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Everybody hates their job.
. Gets easier to bear with then. And then who knows. Maybe someday you'll like medicine.
Not likely, the way things are going my friend. nice try though!
Everybody hates their job.
. Gets easier to bear with then. And then who knows. Maybe someday you'll like medicine.
Not likely, the way things are going my friend. nice try though!
Everybody hates their job.
Hello all,
I'm not sure I want to go through all of this anymore. I'm a M1, and am really down about school...and the prospect of continuing on like this for the rest of my life. I passed all my first semester classes, and have started seeing someone (therapist) about this, but beginning this semester makes me just feel bleak. I go to a private school as well...so it is really expensive. IDK...does it ever get better or is it just a life of enduring?
This isn't like getting into medical school (even getting into med school doesn't require constant medical activities). They're not going to not license you because you traveled for a year or worked for the family company! JEEZE! And if your residency cares, obviously they have sticks up their ass and you wouldn't feel comfortable there anyway. Residencies don't want perfect robots who f o l l o w t h e p a t h u n t h i n k i n g w i t h o u t v e e r i n g. These people tend to not deal with other people very well and could possibly have a nervous breakdown from not taking care of themselves well enough..
You tell a residency director you wanted to take a year to explore other options and came to the conclusion that medicine was your calling he might possibly applaud you for your maturity. I guarantee this with psychiatry.
it does not get better. Personal experience --> Internal medicine resident
Ever? I think the choice to finish has been made by the amount of debt I have already racked up. About 100K with Undergrad, my masters, and now the 1st year of Med School. What kind of job could I get that would pay that off? I believe I'm stuck.
If you really truly believe that you are "stuck" with this then you are going to have problems. I suggest you start figuring out what your desires are in life and your future.
I'm a M1, and am really down about school...and the prospect of continuing on like this for the rest of my life.
Never could have considered how frustrated everyone in medicine is.
What a terrible field. Everyone is angry at everyone else (nruses, PA's, NP's, Dr's). Professors hate their students. Students are competitive such that they hurt each other. This is all the worst of competitive prick American culture.
Dude, if you have doubts, get out now. It gets worse from this point on. The clinical years are worse than the preclinicals one and residency is hell. Being an attending doesn't guarantee you happiness and satisfaction either. This message board is littered with threads from people in all stages of training regretting going into medicine.
A lot of people regret going into medicine because they are book smart and they've worked really hard for a goal their whole life that they really don't know a lot about. I know quite a few people who are acing all of their preclinical coursework, but they have no people skills (because no one ever needed them as a premed, they never figured out they didn't have them) and I know that they are going to (a) dislike and (b) not excel when it comes to actual patient care in their 3rd and 4th year. If you talk to older students who are good with people and really wanted to go into medicine - rather than those who are just good at school and following mommy and daddy's dreams of their child becoming a doctor then you'll see that med school doesn't always get harder. Even before I started med school I used to work with patients in a hospital upwards of 80 hrs per week and it was no sweat. So yes there are people who are caught off guard when it comes to the clinical years and say that it just gets harder and harder, but then there are those people who say that med school just gets easier and easier.
I am nontraditional as well. have many friends that are. Yup. its hard. Have I had moments where I hated my day? yup. abso-freaking-lutely. Everyone has or will have moments like this. At somepoint.
but, believe it or not. It gets better. If you thought hard about your choice (most nontrads do) and know that it is your dream, then you need to stick it out. Medicine is hard. It is also phenomenally rewarding. It is also annoying, sometimes painful and exhausting.
this is a perfect example of a misguided post...
The difficulty of medicine has nothing to do with dealing with patients at all. thats the easy part....
Actually most do want "robots" when you get right down to it. They want residents who will fall into line and do exactly what they're supposed to like all other residents without complaint, who will finish the residency in the alloted amount of time (which means not veering off the path as you put it), and ultimately pass the board certification exam. That's how residency programs stay accredited. Which if you're a PD is the bottom line, everything else is secondary. And they pick residents who they think will most likely achieve that.
That's why they consider your board scores (predictor of passing the board certification exam) and letters of rec (which is basically their colleagues vouching that you're clinically competent and that you behave).
Medicine is all about status quo...algorithms, criteria, accepted standard of care, allegiance to hierarchy, etc. Deviation from the status quo is not tolerated much. Even the doctors who like to think of themselves as "rebels" are still conformists when it comes right down to it.
A lot of people regret going into medicine because they are book smart and they've worked really hard for a goal their whole life that they really don't know a lot about. I know quite a few people who are acing all of their preclinical coursework, but they have no people skills (because no one ever needed them as a premed, they never figured out they didn't have them) and I know that they are going to (a) dislike and (b) not excel when it comes to actual patient care in their 3rd and 4th year. If you talk to older students who are good with people and really wanted to go into medicine - rather than those who are just good at school and following mommy and daddy's dreams of their child becoming a doctor then you'll see that med school doesn't always get harder. Even before I started med school I used to work with patients in a hospital upwards of 80 hrs per week and it was no sweat. So yes there are people who are caught off guard when it comes to the clinical years and say that it just gets harder and harder, but then there are those people who say that med school just gets easier and easier.