The Aspiring Psychologist Podcast - Is It Too Late to Become a Clinical Psychologist? Retraining at 40+ Explained
Episode Date: April 24, 2026Is it too late to become a clinical psychologist?In this episode of Psychology, Actually, I’m joined by trainee clinical psychologist Claire Dunn, who started her journey at 40 and secured a place o...n the doctorate at 47.Together, we break down what retraining in psychology actually looks like practically, emotionally, and strategically. Using real-life style examples of older applicants navigating career change, family life, and self-doubt.We explore pathways into clinical psychology, including conversion courses, assistant psychologist roles, NHS experience, and how to stay competitive when you feel “behind”.If you’re an aspiring psychologist wondering whether you’ve left it too late - this episode offers a grounded, honest roadmap.⏱️ Timestamps00:00 Is it too late to retrain in psychology?01:13 Claire’s journey to training at 4702:23 Case study: Sarah (career change from teaching)04:30 Transferable skills and real-world experience05:41 How much do you need to want this?06:39 Studying later in life (Open University + flexibility)08:56 Balancing study, work and parenting10:35 When is the “right” time to retrain?12:20 Should you focus on study or experience first?14:32 Testing whether psychology is right for you15:25 Making the most of academic support16:19 Case study: Mark (NHS admin to psychology)18:10 Feeling “behind” and imposter syndrome19:05 Does a 2:2 limit your chances?20:31 Strengthening applications with a master’s21:51 Assistant psychologist vs further study23:02 Why academic references matter24:06 Staying connected with referees25:27 Avoiding generic references26:35 Gaining relevant clinical experience28:21 Alternative pathways (CAP / PWP roles)30:18 Is it really too late? Final thoughtsLinks:📲 Connect with Claire Dunn here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/claire-dunn-037480244/🫶 To join my podcast membership to get early access to episodes and / or exclusive weekly content head to: https://the-aspiring-psychologist.captivate.fm/support or to the Apple Podcasts App: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-aspiring-psychologist-podcast/id1605628278 or to YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOwjrIP_jatiqlAivJE2mgQ/join📚 To check out The Clinical Psychologist Collective Book: https://amzn.to/3jOplx0📖 To check out The Aspiring Psychologist Collective Book: https://amzn.to/3CP2N97💡 To check out or join the aspiring psychologist membership for just £30 per month head to: https://www.aspiring-psychologist.co.uk/membership🖥️ Check out my short courses for aspiring psychologists and mental health professionals here: https://www.aspiring-psychologist.co.uk/online-coursesAsk Marianne your most pressing psychology career question and she will send you a FREE bespoke reply! Grab your free psychology success guide here and fill in the most pressing concern box: https://www.aspiring-psychologist.co.uk (scroll to the bottom of the page)✍️ Get your FREE Supervision Shaping Tool now: https://www.aspiring-psychologist.co.uk/free-resources📱Connect socially with Marianne and check out ways to work with her, including the Aspiring Psychologist Book, Clinical Psychologist book and The Aspiring Psychologist Membership on her Link tree: https://linktr.ee/drmariannetrent💬 To join my free Facebook group and discuss your thoughts on this episode and more: https://www.facebook.com/groups/aspiringpsychologistcommunityLike, Comment, Subscribe & get involved:If you enjoy the podcast, please do subscribe and rate and review episodes.Hashtags: #aspiringpsychologist #dclinpsy #psychology #assistantpsychologist #psychologycareers #podcast #psychologypodcast #clinicalpsychologist #mentalhealth #traineeclinicalpsychologist #clinicalpsychology #drmariannetrent #mentalhealthprofessional #gettingqualified #mentalhealthprofessionals #traineepwp #mdt #qualifiedpsychologist #traineepsychologist #aspiringpsychologists #wellbeing
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My name is Diakalola Amujam.
I am a recent psychology graduate from Ireland.
I am also an aspiring clinical psychologist.
Dr. Marion's book, The Clinical Psychologist Collective, has been so helpful to me on this journey to becoming a clinical psychologist.
