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- Oct 21, 2015
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I was recently accepted to one of my top choices for Med School. It was an extremely exciting and humbling moment--one that I have dreamt about for years and one that I will probably never forget--but it lasted for only so long, because as soon as I received my offer it was back to the lab, which is quite literally the only place/activity that could have possibly brought me back down to earth after receiving the news. Lo-and-behold, it did.
Now, I know a lot of people here will think I've got a classic case of the post-acceptance-lazies. "Classic pre-med kid: gets accepted to Med School and suddenly drops all of their responsibilities because, hey, who needs them now that you're accepted?!" No. This place is honestly dreadful. I'm not going to delve into any particulars, but I will just say that coming in every morning takes serious will power and an acknowledgment that the next 8 hours of my life will consist of being overworked, under appreciated, and unpaid. I've been here for almost 5 months now and, truth be told, I can't take it much longer.
SOOOO...my question is: Now that I have been accepted, can I (peacefully and professionally) put in a two week notice to leave the lab without worrying that my acceptance offer will be rescinded? After perusing my acceptance letter, it looks like I need only complete my current degree and pass a CBC in order to matriculate next August, so I don't know what the deal is with dropping an EC. I did say in my AMCAS app that I would dedicate XXX hours to lab work in the upcoming year (June '15 to May '16) and thus far have met ~75% of those hours, so I would obviously meet that quoted number before leaving, but is that still frowned upon? Especially considering I could complete those XXX hours by January instead of May (which I previously stated)?
I'm looking for serious advice here, so please give me honest feedback on what you yourself have done or what you have heard others do. If I need to stick it out I will--the last thing in the world I want to do is jeopardize my future and lose this offer--but I am honestly looking for a professional and respectful way to exit my lab and continue solely with volunteering and other EC's.
Thank you all in advance for your help and good luck in your cycles!
Now, I know a lot of people here will think I've got a classic case of the post-acceptance-lazies. "Classic pre-med kid: gets accepted to Med School and suddenly drops all of their responsibilities because, hey, who needs them now that you're accepted?!" No. This place is honestly dreadful. I'm not going to delve into any particulars, but I will just say that coming in every morning takes serious will power and an acknowledgment that the next 8 hours of my life will consist of being overworked, under appreciated, and unpaid. I've been here for almost 5 months now and, truth be told, I can't take it much longer.
SOOOO...my question is: Now that I have been accepted, can I (peacefully and professionally) put in a two week notice to leave the lab without worrying that my acceptance offer will be rescinded? After perusing my acceptance letter, it looks like I need only complete my current degree and pass a CBC in order to matriculate next August, so I don't know what the deal is with dropping an EC. I did say in my AMCAS app that I would dedicate XXX hours to lab work in the upcoming year (June '15 to May '16) and thus far have met ~75% of those hours, so I would obviously meet that quoted number before leaving, but is that still frowned upon? Especially considering I could complete those XXX hours by January instead of May (which I previously stated)?
I'm looking for serious advice here, so please give me honest feedback on what you yourself have done or what you have heard others do. If I need to stick it out I will--the last thing in the world I want to do is jeopardize my future and lose this offer--but I am honestly looking for a professional and respectful way to exit my lab and continue solely with volunteering and other EC's.
Thank you all in advance for your help and good luck in your cycles!