I was an Occupational Therapy student in the Riverland… continue reading for a short, sharp, and shiny spiel of my 9 weeks with The Potential Ability Group (TPAG). Inclusive of all the good bits, the incredible bits, and the overwhelming bits (mostly incredible though).
Beginning my placement at The Potential Ability Group (affectionately known as TPAG), I really had no idea what to expect. My first day began at my supervisor’s house, she opened the door while fretting about a mouse in her house (safe to say the ice was immediately broken), and I soon came to realise this placement was going to be like nothing I had ever thought. The team at TPAG really welcomed me with open arms and were always consistent with support and providing regular ‘check ins’ to see how I was going. After my first shadowing visit my supervisor hit me with the “so how are you feeling? Surviving, thriving, overwhelmed?” I soon realised how important these three reflective words would become throughout my time at TPAG.
My capacities and knowledge around occupational therapy has changed dramatically since my placement here. My university brain was tipped upside down within the first week of being with my supervisor, I have never felt so inspired yet so inadequate at the same time. Safe to say I was quite literally a sponge during the first few weeks, absorbing so much information! I was really pushed to reflect, and problem solve my own thoughts and queries. My understanding for conditions in paediatrics and the importance of sensory processing within these conditions was something I have never and would not have previously thought to consider. My mind was steered away from the textbooks of the university and standardised assessments and more into the environment and psychosocial being of the individual.
My knowledge of the occupational therapy role grew enormously. My passions were solidified and my anxiety of having chosen the right career path was eased. TPAG as a whole, their values and the company processes support everything I envisioned Occupational Therapy to be, not to mention all the incredible OT’s and their insane amount of knowledge. Absorbing the OT’s passion for their role and advocation for their clients was unbelievable. But don’t get me wrong there were some things that took some getting used to.
Getting used to driving from client to client and having to quickly take notes down in the car before heading to the next client took some adjustment. Safe to say, absorbing this all was pretty tough, more often than not, you’d find me sending messages or voice notes to myself from my supervisor’s phone (as mine went flat), as I refused to miss out on any information/knowledge she threw my way!