As I plan to continue postgraduate studies in the UK, I found it extremely useful that this book provided in-depth information on the UK.
the Clean Sight application process. I enjoyed reading about the experiences of both qualified
and training clinical psychologists. The various narratives were my favorite part of the book,
as everyone's story was different and it provided amazing insights into the clinical psychology journey.
I would definitely recommend this book to anyone interested in psychology and aspires to become
a clinical psychologist. What if the thing stopping you from progressing your psychology
career isn't your age, isn't your degree and it isn't your grade.
But the story you're telling yourself about what's possible.
Every week I receive messages like, I'm an older applicant and I don't have a psychology
degree, is it too late for me?
Or I've got a two to and I haven't studied for a while. Have I ruined my chances?
Today I'm rejoined by a brilliant previous guest, 47-year-old Claire Dunn, who is a trainee
clinical psychologist.
and we are creating a roadmap for two older applicants.
This isn't a fantasy you can do anything type conversation.
It's a grounded and honest look at what retraining in psychology really involves,
practically, emotionally and strategically.
I hope you find it so useful if you do like and subscribe for more.
Hi, welcome along to the podcast. I am Dr. Marianne Trent, a qualified clinical psychologist,
and I'm joined once again here today by the brilliant Claire Dunn, who is,
is now officially a trainee clinical psychologist.
Hi Claire.
Hi, Marion.
Thanks for having me back.
Thanks for coming back.
And to be honest, we've never really been out of each other's
WhatsApp and LinkedIn since we met, have we?
No, absolutely not.
It's been, yeah, it's been great.
I've been picking your brains, haven't I?
Right my course.
Well, I just like you, Claire.
And sometimes my podcast gets get to keep me as a little buddy
after we meet and I think you're one of those people.
So we spoke before for our first episode
about you having got onto training
at the age of 47.
So if people wanted to watch that first or afterwards
then that would be a great place to start.
But we thought it would be really helpful
to kind of have a look at a couple of different vignettes really
for if somebody is like, I think I want to be,
in this instance, a clinical psychologist we're gonna talk about.
But obviously lots of the things we're going to talk about might be, you know, comparable for other branches of psychology.
But we're going to have a look at a couple of vignettes for if we were working with somebody in a team and they were like, you know, I'd always, I've always loved to, you know, the idea of what you do.
Yeah.
But I think it's too late, you know, or maybe I do want to do it, but I don't know where to begin.
So we're kind of going down that road.
And we're going to kind of have a little bit of a, yeah, a little bit of a look at what we would advise.
So other options are available, other opinions are available, but you know, you and I are both pretty
crafty at JobCrafting, which is an episode I did with Jack. It was a brilliant episode as well.
So if people are like, what is JobCrafting? Have a look at that one.
Okay, so with no further ado, let me read this first vignette to you and to our audience.
Give me one moment.
Okay, so we've got Sarah, who is 40 and works as a secondary school English teacher.
She's been teaching for 15 years and is currently ahead of year.
She has two children aged 7 and 10.
She returned to full-time work after maternity leave,
but has found the role increasingly emotionally draining.
She's always been invested in psychology and mental health
and is often the member of staff that pupils gravitate towards when they're struggling.
She's completed safeguarding training, pastoral care work and regularly liaises with CAMS,
social care and educational psychologists as part of her role.
She achieved a 2-1 in her undergraduate degree,
was English literature, but has no formal psychology degree. She's got a few concerns. She feels
too old to retrain and worries about starting again at the bottom. She's anxious about finances
and balancing training with family life. She's unsure whether her teaching experience counts
as relevant experience. She's worried she doesn't sound academic enough compared to younger
applicants, and she's overwhelmed by the different routes and conversion courses and assistant
roles and kind of Ed Syke versus Clint Syke. She has to
has got a load of strengths. So she's good at managing distress, she's got strong systems thinking,
leadership, supervision of staff, she understands child development through lived and personal
experience because she's a mama and she's resilient time management and she thinks she's pretty
emotionally contained. All right Claire. So if we had Sarah with us, what would we be
thinking about with her? Well, I mean she's got so many transferable skills.
hasn't she? Just looking at the vignette myself. Safeguarding, pastoral care,
liaising with CAMs, the MDT work, social care, Ed Sykes. Yeah, I mean, she's definitely got options,
isn't she? And definitely not too old. That's for sure. She's definitely not too old.
