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Rent, living expenses, student loans, parents, vacation/race car/airplane fund. In that order.
OMG you guys are awesome! haha I honestly did not expect this much love for parents. No offense to anyone! It is just a very positive surprise. I am impressed!👍
Why are you surprised? My guess is >50% of people on SDN are asian and asians tend to feel indebted to their parents and feel the need to care for them when they're older as it is a part of their culture
Hookers and heroin....for my parents of course
give a big chunk of it to my mom for everything she has done for me to get that far
👍 Probably the same.Give a big chunk of it to my mom for everything she has done for me to get that far
I would give it tO my parents but they would not have any of it (not that they hate me and don' want my money), they probably want me to save it so I an can support my own children the same way they have supported me.
Why are you surprised? My guess is >50% of people on SDN are asian and asians tend to feel indebted to their parents and feel the need to care for them when they're older as it is a part of their culture
OMG you guys are awesome! haha I honestly did not expect this much love for parents. No offense to anyone! It is just a very positive surprise. I am impressed!👍
I would probably make like a substantial payment towards my loans and hand over most of my salary to my dear mother, without whom I honestly wouldn't have gotten that far! I know she will probably start saving up for a house first 🙂
Of course, I would fall into this category as well. If you think about it, by the time most of us are finally earning an attending salary, our parents will be quite old. Why not spend it on them? We'll have decades to enjoy our money.
Recall that the median income for the parents of med students is between $100,000 and $150,000.
Do you have a source on this? This is very firmly UMC territory, I'm a bit surprised.
I'm buying a used Ferrari/Lambo/Aston Martin/Rolls Royce after a couple years of practicing.Man, this is such a feel good thread. Most of the topics discussed on SDN are all about the stress, doubt, and struggle of a career in medicine. It is so nice to finally have a chance to think about the (financial) rewards that will finally await us at the end of this tumorous path.
Think of all the people we will help on the way too!
For me, I will probably still be stressing out in paying my school loans. But apart from that, I would like to give some to my parents + a few charities... and maybe buy myself a shiny new car too 😀
👍 Probably the same.
Yeah my parents may try this but I'll just "forget" a suitcase full of money in the living room when I visit.
There's a lot wrong with this post, part of that being that >50% of SDN is not Asian. There have been multiple polls in the past on this.
It's really not that surprising that so many of us would pay back our parents. Recall that the median income for the parents of med students is between $100,000 and $150,000. This is just enough that parents can meaningfully contribute to things like interview fees, application fees, MCAT classes, MCAT books, a nice private undergraduate college, etc...but not so much that the parents won't have to make sacrifices to do so, especially if they pay some of medical school as well. Most students are probably aware of the large role money pays in our ability to be successful, and thus feel that its worth thanking their parents for giving them that opportunity to be successful.
Of course, I would fall into this category as well. If you think about it, by the time most of us are finally earning an attending salary, our parents will be quite old. Why not spend it on them? We'll have decades to enjoy our money.
https://www.aamc.org/download/269322/data/msq2011.pdf
Page 21. Median is $110k/year. 43% of respondents fall within $100-250k/year.
65% also have zero pre-medical debt. 😱
I saw it too, but I ignore the troll posts as best I can, like the one two above this.
Edit:
Also, I can guarantee your salary ain't gonna be $200k the first year, unless you have one of the most coveted specialties. Add in taxes, malpractice insurance, salaries dropping, etc.
I think you all are seriously overestimating the amount of disposable income you will have, especially after your first paycheck.
Why is everyone so sure that their first paycheck will be one of 12 or so that will total to 200k years form now? What if annual salaries drop below 90k? Will you guys even work towards that first paycheck in the same field?
After completely my emergency android neurorobotics fellowship on Newt Gingritch's moon base, I'll buy an X-Wing fighter and head to Dagoba to be Yoda's personal physician...