No. You will be screwed if you marry a person out of feel of being lonely and end up getting divorced a few years later- losing half of your net worth. Be patient.
You’re going to get a range of answers. Personally, I wish I put more effort into finding a life partner. Instead I’ve become a journeyman, having lived in 3 different cities since starting medical medical school then intern year then residency. And I’ll probably end up going somewhere else again for fellowship or practice.Thank you. This is my plan moving forward. I might have a date here and there just to see what happens but right now, my career is my priority. I was wondering if I was making a big mistake thinking this way.
What? An M4’s who is 26-27 can be making $300k+ in 3-4 years. That isn’t exactly a long-con or a risky con (not that being attracted to someone with financial means is even a con to begin with). Sure there might be some “gold diggers” who want the $80k car NOW, but there are also plenty of people who are fine with waiting 3-4 years to enjoy that sweet physician paycheck for the next 30 years.I see and hear this a lot. Get real, SDN. No one one gold digging is going to date a medical student for it. You’re unemployed, building debt. Not even other medical students want to date you. Not in today’s instafix culture. Why would they waste time on a med student who doesn’t even know where they’ll be living in a couple years when they can get a resident who has a job, works all the time, and is actually a doctor? If you can find someone to stick with you during the med school process, that’s a keeper.
This part especially warrants aNot even other medical students want to date you.
It sounds like you are not emotionally ready for a relationship (have you ever been in one?), which is fine--everyone matures emotionally at different rates. Being in a healthy relationship makes your life more beautiful and enjoyable so I would not look at a relationship as a waste of time.Title sums it up. I just want to know if I were to focus on my career throughout medical school, would I end up alone forever if I entered residency as a single person? I recognize I am going to be busier during residency especially since I may go into something surgical. I want to hear other people's stories and wisdom on this.
I [23M] am second year medical student and at the moment I think I'm probably going to enter residency single. This is mostly because of a choice. I recognize that the next 2 years of my life are going to be huge for determining what specialty I enter and what residency program I will be in which could have major impacts on my future career.
I just think a relationship would be a distraction or not a good thing for me right now. There are classmates who have made very clear moves but I don't feel that chemistry with them and I don't want to couples match as I plan to do something competitive. I've done dating apps but dates just take time and I am very focused on my career vs a relationship right now.
Haha as someone who has always had to fend the opposite sex off, that gif does not compute. All I’m saying is that the days of doctors having to worry about someone (other than their spouse) hitting their financial pockets are gone. I hate to break this to a lot of you, but most doctors simply do not make a lot of money. 200-250k salary with 300k+ debt is not a great financial situation. Most people are aware of the debt and timesink that medicine is and would avoid dating med students.What? An M4’s who is 26-27 can be making $300k+ in 3-4 years. That isn’t exactly a long-con or a risky con (not that being attracted to someone with financial means is even a con to begin with). Sure there might be some “gold diggers” who want the $80k car NOW, but there are also plenty of people who are fine with waiting 3-4 years to enjoy that sweet physician paycheck for the next 30 years.
And in regards to debt, 25% of US MD grads have ZERO education debt (undergrad+medical school), another 20% have less than $150k. And then even for the remaining 55%, a true gold digger will just push for 10-20 year repayment with most of the household income being spent and not saved. That still works out to being a lavish lifestyle in any scenario outside of a NYC pediatrician.
This part especially warrants a
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Hmm smells a little troll-y…Haha as someone who has always had to fend the opposite sex off, that gif does not compute.
…okay then.200-250k salary with 300k+ debt is not a great financial situation.
Finding and maintaining a relationship regardless of medical school/residency is difficult. You’ll have married classmates and residents who get divorced, couples who meet during training and everything in between.
The big red flag in this whole thread is the over analysis of dating or the possible partner. Some of you sound like you’re prepping for an MMI or oral board exam. If you approach meeting someone like it’s game theory then you’ve missed the entire mark.
When you aren’t studying or working, go out and do the things you love doing, hang out with friends, etc. Hopefully you run into someone who’s interested in the same things as you.
Can I just say it?Title sums it up. I just want to know if I were to focus on my career throughout medical school, would I end up alone forever if I entered residency as a single person? I recognize I am going to be busier during residency especially since I may go into something surgical. I want to hear other people's stories and wisdom on this.
I [23M] am second year medical student and at the moment I think I'm probably going to enter residency single. This is mostly because of a choice. I recognize that the next 2 years of my life are going to be huge for determining what specialty I enter and what residency program I will be in which could have major impacts on my future career.
I just think a relationship would be a distraction or not a good thing for me right now. There are classmates who have made very clear moves but I don't feel that chemistry with them and I don't want to couples match as I plan to do something competitive. I've done dating apps but dates just take time and I am very focused on my career vs a relationship right now.
Although, I feel I need to introduce a caveat in the interest of injecting more absurdity into this conversation.Can I just say it?