Yeah, I think I'd kind of want to chat with Sarah to ask, like, how important, how passionate does she feel about this goal of retraining?
It's absolutely achievable, but it's really hard work.
Would this be the right time for her with the ages of her children?
So I know they're seven and ten.
I have, I'm working with trainees that have younger children and they're managing.
and they're doing they're amazing they're like super mums and super dads it's i'd want to know yeah how
much does she want this yeah it's a very it's a very good point you know you do need to really want
this and it it almost sounds like maybe she's thinking i need a change um um uh and i don't
yeah maybe it is maybe it is like she really wants this she's worked with she's worked with the clinicians
and she feels like this is this is her now but um it isn't easy i
guess if she wanted to explore her options, then maybe a psychology undergraduate degree is
going to serve her well anyway because it will help her to kind of solidify her thinking,
to put theory, you know, maybe not into practice now, but to kind of get it slotted up into
her head ready for when and if she does do something. And maybe doing that with maybe somewhere
like the Open University might be a really good way for her to not have to necessarily drop
work that pays her, of course, when she's got a young family to support. I know that you did
a degree with the Open University, didn't you? I did. And I started that at the age of 40. And that was,
for me, that was my first degree. Sarah has a degree, doesn't she? So she could probably bypass
the psychology undergrad and go straight for the master's conversion. But yeah, a degree at 40
is absolutely doable. I think at the time my children were,
I think 11 and 13 when I started.
My daughter was definitely still at primary school.
Yeah, and a degree with the Open University is really good.
It gives you that flexibility.
You can study at a time that suits you.
So a lot of my study would be of an evening.
I worked during the daytime,
and I would do my study and assignments in the evening.
It's really accessible Open University,
especially for older students.
and students with other commitments like family children and other jobs as well.
Yeah, I wrote the case study and I already forgot that she has a degree already.
So yeah, she might well be able to do a two-year master's conversion.
Do you know whether some employers are happy for people to take a bit of study leave,
to kind of work in their employed time?
Or are you like, I've got no idea, Marianne.
I've got no clue.
I don't know. The answer is I don't know. However, as a teacher, obviously, term time is teachers work so incredibly hard, don't they? And some of my closest friends have been teachers. They've since left the profession, just as Sarah is thinking of doing so as well. But I suppose the upside is the school holidays.
And they would probably be a really good opportunity for Sarah.
She's going to have to balance obviously childcare as well with the children in the school holidays.
But she'd have maybe more capacity and energy mentally within the school holiday periods.
Although I know as mum's, they're also our super busy periods as well, aren't they?
Yeah. And I do find, I'm obviously self-employed now.
So I've got the luxury that I can kind of control my own diary.
I do find that I need at least a week off when the kids break as well.
And I'm not even working in a school.
Like I genuinely need that time to down my tools and to just, you know, parent or just, you know, just work without seeing clients.
So I might do bits and pieces on my laptop.
But I do really need that time as a parent.
And I think there's a reason why the schools are organized in the way they are to give us kind of breaks every six weeks.
it's because I think as humans we respond really well to that.
It's a lot. It's a lot. And for Sarah, yeah, the ages of her children, seven and ten.
It's a lot, but she's, you know, it probably is an ideal time for her. Her children are a little bit older.
So if she was to do the two years, master's conversion, and she could do that part-time,
alongside her teaching and being a mom and a parent.
That would also give her a bit of breathing space as well
before she looks at going down the clinical psychology pathway
or whether that's the educational psychologist pathway.
It would give a little bit of breathing space, I suppose,
and the children would be a little bit older.
But I still advocate, you know, it is possible.
And like I say, I have trainees with,
in my cohort that have children, younger children, and they're smashing it.
Yeah, I think they need you in a different way at that stage as well, don't they?
