Meet Sara: Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner
Today we're meeting my oldest friend in the world, Sara Webb. I've literally known Sara since birth. She's a total boss lady and is one of my heroes because of the incredible work she does in psychiatry. I especially love how she answered the last question and she gave me lots to think about. Check it out below!
Tell us a little about yourself and your career
My name is Sara Webb and I am a psychiatric nurse practitioner. I work in outpatient mental health and prescribe medications for a wide variety of mental illnesses, mostly for adults. I also teach psychopharmacology and several other courses at the University of Utah in the psychiatric nurse practitioner graduate program. I am married and have a four month old baby girl who is perfection personified.
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How does your community of women you surround yourself with support you?
The women in my life have always been very supportive. Now that I have a baby and am working full time, family members have been more than willing to help when needed. Professionally, I work in a field that is dominated by women (nursing). I have had mostly female mentors and role models along the way. When I was on maternity leave, multiple women I work with stepped up to help take care of my patients and support me. I also have many listening ears because I am working with many women who are also raising families.
How did you decide which career path to follow?
It was actually not really planned and it kind of unfolded as I went along. I went into nursing because I felt like I wanted to be in a helping profession and I was interested in healthcare. While I was in nursing school, I did a rotation in psychiatric nursing (which terrified me)
and was surprised when I really enjoyed it. My professor approached me and encouraged me to go to graduate school and become a nurse practitioner. Without her mentoring and encouragement, I never would have even thought about doing what I do now.
What do you wish you could go back and tell your younger self re: your career aspirations?
When I was younger, I thought that I wanted to work part-time but mostly be a stay-at-home mom - I knew that I wanted to work at least a little bit, but I thought you couldn't work full time and be a good mom. So I had a lot of "back-up plans" and "plan B's". I realized that was silly and cured myself of that thought pretty quickly once I was a little older, but I wish that I could tell myself to just chart a course and go for it. My career has ended up working out really well for me and I didn't need all the backup plans and hesitation.
What's your career related mantra?
I don't know if I really have a mantra, but if I think about it, it would probably be something like "keep trying until you have a perfect job." I didn't love my first few jobs out of school, and I wondered if I had chosen the wrong field. I moved around quite a bit and ended up taking a job at the University of Utah because I wanted to teach.
When I first started, there wasn't any teaching involved but there was the hope that more teaching would come along. I kept asking my boss to let me know if there were any teaching opportunities, and I have slowly been able to pick up more teaching and I am now teaching half the time and working in clinical settings half the time and it is a perfect mix for me. I am grateful that I didn't give up on the field and that I just kept moving around until I found something that was a much better fit.