As a lurker of a few months (with a few posts), I decided to read a bit of this thread, get to know a few people, and finally
😳 introduce myself.
One of the first things I saw of course, was BlacKAT333's April post saying "don't make your first post the one where you got accepted!" Oops! I think that's what I did. (Just so excited!) Sorry, you're totally right BlacKAT333! This intro is waaaaaay overdue.
I'm a 29 year old non-traditional applicant, currently working in research at Children's Hospital Boston as a Flow Cytometry Core Manager. I've had my sights set on veterinary medicine for more than 2 decades but suffered from "life" during the first half of my undergraduate degree, which took me 5.5 years to complete. Not sure that I wanted to immediately plunge back in to academia, I stumbled into flow cytometry straight out of college which led me to my current job.
I find it amazing both how far I've managed to travel from my original dream, and how strongly that distance has reinforced my desire to follow that dream. I love my job, I love my coworkers, and I love the greater good that I'm working for. There's nothing like knowing your knowledge and achievements directly contribute to the health of (mostly underprivileged) children around the world.
And I love my flow cytometer, and the freedom and responsibility that come with my job, but the fact remains that I'm stuck in a cold, dry lab all day with a machine to keep me company and ever increasingly dry skin
🙄 I looked at my options a couple of years ago, and knew I had two career choices: The one that I was already involved in, that I moderately enjoyed and that could make me financially comfortable, or the one that I was passionate about, and that would probably change my life. Guess which one I chose
😀
So I went back to school a couple of years ago, taking one class at a time while working and returning to volunteering, trying desperately to raise my GPA to something resembling a competitive number. This cycle, I applied to 12 schools, determined to make an all or nothing shot of it - My husband and i do want to have children, and we'd at least like me to have my degree and hopefully a year or 2 of internship/residency before that becomes impossible. And now that I've been accepted to Massey, we almost have more questions than answers. I'm still waiting to hear from 6 schools (I have an interview at Tufts coming up too, whee!), but the fact remains that we have a 9 year old Great Dane mix and that Massey is . . . very distant and a very expensive and stressful option for him. Le sigh.
So that's me in a garrulous little nutshell, and I want to thank all the regular posters who've been so tolerant of us lurkers so far. You're postings and advice have been invaluable, and I'm eternally grateful for all the siphoned off help that I've received so far. You all rock!
