So thats the gist of it on my end. Both look fun. Becoming a physician might rock, or completely drain me as a person. Becoming an OT might rock, or might be boring.
This is my dilemma precisely.
I'm attracted to OT mainly because of the pediatric practice setting -- I've volunteered in some early intervention groups and it looks like so much fun. Especially the settings that resemble a preschool for autistic or otherwise developmentally disabled children -- I love the early childhood age group, and I'm not sure if I'd feel satisfied with a job that doesn't involve working with young children. However, there are a lot of aspects of OT that don't appeal to me. I have no interest in, say, making psych patients do crafts or nursing home patients bake banana bread. I also worry that it won't be intellectually challenging enough. Even in pediatrics, which would be my goal group, a lot of the tasks are boring to me -- such as handwriting, which bores me to tears. Still, I have a pretty laid-back, type-B personality, and I might be happier with the more relaxed lifestyle of OT. I'm also very attracted to the freedom to change specialties if you want and being able to do contract/travel work so that I can work 8 months of the year and travel during the rest.
With medicine, I'm sure I could find ample intellectual challenge, but I might miss the fun and creativity that is a part of working in OT. I do love biological science and if I were independently wealthy without need for a job, I honestly think I'd like to go through med school just for the knowledge even if I didn't intend to become a doctor. I just want to know as much as I can about how the body works. I'm 22 now, and I think that later in life, I might be more satisfied with the scientific/intellectual challenge and respect that come with medicine than with the fun of OT -- but obviously I can't predict that for sure.
The difference in time and expense is also a huge factor. With OT, I could start school months after I graduate in January '10, be out of grad school with a well-paying job at 26, out of debt by 30. And because the debt is relatively small, I'd be able to go back to school or take a different job later in life if I wanted. With medicine, I'd have to take a postbac year to complete all the requirements, then 4 years of medical school at great expense, then 4+ years of residency -- it'd be 10 years before I'd even be making an actual salary and I'm not sure I want to throw away my 20s like that. I want to travel a lot while I'm young, and I'm not sure if I could do that AND become a doctor. I'd consider med school more strongly if I could complete it internationally, but from what I've read here that's a big mistake unless you can't get accepted anywhere else. Also, if I decided to become an MD I'd have too much debt to switch to something lower paying like OT later on.
I'm sure that this is way more than anyone wanted to read, LOL. I'm just very torn. When I was younger I never really thought about becoming a doctor, though I've always been interested in biology and diseases -- but recently the idea has come into my head, and I don't know if this is just my typical fear of commitment popping up to ruin my plans to pursue OT (which I was almost sure of at one point) or if med school might be the right thing for me.