Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Second interview: Reserved edition



I drove there a few nights ago. Slept in a little and went to the interview place. Met with the receptionist and she lead me to the interview room.

There sat about forty staff. It was the largest group interview I had ever had. After that group listened to my story, my professional exploits and adventures, they all left and four doctors remained.

Me and the four doctors chatted. Spoke clinical speak. I was very intimidated.

And tired. This driving four hours to new interview places is wearing me out.

And telling my story over and over again is wearing me out. The weight of my decisions are wearing me out.

I hope it went well. I mean, I was sitting in a room with four doctors. Doctors and nurses have different training, different language. We do the same things though. Treat patients. And while everyone practices differently, we all have the same goals. Hopefully.

It was very weird. I mean, who walks into an interview and finds forty people waiting there? And then gets a second go round of questions and answers with four people. But, they kept having me go to more rooms and find out more things. And they were having a pot luck and wanted me to join.

Have some cheesecake! Have some of that ambrosia salad! Well worth the time to try the sloppy joes!

Or Spanish hamburgers as it is called around these parts.

It was about three hours into the interview at this part. I literally had to excuse myself at this point. I have to drive back I said.

It was nice and weird at all the same time. I hope I rose to the occasion.

I wasn't on my full game though. I was . . . . reserved. Normally I am bouncy and confident. But this is me as a nurse. I am a now a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner. Still getting my feet on the ground.

What helped was my wardrobe. I had my black, knee high leather boots on. The ones with the four inch heal. I had a pretty dress and my hair all cute. Wore make up. Smiled and spoke.

But speaking in these types of interviews is very different. There are no stock questions like 'What is your greatest weakness or Where do you see yourself in 10 years?'

It is, "How comfortable are you with prescribing these types of drugs?" or "What is your experience with this type of patient population with x or y diagnosis?" And honestly there are pockets of certain populations and diagnosis I have never seen. And some I understand like the back of my hand.

And I try my best to stay concrete and in the here and now. I try not to lapse into waxing poetic or getting all philosophical. And I remember that the majority of people in the science fields (i.e. MEDICINE) are not artsy like me. So I let my right brain show more.

Which is not something I am use to. Speaking from the right brain. And again, there was a language barrier to content with. Doctors are trained one way and nurses another. Each with its on shorthand and vernacular. I wonder if I made sense. I actually ask them this. They assure me that I do indeed make sense. God I hope I did.

And I was so very honest. I say things that I haven't rehearsed. I say things I haven't said out loud before.

All in all it was hard to read them. The interviewers. There was no head nodding or agreeing with me. Just listening and reservedness. And there was some warmth at the end. But, I am not sure if they got me, or perhaps they saw me as I am.

A brand new Psych-NP. I am barely a fetus at this point. My heart is strong and I am starting to wiggle. And given the right place I will grow ten feet tall.

I hope, I think, this is the right place. I hope they think so too. After all, they have cheesecake.

5 Left a message at the beep:

Bonez said...

All will be as it should be and I am sure you will do just fine and end up exactly where you are supposed to be. Heck, you had your lucky interview boots on, Babe ;)

Bruce Johnson said...

Forty People, in a group interview? Is it me, or is this world just getting way to much into spread the buck mediocrity?

At my office, the usually put prospective hires through a two or three teir group interview process. Then they seem shocked that when they finally offer the job to the person that stuck around through all the intereviews, they turn down the job, because we made them wait 2 months.

This spreading the risk concept in hiring is killing this country. These folks need to trust enough in one person to hire competent people, and not do it by committee.

40 people? I would have started laughing and asked if it was a television reality show prank, seriously. Then I would have just walked out. That is just insane.

Maybe I am just out of touch with Human Resources these days. Hope you get the job regardless. I know you are on pins and needles waiting.

Slyde said...

well, i'll send you some good luck vibes..

but if you drove that long to the interview, does that mean if you get this job, you'll have to move? sounds like too much of a commute for a daily trip

Mrs. Hall said...

Hello Gentlemen:

I do love those boots. I may do a post about them.

And I think they scheduled my interview to coincide with a monthly staff meeting. That way everyone could meet me at once.

Yeah. Good times.

And yes, will have to move. Me and the tribe called Hall.

Hence the weight of this descision.

:)

Mrs. Hall

Mrs. Hall said...

I guess the boots worked.

They called and offered me the job the next day.

I accepted.

Now begins the oddessey of moving.

Don't worry. Won't blog that. It's bad enought actually move, let alone here about it.

;)

Mrs. Hall

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