She did try and see me once a week, to be fair to her, but this month that's definitely gone out the window. Strange that I feel compelled to defend her having vented so thoroughly, but as Xanthines noted this is only my side of the story, and I don't want to do my girlfriend an injustice by only giving you my distinctly coloured perspective.
Focus E Focus - you are extremely fair and patient, so I do have to give you kudos.
👍
Smq - her exams finish the week after my exam: mine's on the 24th, she finishes on the 28th. I was loosely planning to have something on that weekend, but yeah, her class are quite close so it was inevitable she'd be booked then.
I guess I'm confused why you're not more upset that she went ahead and made plans for the weekend after your birthday. Ok, so her class is close-knit.....does that mean that your girlfriend can never say no when invited to go somewhere with her classmates?
😕 If so, that sounds more like a cult or the Mafia than a medical school class.
😉 😛
In all seriousness, I have had classmates in med school who, when invited out for an after-exam party, would say, "Sorry, it's my mom's birthday," or "Can't - I promised the husband we'd try that new restaurant on 15th Street" or something like that. Family and loved ones will always be a part of your life, and there is no reason why medical school should shut them out. Her classmates would likely understand if your girlfriend refused to go with them.
Other classmates made it a point to bring along their boyfriends/girlfriends to these kinds of post-exam parties and outings. I've met several of my classmates' families...I personally thought it was kind of fun to meet them. Even now, as a resident, a lot of my coworkers bring their wives and husbands to our hospital picnics and whatnot.
You have to make an effort to keep in touch with your loved ones that are outside medicine. Classmates come and go. You won't be a practicing physician forever. But your loved ones will still be around even after you retire from being a doctor....you can't ignore them.
I'd never be selfish enough to issue the ultimatum "medicine or me" - I'd always want her to succeed in everything she does - but there's no reason why the two can't co-exist with just a smidgeon of effort on her part.
EXACTLY. It shouldn't have to be a choice between you or medicine. A teensy bit of effort from her part would ensure that you have a place in your life.
Medicine is an extremely isolating profession. You learn a new, weird language that only other doctors and nurses can understand. You have bizarre experiences that only other medical students would share. And you see disgusting and/or emotionally devastating moments that can sometimes be difficult to discuss with other people.
If your girlfriend continues to lead a separate life from you, she will grow and change in ways that you can't keep up with. You will eventually be so ignorant of her life in medicine that you won't understand what she'll want to talk about. And then, sooner or later, you'll have nothing to say to each other. This is a sad reality that I've witnessed with my own classmates (and even between myself and some of my old friends) over and over and over again.
Don't let your girlfriend take you for granted. Relationships don't work that way.
If anyone has advice or personal insight into how their own med school relationships functioned on a routinely basis, you might give me an idea - I've no basis of comparison here, so if I inadvertedly come across as a doormat, it's only because I'm stumbling into this blindfolded.
It works the same way that it does for any other couple that is busy. You make your priorities and you make sacrifices to accomodate those priorities.
One of my fellow interns is married with a child. She bargained to be on call on nights when her husband could stay home and watch their son. She doesn't waste time in the office, and does her charts as quickly as she can, so that she can leave as soon as she reasonably can so she can spend time with her husband. She also made sure in advance that she got a certain weekend off, so that she could help host a birthday party for her child.
One of the ICU senior doctors asked if we could all come in 30 minutes earlier than usual to see patients, which we did. After all the patients were seen, he basically ran out the door. He didn't come back for a few hours, but when he did, one of the nurses asked him where he had been. "My 5 year old daughter sang a solo for the school's Christmas concert; I promised her I would be there."
As for me, it's slightly different since I am also dating someone in medicine. But still, I make an effort to see him several times a week....I just make do with less sleep and more coffee.

Still totally worth it, though. I don't regret losing the sleep if it means I get to hear about his day and share jokes and decompress a little.
Can I just say on a closing note to this post the massive respect I have for all of you? It takes a phenomonal amount of self-sacrifice to choose becoming a physician, and a metric assload (technical term) of brains to boot.
You forgot to mention, becoming a physician also requires a healthy dose of insanity.