So my eldest is quite, you know, confident and capable to kind of occupy himself a little
bit more than when they're very young, you know, you can't do that.
You'd struggle to kind of write an essay at your kitchen table whilst they were watching
see BBs or whatever.
I think when they get a little bit older, they might want to spend a bit more time by themselves anyway.
Not, you know, all children are different. Of course they are. But there might be, I think for me, around that age.
So when I left the NHS, when was that? 2021. Yeah, my children were probably around that age, is what I would say.
near my eldest one was around that age.
And I just had this sense of, oh, okay, like a bit more liberation.
Like I don't need to be everything to these children anymore.
Like even that they get invited to play dates and stuff and they want to hang out with their friends.
And, you know, they're not just looking to me to be everything for them.
And so that allowed me to carve out different niches in my own life.
And I think to do that joy audit that's really important to think about what do I enjoy,
what ignites me, what do I not like doing, which will be an MDT meeting,
that is a way to kill Marianne, you know, and to do more of what I like and less of what I,
what I don't.
So with Sarah then, would we be saying that she just focus on the education for now
rather than adding in any kind of additional experience type stuff for now?
I think so.
I think she has a lot of responsibility already in her job.
And like I say, she has an abundance of really transferable skills into psychology.
You know, I would, for me personally, I would say to Sarah,
okay, get your masters, do your master's conversion course that will give you the accreditation.
that you need to apply for the doctorate and just focus on that for now.
I think trying to gain other clinical experience, I think that would be too much.
She works all time.
She's a teacher in a secondary school.
I mean, I think teachers are absolutely amazing.
Patients of saints.
Yeah.
And I think it's just different.
So the children of this current generation are just different to teach and different to try and, I don't know, tow the line.
As a teacher, you need to be able to kind of, you know, get the pack to behave themselves generally, don't you?
And I think that's just from my experiences of listening to stories from my eldest son's secondary.
that's becoming harder and harder.
So Sarah is probably exhausted.
I'm not surprised she's thinking it's tricky.
And they're not just teachers anymore, are they?
Teacher friends of mine have said, you know,
we're not just there to teach.
We're there in a safeguarding capacity.
We're there as social workers.
We're there as therapists.
You know, they have, they wear so many hats.
and are so experience and would, you know, it would be a great loss to education for Sarah to leave,
but their loss would be our gain because we could have Sarah come and work with us.
We certainly need more Sarah's coming into the profession.
Yeah, so do your masters, check that you actually really do like it.
You know, you might discover that actually you really love the research stuff and you might go into research.
Or you might decide that actually you'd want to be, you know, a clinical associate psychologist or, you know, a PWP.
And that might light you up.
But do the Masters and I think just see what you think.
See what you think to studying again as well.
Because, of course, that will have been some time ago.
And when you are studying, do reach out for your student support service and your Centre for Academic Writing and all of that stuff to help you because, you know, you are in essence paying their wages as well.
They're a service that you should use and shouldn't feel any stigma about using.
So, yeah, I mean, I would, I highly recommend the Open University. They do do the master's conversion course.
also know that Brunel do offer the course, Brunel University offer the course remotely as well.
So I would recommend 100% that she looks into this and really considers.
But that return to education and studying will also help to inform her whether this is the right path for her.
It certainly was for me.
I started studying and I don't ever want to stop.
My body's telling me to stop, but my brain just.
wants to keep going. So yeah I think I think go for it. Amazing. Okay so we've got a green
light to proceed to the next stage which for Sarah looks like it might involve the
masters. Do you want to guide us through the next vignette Claire? Absolutely. Okay so case
study number two we have Mark he's a 35 year old male an NHS office manager so he works
in a community mental health service. He manages rotors referrals, waiting lists and service
data. He works closely with psychologists, nurses, psychiatrists and support workers but
does not currently have a clinical role. He has a Bachelor of Science in Psychology, achieving
a 2-2 and he completed that 12 years ago. At the time, he lacked confidence and direction and
didn't apply for assistant psychologist roles. He moved into admin for financial stability and he's
stayed there ever since. He's single, lives alone and works full time. So his current concerns are
Mark feels stuck and worries that he has wasted time. He believes his admin role isn't good enough
for applications. He lacks confidence speaking about himself and his skills. He feels behind his peers
who qualified years ago and worries about being a man in a predominantly female profession.
