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I'm a second-year clinical psychology PhD student, and for various reasons I feel like medicine would be a better match than psychology. I actually really love my PhD program and what I'm learning, but it's very research-based and I'm having a hard time picturing myself in the type of career I'd be qualified for after I get my degree.
After much thought, I decided that that the best route would be to stay in my program but perhaps take some pre-med classes in addition to see if the hard sciences are doable for me. I remember liking biology a lot in high school but having some trouble in chem and physics, so I certainly don't want to drop out of my PhD program if I can't handle it (I didn't take any sciences classes as an undergrad).
I talked to my advisor about taking chemistry this year and bio next year (the school I'm at is very well-respected academically, and as a grad student I could take undergrad classes for free) to supposedly improve my non-existent science background. She basically gave me a flat-out "no" because she thought it would be too time-consuming, irrelevant to my training, and take time away from my research. She told me this about a month ago, so I accepted it and decided to try to pursue the pre-med thing after I get my PhD.
Fast forward a month, and the class starts on Wednesday. All of a sudden, I'm desperate again to take it so I can either give this pre-med thing a real try or decide that psychology is the way to go. Should I just beg her tomorrow to let me take the class? I really don't want to tell her I'm having second thoughts about my PhD program because I feel like that could come back to haunt me if medicine doesn't work out (my program really looks down on people who want to be practioners and there's a huge stigma). I'm so confused and upset about this whole thing. I'm 22 so I know I could pursue medicine after getting my PhD, but I also want to have a family before I'm 30 so I do feel a lot of time pressure.
After much thought, I decided that that the best route would be to stay in my program but perhaps take some pre-med classes in addition to see if the hard sciences are doable for me. I remember liking biology a lot in high school but having some trouble in chem and physics, so I certainly don't want to drop out of my PhD program if I can't handle it (I didn't take any sciences classes as an undergrad).
I talked to my advisor about taking chemistry this year and bio next year (the school I'm at is very well-respected academically, and as a grad student I could take undergrad classes for free) to supposedly improve my non-existent science background. She basically gave me a flat-out "no" because she thought it would be too time-consuming, irrelevant to my training, and take time away from my research. She told me this about a month ago, so I accepted it and decided to try to pursue the pre-med thing after I get my PhD.
Fast forward a month, and the class starts on Wednesday. All of a sudden, I'm desperate again to take it so I can either give this pre-med thing a real try or decide that psychology is the way to go. Should I just beg her tomorrow to let me take the class? I really don't want to tell her I'm having second thoughts about my PhD program because I feel like that could come back to haunt me if medicine doesn't work out (my program really looks down on people who want to be practioners and there's a huge stigma). I'm so confused and upset about this whole thing. I'm 22 so I know I could pursue medicine after getting my PhD, but I also want to have a family before I'm 30 so I do feel a lot of time pressure.