyone dentist has had a handful), post-op sensitivity or damage to nerves, management of staff, managing overhead. And there's always more to learn or refine.
I also know older dentists with back pain, wrist pain, tendonitis, herniated discs. I know many who have hearing loss. And I know many with neurological diseases such as Parkinson's which is devastating.
We make money because of those stresses and because of the strain on our mental and physical health. I'm leaving work today and I'm mentally drained with a back that's fucking aching because I worked on an upper tooth of a patient who couldn't be seated back, and had a patient who could only open a hair. Oh yeah, and my staff is pressuring me to get the vaccine, and I'm going to resist the Newsom mandate so that's gonna be interesting.
Thanks for the check-in fren… your story is quite different then the dentists I do know. And sounds like you’re in it for the profession and vocation and not for the big bucks. Kudos to you and keep up the resistance on the fool’s mandates …
Curiously, what are your thoughts on the industry use of amalgam filings (Mercury) in patients?
Hate them, not safe. We're actually required to filter for amalgam fillings as we replace them (so they don't go down public sewers, etc), and then we also have to pay for a hazardous waste service to take them.
Time to ask for more money. That should make things bearable short term while they look for a job elsewhere. Probably should ask for a week of paid sick leave due to the effect workplace threats have had on your mental health. Could use that week to start the job hunt.
No point staying around. The cunt has already shown her hand. She will be waiting patiently for the opportunity to strike again once the odds tip back in her favor. Milk them for all they have and move on.
Be as kind and loyal to people as you can until they give you a reason not to.
^^^^ This!
If this ever happens to any frogs here, you now have immense leverage. You were ready to walk, and now all the negotiating power is in your hands.
… Dentists make BANK folks, it’s a hell of a lot more lucrative than most doctors make, and it’s hardly a stressful job. And their malpractice insurance is hardly a drop in the bucket.
Hey brother, checking in to give you a different scoop on dentistry.
...It's stressful as fuck. No one likes a worried / not confident dentist, so we all act* to a certain extent. Please ask your dentist next time how often he/she feels stressed. I've seen polls ranging from 50-70% of dentists feeling burned out or stressed with a range of 15-26% that had considered suicide at some point. There's a reason why we have the highest suicide rate out there (or 2nd highest).
Stresses off the top of my head are small mouths, patients that can't be seated back, running behind schedule, unhappy patients, difficult cases, threats of litigation, cosmetic dentistry, root canal files breaking, extractions failing (everyone dentist has had a handful), post-op sensitivity or damage to nerves, management of staff, managing overhead. And there's always more to learn or refine.
I also know older dentists with back pain, wrist pain, tendonitis, herniated discs. I know many who have hearing loss. And I know many with neurological diseases such as Parkinson's which is devastating.
We make money because of those stresses and because of the strain on our mental and physical health. I'm leaving work today and I'm mentally drained with a back that's fucking aching because I worked on an upper tooth of a patient who couldn't be seated back, and had a patient who could only open a hair. Oh yeah, and my staff is pressuring me to get the vaccine, and I'm going to resist the Newsom mandate so that's gonna be interesting.
Thanks for the check-in fren… your story is quite different then the dentists I do know. And sounds like you’re in it for the profession and vocation and not for the big bucks. Kudos to you and keep up the resistance on the fool’s mandates …
Curiously, what are your thoughts on the industry use of amalgam filings (Mercury) in patients?
Hate them, not safe. We're actually required to filter for amalgam fillings as we replace them (so they don't go down public sewers, etc), and then we also have to pay for a hazardous waste service to take them.