He struggles with imposter syndrome and comparison. So his strengths are excellent understanding of
NHS systems, pathways and pressures, regular exposure to clinical decision-making, risk
management and service delivery, strong organizational communication and leadership skills.
He's trusted by clinicians and often
acts as an informal bridge between teams and he remains calm under pressure and is used to holding
complexity. So what he wants, Mark wants to become a clinical psychologist but feels unclear on
whether he should apply for AP roles or further study, how to make his current role more
relevant, how to talk reflectively rather than descriptively,
and whether he is competitive enough he wants a practical plan rather than vague encouragement
okay then mark um thank you um and what i would say is you sound like you're amazing at your job
um you know admin are the backbone of of kind of mental health services so don't
underestimate what you're doing and how much people do value you and you know you're probably
that person that in the office people are like, I don't know, ask Mark.
Mark will know. Mark will know. Mark will definitely know because he's dependable and
reliable. So don't underestimate you and what you're doing. The only reservation I've got
is the tutu. And obviously, you know, I came pretty close to a two to myself. There's a lot of
reasons why that might have been around for Mark. If you were to apply to the doctorate in clinical
psychology via the clearinghouse, lots of courses will not accept 2-2 unless you've got evidence
that kind of strengthened you academically. So what I would say is looking into a master's to
evidence that Mark is kind of strong in that would be kinder. Because you know, you could carry
on applying year after year to the doctorate in clinical psychology and then not get shortlisted
and it might be because you're just being screened out at that very early stage.
And really we do want you to feel like you do have strengths in academia,
that that's not scaring you off because it's so much a part of what we're doing.
You know, you were in your first year currently,
and you said you've already had to put in your research proposal for your dissertation,
for your thesis, sorry.
So it is part of what we do, and we're aiming to be scientists, practitioners,
that conduct research and weave it into our practice.
Have you got any thoughts on Mark Clare?
Yeah, so having already completed the psychology degree,
obviously unlike Sarah, he already has that insight into psychology
and the profession and the subject matter around psychology.
He sounds really motivated to qualify in as a clinical psychologist.
Obviously, it expresses how his...
his peers around him. He feels that they've kind of overtaken him and they've gone on to qualify.
He's in a great situation. The two, two doesn't need to be a barrier. Like you said, Marianne,
he can go ahead and he can complete his master's conversion, come out with a really good grade.
But yes, you are right with the declin process, clearing house. I think all
the vast majority are looking for high two ones to get onto their particular DECLIN program.
But he can go and do a master's, lots of transferable skills yet again.
I'd probably be interested in seeing, like in terms of the AP assistant psychologist roles,
is that something that he's looking to go on to once he has his masters?
What do you think?
Because he could pursue that now and do his, do his masters at the same time.
So, yeah, he could.
Because when you're applying for an assistant psychologist role, you are often competing with somebody that's maybe already worked in relevant experience roles for many years or a couple of years.
And maybe they've, maybe they've graduated a while ago or they've already got something under their belt.
So Mark's already got those some things now.
He could probably, if we could, you know, I think some time in the aspiring psychologist membership might not be a bad thing.
Like we could help raise his confidence and help him practice, you know, skills and talking about himself and talking reflectively.
But yeah, so you raise a valid point.
Like he could do the masters, but he could be doing some other relevant experience roles at the same time.
And depending on what level he's at, you know, I used to work with administrators that were kind of level,
band three, band four, band five, band six.
He might already be kind of at a similar pay level to AP as well.
So he might be able to kind of move with less pain financially.
Also, I don't want Mark to feel like because he's got a two-two,
that it's punitive, like he's got to do a master's.
Because actually lots of applicants who already have a two-one,
sometimes even a first, will also do a master's,
because that helps to strengthen them.
So this isn't a, oh, I've got to.
It's like a, I get to.
But also that's going to really help me
to optimally show myself as being capable and competent.
