Panda Bear said:
For the record, I was a slacker when I was 18. That's how I ended up getting kicked out of college in 1983.
Kee-rist. Didn't any of you date girls, party, drink, or do anything when you were young other than devote all your energies to the single-mided pursuit of a future career?
me. sort of. i was severely depressed for part of college, went home weekends and a summer to work crap jobs and help take care of dying family members, spent a lot of time drunk off my a$$, gettin' it on, going dancing, etc., and fell in love with a career that was not medicine -- geology -- which i thought was all like the field trips: camping, drinking, and hiking. lived and worked in europe for a while. went to grad school in geology, learned that i hated writing grants and was lukewarm on teaching, got my MS, and had no work. lived day to day for almost a year, piecemeal work, almost resorted to living in my car, was medically indigent with an acute condition that needed care, etc. i finally got a job. one that has nothing to do with camping, drinking, and hiking, and although i've never really dug it, i'm good at it. i started volunteering again, because i've always been big on community involvement, and ended up learning that my volunteer job should be my career and geology should be a hobby. then did the whole full time job, part time job (to pay for the classes), two volunteer gigs, and classes thing. was working 60+ hours and volunteering 20+ hours a week while studying for the MCAT, applying, etc.
i've had my fun. i've tried a lot of different jobs. and i've learned balance, and i have no regrets that i didn't do something i wanted or that i did something i shouldn't have. because i feel like i really have a sense of who i am that i never had when i was younger, although i thought i had it then...and i know how to live like an adult -- pay the bills, make do, understand how hard it is to do what you should, etc.
not ragging on trads. really. i just feel like i, personally, would have made a horrible doctor 10 years ago if i'd tried to go to med school then. and now, i think i will make a great doctor, partially because i grew up, and partially because i feel like i can empathize and relate to patients better...because patients are just people, with varied life experiences. better to be a great doctor for 10 years less of a career than an awful doctor who either mistreats patients or burns out. but that's me.