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- Apr 13, 2007
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As a PGY-4, I have been recently looking back on the last four years or so of training and contemplating my initiation, if you will, into the world of pathology. The hardest part at first will probably be explaining to everyone at your med school graduation party and everyone else in your life what a pathologist is. Everyone will assume that you are embarking on a journey into the underworld doing autopsies. They will be baffled why you wouldn't rather do plastic surgery. This will be even worse if your family belongs to a country club or you are graduating at the top of your class, because your mother's friendly Botoxophiles and even your ignorant medical school colleagues will lack insight and tell you that you are wasting your precious step scores and AOA membership.
Several years later, these same people with a newfound understanding of your career choice will be sending you (no probably FedExing), anxiously, their own breast core biopsies, reading you their own child's brain tumor pathology report, or asking you to explain what on earth is LSIL or a LEEP procedure or the difference between a Pap and a biopsy.
The point here, is that only those (un)fortunate people who find themselves "waiting by the fax machine" (as one great pathologist once told me) will ever truly respect your decision to become a pathologist. I bumped into my good friend and trauma surgery partner during 3rd year of med school yesterday and he said, "remember when we finished the rotation and you said you would never have to sleep in a call room again"? Did that end up being true? I said, "yes, come to think of it, I never have slept at the hospital again....no more pillow hair during morning report, etc. etc." He is in his 4th year of surgery residency and was obviously jealous! I write all this because I myself was very pensive and doubtful at first about my decision. People will get to you even if they are idiots. Just stay focused and ignore them. Do you agree SR?
Several years later, these same people with a newfound understanding of your career choice will be sending you (no probably FedExing), anxiously, their own breast core biopsies, reading you their own child's brain tumor pathology report, or asking you to explain what on earth is LSIL or a LEEP procedure or the difference between a Pap and a biopsy.
The point here, is that only those (un)fortunate people who find themselves "waiting by the fax machine" (as one great pathologist once told me) will ever truly respect your decision to become a pathologist. I bumped into my good friend and trauma surgery partner during 3rd year of med school yesterday and he said, "remember when we finished the rotation and you said you would never have to sleep in a call room again"? Did that end up being true? I said, "yes, come to think of it, I never have slept at the hospital again....no more pillow hair during morning report, etc. etc." He is in his 4th year of surgery residency and was obviously jealous! I write all this because I myself was very pensive and doubtful at first about my decision. People will get to you even if they are idiots. Just stay focused and ignore them. Do you agree SR?