By The Flight Attendant Nextdoor
Flight Attendant Nextdoor shares her inspiring career pivot from aviation to healthcare in “Grounded in Care.” Learn how she balances flying, phlebotomy training, and nursing school prep—with time-management tips, transferable skills, and encouragement for your own career change.
Why “Grounded in Care” Is More Than a Catchy Title
If you’ve followed my journey for any length of time, you know that aviation has been my playground for nearly a decade. I’ve poured myself into delivering safety, service, and calm in the sky. But there has always been another calling whispering in my ear; one rooted in science, compassion, problem solving and hands-on care.
This blog post kicks off my new series “Grounded in Care Diaries,” where I’ll chronicle my pivot from full-time flying to part-time aviation and part--time healthcare training that occupys my mental on a full time bases. Whether you’re curious about changing careers yourself or simply love behind-the-scenes glimpses of real life situations, my hope is to inspire you with practical insights, honest reflections, actionable tips and fearless growth when you need it.
From the Sky to the Stethoscope: How My Pivot Began
For years I’ve been fascinated by the mystery of numbers and how the human body works. In high school, In 9th grade I even tutored a 10th grader in algebra—solving for x like it was a puzzle after the teacher gave me a sample question to do at the start of every class to see if I had the new formula down and I did. It was like a free period or layover from our class day, learning, snacking and chilling in the tv room! The good ole days. While my “solve for x” skills gathered some dust, that analytical brain never went away. It just expressed itself in different ways: calculating flight times, managing my work life balance, and planning how to execute my next set of challenges like a game of chess.
Fast forward to today: I’m brushing up on math, percentages, and metric conversions to ease my dosage-calculation jitters. By this time next year, I plan to be fully immersed in a nursing program. Right now I’m warming up with a phlebotomy program; and honestly, it feels like coming home. Anatomy and physiology fascinate me. The body’s intricate systems remind me of an aircraft: multiple layers, each essential, each perfectly designed to work together. Fearfully and wonderfully made machines.
And just like I did with real estate a few years back, I’m using my flight hours to study inflight. After service is complete, you’ll find me tucked in a jumpseat with my nose in my class notes instead of playing games on my phone.
Phlebotomy Training: My First Step Into Patient Care
I’m currently in Week 3 of 12 in my phlebotomy course. My first test? I scored an 80. As a flight attendant, while training and recertifying you must hit 90% or above on every exam, so I’m taking that same energy forward. (Lesson learned: don’t skim “easy” chapters; I missed on my first test (which was write in and not multiple choice), pre-analytic phase and quality-control records!)
Why start with phlebotomy? Two reasons:
- Hands-On Experience: Drawing blood is a skill that transcends job titles. It’s part of the early part of nurse’s training, but having certification ahead of time lets me hit the ground running. Plus I’m adding IV cert. too.
- Immediate Demand: Phlebotomists are needed everywhere. This means I can earn PRN (as-needed) income on the ground as my schedule permits while still flying short routes and school .
The Time-Management Equation (and How I Make It Work)
One of the biggest questions I get is: “How are you doing all of this?” The answer: planning, color-coding, and setting clear priorities.
- Flying Schedule: I’ve reduced my monthly flying hours from 100-120 to a leaner, more intentional schedule. My sweet spot is two to four short flights per week (max six hours of time invested per workday).
- Training Schedule: Twice-a-week phlebotomy classes, plus home and inflight study.
- Family & Self-Care: Fitness, meal prep, and quiet time are non-negotiable blocks in my planner.
- Side Gigs: Seasonal stadium events keep things interesting and add welcomed variety to my income.
I treat my calendar like an aircraft checklist: everything has a place, and for the most part nothing gets missed.
What Aviation Taught Me About Healthcare
Being a flight attendant isn’t just snacks and safety demos. It’s rapid decision-making, empathy under pressure, and meticulous attention to detail; skills directly transferable to healthcare. Here’s how:
- Crisis Response: Dealing with medical emergencies at altitude builds composure.
- Customer (Patient) Service: Understanding different personalities and cultures helps me connect.
- Teamwork: Coordinating with pilots, gate agents, and fellow crew mirrors interdisciplinary healthcare teams.
- Procedural Rigor: Just like checklists in the cockpit, patient safety depends on precise protocols.
In many ways, I’ve been “grounded in care” all along— and clearly I’m ready for my interview, lol..
Brushing Up on Math and Science Without Overwhelm
If you’re thinking about nursing or another healthcare career and feel rusty on academics, you’re not alone. Here’s my quick plan to refresh skills:
- Daily Micro-Study: 15-minute math drills—percentages, metric conversions, and dosage formulas.
- Free Online Resources: Khan Academy, YouTube channels, and TEAS prep apps.
- Practice Under Pressure: Simulate timed quizzes to mimic real-test environments.
- Layer Learning: Review anatomy charts while commuting or on breaks.
Small, consistent efforts add up—just like flight hours toward seniority.
My Vision for the Next Year
Picture this: The Traveling Student Nurse. Short flights a few days a week. PRN phlebotomy shifts on the ground. Starting Nursing school before next fall. Sleepless nights reserved not for memorizing venipuncture steps, but for med-surg, health assessment, and pharmacology.
Yes, it’s a pay cut as a student compared to nearly 10 years of full-time flying, but it’s an investment in a future where my passions for science, care, and flexibility all intersect.
