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- MD/PhD Student
I know that no one can make this decision for me, but I'm interested in at least getting some feedback and hearing some new perspectives. I'm a first-year in an MD-PhD program, and I'm thinking about trying to transfer to the graduate school next year (in other words, dropping the MD). I've pretty much always known that I wanted to do research, but after I graduated college I became interested in MD-PhD programs. At the time I thought it was because I wanted do research that would "help people", and I would be better able to do that with medical training, and that learning to be a doctor would somehow make me a better person, less self-centered and more caring towards other people. But to be honest, now I realize that I was mostly driven by my competitive nature, which made me desire to be in an elite program and have more degrees than other people. I no longer think that medical training would enable me to help people through research any more than PhD training would. Plus, I don't even know how much I care about "helping people"-- I love research and knowledge for its own sake, and I think I was trying to mold myself to other people's values by convincing myself that I wanted to "help people". I'm starting to feel like its ok if I don't have any particular interest in helping people. But coming to this realization just as I'm entering med school has made me feel very alienated from the other students and faculty.
I spent several years in a pre-med postbacc program, so a lot of time has passed since I first made the decision to apply to MD-PhD programs, yet I was so caught up in the competition of applying that, even though I always felt ambivalent about the medical training and questioned why I was really drawn to these programs, I never seriously thought about turning back.
Now that I'm here and the competition is over, my eyes have been opened to the fact that I have no good reason for being here, and I am much more excited about being in grad school than being in med school. However, many people whose opinion I respect (including MD-PhDs who are primarily doing research) have advised me to stick with the program, because it will prove to be very practical for my research career, helping me to get grants and academic appointments, etc. If this is really true, it would be enough incentive for me to stick with it, but I'm not so convinced that it is true.
Also, they point out that I might fall in love with medicine if I give it a chance, and I'm here already (and its free) so why not give it a chance? But a part of me feels like, it was a mistake to come here, so why extend that mistake further? Why not just do the thing I already know I love? However, my biggest worry is that if I drop out I will someday greatly regret it. It's possible that by the end of the first year, my feelings will change and I'll become interested in studying medicine. But if I still feel the same way at the end of the year that I feel now, I want to figure out whether I can live with my decision if I drop out and give up this free education. I really appreciate any feedback you all can give me.
I spent several years in a pre-med postbacc program, so a lot of time has passed since I first made the decision to apply to MD-PhD programs, yet I was so caught up in the competition of applying that, even though I always felt ambivalent about the medical training and questioned why I was really drawn to these programs, I never seriously thought about turning back.
Now that I'm here and the competition is over, my eyes have been opened to the fact that I have no good reason for being here, and I am much more excited about being in grad school than being in med school. However, many people whose opinion I respect (including MD-PhDs who are primarily doing research) have advised me to stick with the program, because it will prove to be very practical for my research career, helping me to get grants and academic appointments, etc. If this is really true, it would be enough incentive for me to stick with it, but I'm not so convinced that it is true.
Also, they point out that I might fall in love with medicine if I give it a chance, and I'm here already (and its free) so why not give it a chance? But a part of me feels like, it was a mistake to come here, so why extend that mistake further? Why not just do the thing I already know I love? However, my biggest worry is that if I drop out I will someday greatly regret it. It's possible that by the end of the first year, my feelings will change and I'll become interested in studying medicine. But if I still feel the same way at the end of the year that I feel now, I want to figure out whether I can live with my decision if I drop out and give up this free education. I really appreciate any feedback you all can give me.