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Didn't you just start a podiatry residency a few weeks ago?I think one of the biggest issues throughout the entire process is how looked down upon you are during some of the residency years.
Not a word about helping sick and injured,Long story short, I've always been interested in becoming a physician, though probably not for the right reasons.
The reasons boil down to:
However, those are probably bad reasons, and on top of that, I'm also terrible at STEM (earned A's and B's) and even earned a B- in Orgo 1.
- Trying to hang onto an idealized version of the field I had when I was a kid (would admire female doctors who practiced locally and think they were super smart and cool, wished I could be like them)
- Wanting validation for my academic smarts and intelligence (did well in school overall but was never the smartest...also did not do well in college which you can read more about below)
- Wanting a career with more job stability for Pete's sakes (aka no layoffs because of tough times)
- Wanting a career that is prestigious with high earning potential
- Intellectual interest in medicine (though I admittedly like psychology more)
I only have a ~3.56-3.62 science GPA for MD schools and a 3.74 science GPA for DO schools.
I'm clearly not a STEM person by any stretch of the imagination.
Here are my STEM grades if anyone is interested. I attended a T15-T20 public university.
My academic strengths are in English, psychology, Spanish (for someone who learned the language at age 14 in high school LOL) and economics, in which I have earned all A's with ease.
- General Chemistry 1 & Lab: A/A
- Organic Chemistry 1 & Lab: B-/A
- Calculus 1: B+
- Calculus 2: B+
- Statistics: B+
- Human Physiology: A
- Organic Chemistry 2: P (Spring 2020)
- Stats & Data Science: A
- Was listed under the statistics department and is statistics heavy
- Research Methods in Psychology: A+
- It was a statistics and coding heavy class, I'm not sure if it counts towards BCPM for AMCAS
I even sought out neuropsych testing to see if I have any learning disabilities. I do not have the test results in hand, but I highly suspect that I have ADHD, a really bad auditory memory, and really crappy visuospatial skills.
That being said, despite the fact that I'm bad at science and math and want to get into medicine for iffy reasons, I can't seem to let go of this field.
For context, my most recent therapist literally fired me after 9 sessions because she said my issues related to medicine were too intense for her LMAO. She suggested that I needed "intensive [redacted type of] therapy."
Does anyone have any advice? I'm 25 and this is heavily impacting my career.
Until you get your mental health issues under control, Medical school will merely be a furnace for you.I understand, but you didn't even comment on my academic concerns.
If you're bad at science coursework, med school isn't for you.My mental health is perfectly fine for the most part lol apart from ADHD and being bad at science
I'm also not going to tell you what you want tonhear, but what you need to hear.If you're bad at science coursework, med school isn't for you.
Can you give us your year by year cGPAs and sGPAs??Right, but do you see me being bad at science reflected in my grades?
As I mentioned earlier, a career in Medicine isn't for your validation.It's because I genuinely feel like it would be a mistake to attend medical school if I'm not naturally good at STEM when I've received lots of validation/compliments for my writing "talents." I feel like I really struggle with math and science.
But at the same time, I want the validation that being a doctor would confer lol.
I can't even afford the intensive DBT therapy my last therapist suggested lol.
This is not a valid reason.I want the validation that being a doctor would confer lol.
Wanting to help sick people and do good for society, because you enjoy it not because you want people to tell you what a good girl/boy you are. Having a particular passion in medicine, like I want to do gender affirming care as a trans person myself. Loving the job/process of being a doctor itself enough to sacrifice a lot for it, usually this is more a surgical phenomenon. Something along those lines I'd say.I understand, but in that case, what are valid and good reasons to want to be a doctor?
Sorry if you've stated before, but how far along in your medical career are you?There's nothing wrong with wanting a decent job, but I have a hard time categorizing medicine as "just a job." There's a lot of societal expectations and sacrifices to just do it for that. Imo those factors should be a bonus to your main reason, not the primary factor.
In the time it's take you to be a BC physician, you could certainly cultivate a decent business career in a stable industry like gov, pharma, etc. We're in a very unstable economy RN so I wouldn't hang your hat on it because you got laid off one time.
I'm just getting started in med school, but I was a part time premed for 4-5 years due to work and family constraints. I've been grinding 60-80h a week for that period of time toward this goal.Sorry if you've stated before, but how far along in your medical career are you?
You'll dislike med school even more, and residency even less.I understand, but I also dislike business.
The final result sounds nice. But I can tell you as a resident, life is not easy. 6 am to 10 pm days exist, and you are just doing all the work for your doctors that they don't want to do.I am actually interested in medicine and the final result of being a doctor.
LOL, well, you know, getting laid off from your first job in business straight out of college, having only been there for 6 months, and having not found a job since Feb 2023 isn't too hot either.
That happened to some of my former coworkers at our last job.
For the wrong reasons, hence my comments.I am actually interested in medicine and the final result of being a doctor.
Irrelevant to the point I and others have been trying to make.However, I have actually wanted to be a doctor since childhood.
Grass is always greener on the other side.Neither is being unemployed for 12+ months and relying on parents to survive (my former coworkers) and having a job that you absolutely hate, is also very competitive (aka strategy consulting) and be filled with regret every day that you didn't do medicine.
I'm only 25, so I'm not going to say I have a ton of experience and have worked every single type of job in the world. I've never done residency.
But I'd rather grind it out in residency and have a decent paying job for the rest of my career than deal with freaking layoffs and corporate BS for the rest of my life. My 1.5 years in consulting taught me that.