I'd have to say, yeah, I pretty much didn't like most of the other rotations. Can't say I hated them, and I wasn't miserable every single minute. THere were good things about every rotation, even psych (I did half of that in the psych ED where people were acutely decompensated, and often had some very bizzare stories...good for a laugh). But I the things about each rotation I disliked stood out dramamtically. The long rounds and endless debate of IM. Peds...admitting RSV after RSV after RSV night after night. Psych...you can't fix anything, and the continuous cycle of people going off their meds, getting comitted, being released, going off their meds...ugh. FP...day after day of clinic tweaking HTN meds by few mg. OB...don't like (OK, hate) doing pelvics and the operative experience is too limited.
I considered EM but realized I don't have the patience to deal with the stupidity that permeates the ER (I think there is more stupidity per square foot in the ER than any other area of the hospital). Anesthesia I considered briefly, but I knew it would drive me nuts being in the oR and not being the surgeon.
I liked surgery SO MUCH MORE than the other rotations. I just knew that if i picked something else, I'd wind up wishing I had done surgery. Surgery was the only rotation where I was reading becasue I WANTED to read about it. The rest I read because I had to.
I did go to a school which was VERY student friendly clinically, especially the surgery department. Students were encouraged to drop by the trauma center early, even as M1, and were allowed to get involved in many things. THey could learn to suture, or scrub cases. THe orthopods would always grab a student for help with splinting or traction pins. So I had acutally scrubbed my first case as M1 and by the time I did my 3rd year rotations, I was well known to most of the surgery residents. Somtimes when I was on other rotations, I would stop by the trauma center on my way out and basically it felt like it was where I belonged.
I didn't really consider the surgical subs because I like operating on the ABDOMEN the best. Even the neck cases in gen surg don't appeal to me the way going into the abdomen does.
That's not to say there are not some days when I wonder. On those days mostly, I wonder if I'll really be able to make it through residency, and I think that maybe I'll have to switch to something else due to physical limitiations. These days usually occur when I"m scrubbed but still not doing anything or holding retractors (still happens rather frequrently to jr residents) and my back pain has escalated expoentally. But then when I'm allowed to step up and put a few stitches in the bowel, or close the fascia, and then I forget about the pain. And usually, I'm not scrubbed on cases like that, I'm usually involved in ones that are more approprate for my PGY level.
As for social life, I don't have a typical one. Not so much because of the surgery schedule, but because since I was a little kid I've never been very popular. I'm not sure why that is. I've just never been the sort of person that gets included in activities. I'm also quite a bit older, and don't blame the young kids who are my fellow residents for not wanting to hang out with someone older. My fellow residents do hang out. The singles go to bars, the marrieds get togther for dinner. But I'm not really the type that enjoys going to bars and getting drunk anyway. I do travel on my vacations (been to Europe twice already), and am focusing on learning some sports and becoming more active, so it's not like I'm sitting at home miesrable. So in my free time, I'll go to the gym, rent a movie or go take a ski lesson, for example. I'm also currently reading Tom Clancy's latest.
So for me surgery clearly stood out. It just seemed to fit with how I think.