- Joined
- Feb 2, 2008
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I'm a non-traditional student getting into my later twenties with a current lower six figure career that gives me exceptional flexibility and leisure time. And that's it. No deep gratification, no learning. It makes no difference. The income is not guaranteed and can increase/decrease significantly, but will likely be lower six figs. It is the lazy man's dream job -- little hrs/day but you make a nice living and work when/where you want.
I pursued a post-bac program and have been accepted into a top 20 medical school. Woohoo! Studied hard for classes/MCAT and did research/volunteering all while working.
I'd be happy to grow into an academic M.D. doing teaching or research alongside clinical work, but I'm worried I'm being naive about how good I have it.
Interviewers and friends ask me: why would I give it up? Especially when so many doctors actually dislike their current situations because of it lacks freedom/money.
The answer: my current career doesn't mean anything to me outside of freedom and money (which is a lot but it's not everything), medicine is socially valuable, emotionally and intellectually rewarding in a much deeper way.
Yet, going 8+ years (in med school and residency) making little money relative to what I could make borders on naive when you factor in a desire for time for family (hypothetically) down the road, ability to control your own time, and financial considerations (the cost of medical school versus saving the money, greater earnings potential down the road)
Thanks for any input. I'm really looking for a balanced perspective on this from people with experience.
---> to protect my anonymity I am not comfortable explicitly saying what my current job is.
I pursued a post-bac program and have been accepted into a top 20 medical school. Woohoo! Studied hard for classes/MCAT and did research/volunteering all while working.
I'd be happy to grow into an academic M.D. doing teaching or research alongside clinical work, but I'm worried I'm being naive about how good I have it.
Interviewers and friends ask me: why would I give it up? Especially when so many doctors actually dislike their current situations because of it lacks freedom/money.
The answer: my current career doesn't mean anything to me outside of freedom and money (which is a lot but it's not everything), medicine is socially valuable, emotionally and intellectually rewarding in a much deeper way.
Yet, going 8+ years (in med school and residency) making little money relative to what I could make borders on naive when you factor in a desire for time for family (hypothetically) down the road, ability to control your own time, and financial considerations (the cost of medical school versus saving the money, greater earnings potential down the road)
Thanks for any input. I'm really looking for a balanced perspective on this from people with experience.
---> to protect my anonymity I am not comfortable explicitly saying what my current job is.