Lessons Learned So Far (Week 3 of 12)
- Don’t Underestimate “Easy” Material: Skimming Chapter 1 due to over confidence cost me two questions.
- Leverage Existing Discipline: Aviation’s high regulation standards set a solid foundation for healthcare training.
- Use Downtime Wisely: Jumpseat study sessions add up.
- Plan for Pay Fluctuations: Budget ahead for the transitional phase between careers.
- Stay Curious: Anatomy is the gateway to all.. Every system tells a story of resilience. So master it.
Why “Grounded in Care” Resonates
The phrase reflects a dual reality:
- I’m literally more grounded now by flying fewer hours.
- I’m rooting myself in a field built on caring for others as others have cared for me during critical times.
It also speaks to a universal truth: career pivots don’t mean abandoning who you are. They’re about carrying your strengths forward into new arenas.
Tips for Anyone Considering a Career Pivot
Whether you’re in aviation, hospitality, or another industry entirely, here’s what’s helping me navigate this shift:
1. Audit Transferable Skills
Write down everything you do daily. Crisis management? Team leadership? Communication? All of these translate to healthcare.
2. Test the Waters With a Short Program
Phlebotomy, EKG tech, pharmacy tech, dental assistant, radiology tech, behavioral health tech or medical assisting courses can give you a taste of patient care without a multi-year commitment.
3. Build a Financial Runway
Just like an aircraft needs runway to lift off, a career pivot needs financial padding. Adjust your spending now to ease transitions later.
4. Use Downtime to Learn
Audio lectures during commutes. Flashcards during breaks. Ten minutes a day compounds quickly. I record myself reading and playback in the car.
5. Stay Flexible
Schedules will shift. Opportunities will surprise you. Keep your eyes on the long-term destination, but be ready to reroute.
Balancing Multiple Roles Without Burning Out
I still love being “The Flight Attendant Nextdoor.” My uniform, my base family culture, my wings, my crew antics—they’re part of me. But I also know that constant 90-110 hour months aren’t sustainable long-term because our work hours are significantly greater than that each month
Here’s how I’m protecting my wellbeing:
- Shorter Trips: Preferably with a trip rig that maximizes pay for time invested.
- Fitness: Training twice a week to maintain energy.
- Home Life: Scheduling family time like an immovable meeting.
- Boundaries: Saying no to extra activities that conflict with study priorities or resetting the nervous system from the overstimulation of being around hundreds or nearly 1000 passengers in one day.
This isn’t about doing everything at once. It’s about doing the right things at the right time.
Color-Coding My Life
One of my favorite things to do as a brain dump is: color-coding my planner. Each category gets its own hue:
Flying: Blue
Healthcare Training: Red/Orange
Family & Self-Care: Pink
Side Gigs: Green
At a glance, I can see my week’s balance. If red is fading, I know I’m under-studying. If blue dominates, I’m flying too much. This simple visual cue keeps me on track.
Grounded in Care Amazon Finds= Flight Attendant Nextdoor Finds
As I’m making this pivot from the skies to scrubs, I’ve been slowly gathering little things that keep me organized, healthy, and motivated — from study helpers to self-care pick-me-ups.
Because so many ask what I’m using because I’m a bit of a gadget girl, I decided to add a brand-new Grounded in Care section to my Flight Attendant Nextdoor Finds. It’s where I’ll keep all the practical healthcare tools and cozy comforts that are helping me through this healthcare chapter.
If you’re on a similar path (or just love a good recommendation), you can peek at my picks [here] — and I’ll keep adding more as my journey unfolds.
Looking Ahead: The Big Picture
My long-term vision is a career blending the best of both worlds: travel, flexibility, and meaningful patient care. That might look like:
- Seasonal or travel nursing assignments.
- Teaching safety or corporate wellness consulting to airlines, pharmacy firms, etc.
- Blogging and creating resources for others navigating similar pivots.
Whatever form it takes, I’m staying transparent about the process—the wins, the setbacks, and the lessons. I know how to hold myself accountable, pivot as needed, forgive myself for not being perfect and move on to the next bullets point.
On This Journey too?
This post is the launchpad. Over the next several months, “Grounded in Care Diaries” will cover topics related to:
- Behind-the-Scenes of Phlebotomy School
- Getting accepted into nursing school and orientation
- Courswork and Dosage-Calculation Study Tips
- Budgeting for a Career Pivot (maybe)
- Fitness & Wellness Routines for Student Nurses
- Life Hacks for Flying + Studying
- Amazon Supply list Heathcare, Self care and Aviation
If you’re considering a similar shift, subscribe to my newsletter (feature available on desktop view) to get real-time updates and resources. Let’s build a community of people who refuse to choose between passion and practicality.
Closing Thoughts
I’ve always believed life is too short to leave visions unexplored. Aviation gave me the world. Now healthcare is calling me to serve in a new way. By reducing my flight hours and embracing this season of learning, I’m investing in a future that feels aligned and sustainable.
No matter where this journey leads, I’ll always be The Flight Attendant Nextdoor—rooted in hospitable service, curious about the people and places of the world, and dedicated to showing up as I always do with problem solving care.
Here’s to every one of you thinking about your own pivot. Whether you’re moving from the skies to the stethoscope, the classroom to the boardroom, or anywhere in between, may you find the courage to be both grounded and soaring.










