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Writer's pictureGeorgia Vine

Why I Study Occupational Therapy


This blog has been published on my site for quite a while now but the decision to write this blog wasn’t an easy one… I wrote blog for multiple reasons.


The first reason being that I felt that I needed to explain why I was drawn to occupational therapy and the second reason was to discuss my future within occupational therapy.


Design with Ease

Apart from the fact that I might not even go into the system (which relates to point two), the thought of potentially going into the system and changing people’s life makes me feel even more determined to complete this course.

But on the other hand these two reasons were the same reasons why I didn’t want to share or even write this blog as I shouldn’t feel that I need to justify why I study what I study and I didn’t really want to discuss my future without knowing what the future holds. Then I realised that blog post could potentially be the starting point in occupational therapy. So why not share this?


Here we go point one and before I make this point, I am sorry if this comes across in a controversial way, but this is a question that I have been meaning to answer for quite some time. I’m not going to bore you with all the reasons why I chose occupational therapy and why the course stuck out for me. But just for a bit of background information – occupational therapy was the right course for me as I’ve always wanted to explore the field of healthcare. OT also entails a lot of problem-solving as sometimes with occupational therapy the answer isn’t right in front of you so seen as I love maths this felt great! Not to mention that the signature colour for occupational therapy is green just like cerebral palsy I mean can it be more perfect!


However, the aim of this blog is not to rewrite my personal statement the aim is to answer a few questions that I have been asked since starting my university journey. So, let’s get the big question out of the way… ‘Why go into the system when you’ve just come out of it?’. I have been asked this question few times, sometimes it hasn’t been as direct as others but I’m capable of reading between the lines. I find this question quite annoying especially when it’s someone I’ve just met because it just makes me aware that I am probably never going to stop answering this question. Apart from the fact that I might not even go into the system (which relates to point two), the thought of potentially going into the system and changing people’s life makes me feel even more determined to complete this course. This is not because I want to change the system. A big reason why I want to go into occupational therapy is because when I was younger my occupational therapists were just phenomenal and they played that much of significant role in my life, that they inspired me to go for this career. If I can make half the impact on an individual that they’ve made on my family and I then I know it is all worthwhile.


The other questions I have been asked, have been around my capabilities within occupational therapy, these questions don’t annoy me as such because yes, my disability will always be the elephant in the room; again, this is based on so little understanding. Occupational therapy is such a board profession as you could be working in a clinic or hospital or you could be working in a driving skills centre. So, I think eventually I’ll find an area of occupational therapy that I want to work in, I’m not saying that it won’t be harder and that my options aren’t limited because it would be wrong of me to think that they weren’t. But I know that there is certainly a role in occupational therapy out there for me, that works with my needs.


This then links on to point two… I’m only in my first year (second year now) at university so I don’t have my heart set on an area of occupational therapy just yet, but I have a better idea of what areas I want to and don’t want to explore than I did a year ago (and a better idea still now almost a year on). Last year, I did a presentation about my blog, I wanted to make this presentation slightly more interesting and wanted to talk about more than just blogging. For a while now, I’ve said that I’ve wanted to link occupational therapy in with blogging, so I had the idea of doing research about the impact of occupational therapy online to incorporate this into my presentation. Then after researching, I found that there wasn’t much around this, and I realised that this maybe the area suited for me.


However, prior to this I had also had a discussion with my university lectures about linking blogging in with occupational therapy, and from this, they had advised me to write this blog. I’d been towing with the idea of writing this blog because I didn’t want to tell everyone about my future in occupational therapy without knowing what would happen. I asked myself a lot of questions around this with one of the big ones being ‘Where am I going to start?’ and therefore I decided to write this blog because this is where I am going to start. Occupational Therapy Without Borders is now the fourth site in which I’ve shared this post and I do feel a bit like a one trick pony but then I realised that I can’t start something without a general idea of where it’s going to go. I fee like my more recent blog- What Is a Virtual Occupational Therapy Placement explains this a lot a better. However, the idea of my blogs it to capture this journey.


You’re probably thinking why this blog is named Why I Study Occupational Therapy if this is not the main reason why I wrote this blog. This is because the reasons for studying occupational therapy is also listed in point two as well as in point one, even if it doesn’t seem apparent. In my first blog post on Not So Terrible Palsy, I wrote ‘I believe that I was born with Cerebral Palsy for a reason’ and from my previous work, I’ve realised this reason could be to create a link between the online community and occupational therapy. I study occupational therapy as I can bring to the table my personal experiences as well as professional experiences and this how blogging links into it even if this link isn’t visible yet. So, I can finally say that I know all the reason’s I study occupational therapy and why I’m more than willing to go back into the system!


Georgia @georgiavine4213 @georgiaannv

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