And to get your hand in a bit more
because you haven't studied for a while.
And so to be fresh and to have,
I think a fresh academic reference can be really great as well.
So what I would say for anyone that's undertaking a master's or even an undergrad is make very good friends, you know, with your academic supervisor so that they do know you.
So maybe not friends.
That might be a bit strong.
But make sure you're going for meetings.
Make sure that they genuinely do know about you and your work and your research.
So that when you ask them, you know, to write you a reference next year, the year of.
after the year after that.
They're like, oh, Mark, yeah, I remember Mark.
Otherwise it can be really tricky,
aren't it, Claire?
Yeah, absolutely.
I stayed in contact with my final year
undergrad tutor.
I'd heard that the university, for example,
like a lot of the universities,
will provide a very generic reference suitability statement
for the D-Clean.
So I was quite quite,
strategic actually I kind of kept in contact he was a great tutor absolutely
great Alberto was his name who's wonderful and I I stayed in contact so when it
came to that suitability statement for the Declin application I was able to put in
his email address he's his open university direct email address because I have
heard from others that their universities where they did their undergrad or
they did their masters, provide these very generic references, suitability statements.
So, yeah, a little trick, yeah, stay in contact with them.
And get their email, get their actual email rather than the generic admin one,
so it's more likely to end up in the right place.
Yeah, brilliant advice.
So, you know, he could stay where he is and do his masters.
he could move on and apply for AP roles,
or maybe he could be thinking about,
well, could I join, you know, an NHS bank service
and maybe do, you know, a shift a week in a clinical setting?
So perhaps as a support worker, an HCA, that kind of thing,
on like an inpatient ward or kind of something like that.
Maybe he could, you know, depending on his time and his inclination,
he could go and do some work doing home caring or, you know, caring work in a home,
something to give him experience of the clinical populations that clinical psychologists would work
with, which would be people with intellectual disabilities, children, young people and families,
adult mental health, older adults, broadly speaking, other other areas are, of course, available,
but generically, that's the areas that we look at. So what does he enjoy? What could he
do that might be a paid opportunity. And I don't love advocating for unpaid work, but, you know,
lots of people do volunteer with services like Shout and the Samaritans and stuff like that.
So that it's giving your time in a way that is not taking up loads of it, but you're also
getting access to that work that helps your skills and confidence to grow.
Yeah, absolutely. He's definitely got.
options. I think if it's not a pay cut for him to apply for assistant psychologist roles would be a
really smart move actually. And I think he'd be a really good candidate. Securing your first
AP role can be really difficult and we hear that it can take some people months and months
and months to get that interview and to secure that first post. But work
working within the NHS and having an understanding of NHS system, saying clinical work,
albeit he's not working clinically directly himself. He does have that understanding of how that
looks and how that works. And I think it put him in a really strong position actually to apply
for AP roles. And AP roles are not the gold standard, contrary to belief. They are not the gold standard
for the Declin applications. They are just one route and that's one route that he can access
off the back of his degree that he currently has. He can and I've just had another idea
Claire so depending on where he lives in the country or in the UK he also could apply for
clinical associate psychologist training which actually is a master's and is paid. Now the difficulty
with that, it's not really difficulty, but the barrier to that is that once you qualify,
if you've had kind of a funding to do that, which you would be because you're paid,
you then have to have at least two years passed before you can then go on and have additional
funding to do your doctorate. But we would hope that he would really like being a
clinical associate psychologist and would want to do that for a few years. You know, if he hated it,
it might be a sign actually I don't want to go on and become a clinical psychologist,
but also once you've had that funding,
and the same for like psychological well-being practitioner,
if you've had the funding to do that,
you don't necessarily have to do that job afterwards.
You just can't have more funding straight away.
So if you wanted to go on from your PWP course
and then go on and become an assistant psychologist,
then you could,
but you couldn't have any additional funding whilst you're waiting.
So, yeah, depending on where he lives and whether they're doing intakes for that,
a trainee cap role might work really well for him.
Yeah, it's a really good option.
They paid at band five, then they get paid at band six when they qualify.
