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Why do medical students complain about *everything*
Seriously, med students can find something wrong with any situation. Ever. For the record, this isn't specifically directed at my classmates either, because I know students at other schools who behave the same way. Then again, I've called some of my friends out on how much trash they talk, and they totally agree with how often they do it, and I'm starting to catch myself doing it too. In fact, medical students bother the crap out of me! (<<< meant to be a joke)
Maybe I just pick bad friends :( But seriously, have we been over-conditioned to analyze every single thing we encounter to the point of never being satisfied? Does medical school turn us into critical thinking snobs? Or is being in a position of authority as a future doctor too much for us to resist judging other people? But looking on the bright side, at least we're not in law school. They're way more argumentative. |
What else is there to do with your mouth?
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Are you complaining?:confused:
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because memorizing a bunch of annoying facts does not merit complaining. because everything in med school is completely necessary and integral to one's success as a physician. all the material is interesting, and if its not, the problem is with you.
hey. you chose this role to become a physician. you are going to become a doctor. you should honored at this esteemed opportunity -- to enter this sacred profession, to hone the craft and art of being a caretaker of the sick, blah blah blah. blah blah blah. blah blal blah. |
Med students are at the very bottom of a long steep hill. You see nothing but the hill looming in front of you. Crap always flows downhill and there are lots of folks higher up the hill constantly crapping down upon you. You are coming from college where everyone told you you were great, and then med school where they started off the year telling you that you were future professionals, but once you reach the clinical years you see that it's really just a lot of years of climbing through the crap looming ahead of you. So yeah, you complain. And in a few years you will complain less because you can always look down the hill behind you and see others wading through YOUR crap. And that's the epitome if accomplishment. :)
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In my opinion its a coping mechanism. Complaining together brings us closer.
I do it all the time, and so do my friends. But we complain/laugh about it. We always get a good laugh about how ridiculous some of our practicals are, how much time we have to waste doing dumb stuff, etc. |
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It's universal. Pre-meds, med studs, residents, fellows, staff. |
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Pre-Meds: 4 years of pointless education while digging yourself into debt Med students: 4 years of being a downtrodden afterthought while digging yourself further into debt Residents: obviously Fellows: Function as an attending, get paid like a resident Staff: I dono....office politics? |
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Complaining is a noble American tradition, one that unites us across all social, educational, racial, and political lines. We all gripe. |
I think it's more of a human thing rather than something specific to med students.
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Oh it's only medical students who complain all the time?
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Bad organization of school... bad teachers, useless materials that we have to learn..., especially sense we are putting in countless hours and a ton of money into it.
Last test we had included a couple of lectures on inborn errors of metabolism (MS1), and we had to memorize 11+ glycogen storage diseases (and other diseases) with their # and name, and symptoms, treatment, and a LOT of people complained b/c it was absolutely useless. The lecture was literally heres names, heres symptoms, treatment, gene mutation, and we are expected to memorize them. Some of the diseases range from 1/100k to 1/1000000 prevalence which doesn't make it better. |
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LOL at this thread. I remember waiting tables and ranting about how tough a job it was and how little we were paid and how the average person couldn't handle the stress...and all my fellow waiters were nodding their heads in agreement.
I am reminded of a quote from that movie "The Great Escape". James Garner's character tells some guard that "it's a soldiers right to complain". That about sums it up I guess. I can honestly say though, that while I do my fair share, most of the complaints are stupid and pointless. Furthermore, the worst med school polices I have seen resulted from programs trying to appease the complainers. Remember if you want to change the culture, you have to change first. |
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peace. |
Over-worked and under-paid
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