Being frank here. I enjoy your posts but I think this is a really :censored::censored::censored::censored:ty attitude. It seems to me that some of you forget we all had to start somewhere. My program is 130 hours and I'm at the end of it. My husband is deployed and I have 3 kids under 5. My classes became a huge PITA for childcare arrangements. I had to move in the middle of it with the flu while I deal with my own medical problems and other random life bull:censored::censored::censored::censored:. I'm proud of myself for not only getting to the end, but doing it well and earning the respect of the people I've encountered along the way. I have goals and dreams in EMS but I can't go anywhere until I start here. So I'm proud of my pathetic 130 hours of training and all the headaches and grief it cost me along the way. Because I finished it and I didn't let anything stop me. I set an example for my children and gave them something they could emulate one day. A hard working mother who didn't quit when she was told she couldn't have her dream, but found a new passion and went for it.
So I'll put that stupid little sticker on my car as a kudos to myself and pride in the field I chose to get into when I could have done a dozen far better paying/easier things.
So forgive me.
Good for you, you are absolutely correct about the fact that you should be proud of your accomplishments. Yes it is only 120 or 130 hour course, but unfortunaately that is all that is offered to us as a starting point in EMS. Some go on to medic school, or PA school, or nursing school, great, and good for them. Anyone who takes on something in order to better themselves whether it is six hours or 6000 hours, it is something to be proud of.
Are your accomplishments any less because you "only" have 130 hours of training, I say no, you did something that many, many others have not done or could not do. In my class we had only 12 out of the 40 or so that started finish with a grade high enough to be eligible to pass the class. I know for a fact that only half of us that completed the class passed the NREMT-B. Is it earth-shattering, no, is it an accomplishment, YES. Are you now better educated than you were 5 or so months ago, yes you are. And like many others who have completed this portion of our training, you are probably eager to continue your education and become the best that you can be.
Don't ever let anyone else tell you that what you accomplished is not worthy of praise, because it is. The only people in your life who's opinions actually matter, are your family and loved ones, no one else's even count. As long as you can get up in the morning an look at yourself and say I did something that I am proud of, that is all that matters.
You know what they say about opinions, they are like butt-holes, everyone has one and they all stink.
Oh, and by the way, I am proud of you! Being a mother, raising children, and going to school to learn something that is totally foreign to you, and being able to excel at it, IS something to be proud of.