We recently connected with Jenny Traub and have shared our conversation below.
Jenny, looking forward to hearing all of your stories today. We’d love to hear about the things you feel your parents did right and how those things have impacted your career and life.
My parents have some of the best hearts in the world. They always taught me to see the good in people. I have carried that throughout my career as a nice and in my interpersonal relationships.
They also taught me not working hard was never an option. I had to get good grades in school and go to college. They were very supportive of me and all of my endeavors.

As always, we appreciate you sharing your insights and we’ve got a few more questions for you, but before we get to all of that can you take a minute to introduce yourself and give our readers some of your back background and context?
I have been a nurse for 12 years, and of those 12 years I have been a travel nurse for 7. I have traveled all over the country in up to 30 different hospitals in various units.
Through my travel nursing pursuit, I was able to create a rental business where I rent out my properties to traveling professionals.
I run a blog/ig page called travel nurse chronicles where I post my adventures all around the world working and having fun.
I created another business called health connection services where I offer services such as mobile iv hydration, mobile post op care and cpr classes.
I wrote one book already and am in the process of writing another.
Let’s talk about resilience next – do you have a story you can share with us?
There have been more times than I can count where the self doubt plagues my mind. It happens to all of us. Maybe I should just get a staff job, plant it down, and that’s it. However, there’s something inside of me that keeps me wanting to strive for more.
I attribute it to me being an athlete all my life. I remember in high school we were playing in the district championship basketball game and we were down by 20 at half time. I decided we were winning this game and kept driving to the basket over and over. It ignited a fire in the rest of the team and we ended up winning. I use the lesson I learned from that game in many areas of my life.

Learning and unlearning are both critical parts of growth – can you share a story of a time when you had to unlearn a lesson?
The lesson I had to unlearn is failure being permanent. You must failure over and over again before you learn to succeed. If you want to double your rate of success, double your rate of failure.
Contact Info:
- Website: Www.travelnursechronicles.com
- Instagram: Travelnursechronicles

