- Joined
- Aug 12, 2014
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 2
I was recently dismissed from my school for cheating on an exam. I didn't need to cheat, I was doing fine, I was in the top of my classes on many things. I was working a job during school, I was depressed and am now bordering on suicidal. During the process of hearings I had to study for Step 1, still somehow managed a 243 while literally trying to read with tears in my eyes. I know most students on here just hate people like me on principle, so I don't really expect sympathy. I admitted it right away and feel on my sword for everything, and I know there isn't really much I can do, but I was wondering if anyone knows anything someone with two years of medical school might be able to do. My two under grad degrees are law and psych and are useless on their own. Are you black listed from applying to school, even in something unrelated to medicine? I know even graduate programs may not let someone like me in. I literally had a moment, unplanned, and stupid, stemming from some pretty dark and bad derisive symptoms, and now I'm 180000 in debt, and I have nothing. And this isn't something like, "it's a blessing in disguise". I literally gave up everything for a career in medicine. My home, my friends, and really it led to me taking every question so seriously that when I got things wrong it meant I was killing someone in the future. It's a stupid way to live, as everything I do is a failure when I think that way. It's why I'm here now. I volunteered, I worked hard and studied. I took everything seriously, and I was good at it. It wasn't a question of whether medicine was right for me and is this just a wake up call. It's not. I wanted it too badly I guess. And now I'm having dreams where I hope I get shot, or I'm driving and I want to run into the wall. I don't know what to do next. If I could just have a direction or goal it would at least let me sleep at night. And yes I have been with professional help for this, and no, professional help is not a cure for these things. I guess in a way I just wanted to have a way of saying that not everyone you see is terrible, and the competitiveness and the nature of the medical educational field leads to situations like mine. I don't blame the person who turned me in. All of us believe in a ethical code, a professional standard to the job. But instead of punishment, it may be wiser to approach people having difficulties and attempt to help, rather than gain a sense of self satisfaction of crushing another human being into the ground. Something like this has always been my worst fear, and you would think that if that was the case, why would I have risked that behavior at all. Sometimes, it's not planned. It's panic and despair. I will almost guaranteed never be a doctor. I would have been a great one, but I made one mistake, and now my entire life is now a joke, a complete failure to everyone I know, and such a shame to my family that they have to lie about me. Just look out for each other during these times, everyone always hates gunners, or doesn't like a particular person. But in the end you aren't fighting the people in your class for positions and hospitals. You should be happy for everyone around you, and I'm glad that everyone here takes everything seriously, and is helpful to one another. I may end up as the janitor in your hospital, so just remember, if everyone's life was defined by one mistake, things might not be so special for you down the road. Appreciate wherever you are right now, so that when you are literally considering a gun in the mouth, that hopefully one day you may be happy. So I'm just seeing if anyone has a suggestion or two for someone who is smart, but really really stupid at the same time