Yeah, clinical associate psychologist, also known as caps.
I have a couple within my cohort who were caps and the cap pathway.
obviously waited the two years before applying for the declin.
It's set them up really well, put them in a really strong position for the declin application process.
I think that's a really good option.
I think I'm telling Mark, get a cap for a mark.
Go on, go on, Mark. Do it.
And you'll get a pay rise. You'll be banned fine.
And if anyone's watching or listening to this and they're like, oh, I could be, Mark.
I could be Sarah, that's a really good idea.
Or what about this?
We would welcome comments and questions.
So people can comment on YouTube.
They can do a Q&A on Spotify or harass me down on social media
where I'm Dr. Marianne Trent everywhere.
Any other thoughts or kind of takeaway points for people that are thinking,
I think I want to be a psychologist.
But I'm a bit older, I guess.
Or even if they're, you know, they're 24 and they've graduated and they're like,
I've done history.
What did I do that for?
Any advice?
I know we're looking at older applicants
because we want to empower them
and have that sense of it not being too late.
But any other parting thoughts, Claire?
So, yeah, for me,
anything I post about my journey
in relation to my career change,
transitioning into academia, in my 40s,
I get a lot of interest
and a lot of people reach out.
to me a lot of people will private message me on LinkedIn and ask for advice
whether in a similar situation and my advice is always very very clear and if you
are motivated and you set yourself ambitious goals and it's a pathway that
you want to take then go for it that there is no age limit we offer so much more
as mature students, you know, we come with lived experience, older applicant trainees, we have a lot to offer.
I'd also like to say with regards to that also, I have quite a young co-haul.
They too come with an abundance of experience, a lot of really rich lived experience and clinical experience.
And I've learned so much from the younger members of my cohort.
We all have something to offer and the sky's the limit as far as I'm concerned.
Do I wish I'd done it sooner?
Nah, I'll do it now.
Because if I'd have done it sooner, I wouldn't have had my previous career.
Would you start again now?
So if you were retired medically now from the police force at 47, would you do it now?
Yes.
Yes, I would.
Yeah. Yeah, I mean, you look at retirement. Retirement age is rising, isn't it?
I think for my generation, it's probably going to be probably in our 70s before we're going to be allowed to retire.
But yeah, like easily, a good solid 20, 25 years. I don't ever intend to retire. I suppose it's your outlook. I'm very driven. I get a lot out of my
working identity. So for me it was really important. It's not the be all and end all for everybody
else, but if it's something you want and you're prepared to graft at it, then go for it.
The sky's the limit. Yeah, I totally agree and I don't necessarily predict myself retiring.
Because if you've got, even if you've got 25 years left of work, why not make it something that
you love? Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Absolutely. No, no regrets. I'm wonderfully exhausted in my first year as a trainee, balancing
placement and university and life, but I still feel like I've won the bloody lottery,
getting a place, and it feels an absolute privilege to be walking this pathway, and you can do too.
That's so wonderful. What lovely advice to leave it on, and it's always
a privilege to speak with you. So thank you for sharing your wisdom, your compassion and your
very wise words, Claire. Thank you Mary and lovely to see you again. And and you, take care.
Take care. Bye now. What an absolute pleasure to speak with Claire and we had to cut the very end of
our post chat short because I had to go and run and help my little boy who has migraines
and he was running to the toilet to be sick and didn't even realise he was sick before
then I'll have to go and help clear up the hallway and my son. So these are some of the real
life challenges of parenting children. Certainly the real life experience for my nine-year-old.
Have you got any experience of having migraines yourself or maybe for your children as well?
Yeah, it's certainly blights our life at times, but he kind of, he is a trooper. So yeah,
thanks to Claire for allowing me to dash off so soon.
How have you found this episode? I would love to know. What's it evoked for you? What thoughts have you got? Let me know in the comments whether you are watching on YouTube or whether you're listening on Apple or Spotify or somewhere else good too. You can always come and connect with me on social media. I'm Dr. Marianne Trent. Please do tag me in your stories if you are enjoying the content. I love to hear from you. And I genuinely think if this content,
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