For you as a male, this is something of relatively less concern. As a male attending in a surgical specialty, you will be a hot commodity in a few years. Do watch out for gold diggers, but one decent way to get rid of them is to mention that you have debt (if you do), or just how busy you are, or the risk associated with your occupation (lawsuits etc). People who are truly invested will want to make it work despite the challenges, while other will fall away once they understand being a doctor is not all sunshine and roses.
For better or for worse, society is still relatively sexist, and a female’s relationship prospects dwindle with age, while men’s does less so. Women’s looks (unfortunately) are a big part of their perceived attractiveness, and those decline with age. For men this applies less. Women’s fertility also declines with age, which is a whole other reason why women in medicine get the short end of the stick.
Finally, there is less stigma with men dating partners younger than them while for women there definitely is, so as you age your dating pool doesn’t narrow as much.
I think the only possible issue is that if you are 30 and you have *never* had a relationship potential partners may wonder if there is something more “wrong” with you than just being busy with your career. Not much to be done there except just go with the flow and date of you feel a strong attraction, but no need to force anything.
I know. This thread is so wild, I love it. To hear some of you talk, you'd think physicians are required to put a ring on the first pretty person who bats their eyes at them. No way at all of sussing out any ulterior motives!
You guys are blowing right past options such as:
- Having a discussion with your partner about your shared financial values
- Having many discussions with your partner about your shared financial values
- Finding a partner who is financially independent
- Drawing up a prenuptial agreement
- Getting to know each other before you get married
- Trusting each other before you get married
- Not getting married at all
Let’s not be naive. Earning potential is one of the factors many, many people consider when choosing a potential life partner. It only makes sense because shared finances are a big part of any long term commitment.There is so many better questions you can ask someone on the first date. "Where are you from? How many siblings do you have? What do you do for fun? Do you play any sports?".
I'm just saying at least for me if the first thing someone starts asking me about is my financial potential I would be very wary of them and their intentions.
I second you on the "never the perfect time"- and ALSO- OMG. hats off to you. Some of my cohort also had kids while in various points of training (in psychology which I assume has hours much more friendly to a regularish sleep schedule) and it still boggles my mind. Benefit of having found the right match in a partner I suppose 🙂You're not too young for a relationship, but it'd have to be with someone that understands the limitations that you may have. There's never "the perfect time" to begin a relationship or have kids. Example: had both kids in residency at a time when we weren't having work hour restrictions. That was an ortho residency at Parkland and both of my daughters were born then. Supportive wife that understood what each our responsibilities would be
Title sums it up. I just want to know if I were to focus on my career throughout medical school, would I end up alone forever if I entered residency as a single person? I recognize I am going to be busier during residency especially since I may go into something surgical. I want to hear other people's stories and wisdom on this.
I [23M] am second year medical student and at the moment I think I'm probably going to enter residency single. This is mostly because of a choice. I recognize that the next 2 years of my life are going to be huge for determining what specialty I enter and what residency program I will be in which could have major impacts on my future career.
I just think a relationship would be a distraction or not a good thing for me right now. There are classmates who have made very clear moves but I don't feel that chemistry with them and I don't want to couples match as I plan to do something competitive. I've done dating apps but dates just take time and I am very focused on my career vs a relationship right now.
I think this is a YMMV situation. I have found that not only do the prospects thin, but the pool gets enriched with people who aren't exactly easy-going, relationship-focused, team-building, well-adjusted partners. If you are someone with those traits, you're probably getting scooped up earlier. That's not to say there aren't fantastic partners who are single at every age, but they're definitely more rare.I was initially bummed out I didn't interact much with the fairer sex in high school/college. The good news was people engage in the same dating tendencies they did in high school, college, medical school, residency, and beyond. While the prospects thin at each stage, you'll find great prospects at any stage of your life. This shouldn't be a concern.
You're on SDN asking about your dating prospects at 23 instead of going out to a bar or a club.Title sums it up. I just want to know if I were to focus on my career throughout medical school, would I end up alone forever if I entered residency as a single person? I recognize I am going to be busier during residency especially since I may go into something surgical. I want to hear other people's stories and wisdom on this.
I [23M] am second year medical student and at the moment I think I'm probably going to enter residency single. This is mostly because of a choice. I recognize that the next 2 years of my life are going to be huge for determining what specialty I enter and what residency program I will be in which could have major impacts on my future career.
I just think a relationship would be a distraction or not a good thing for me right now. There are classmates who have made very clear moves but I don't feel that chemistry with them and I don't want to couples match as I plan to do something competitive. I've done dating apps but dates just take time and I am very focused on my career vs a relationship right now.
Was waiting for this LMAOYou're on SDN asking about your dating prospects at 23 instead of going out to a bar or a club.
You're probably screwed amigo.
This post wins the threadYou're on SDN asking about your dating prospects at 23 instead of going out to a bar or a club.
You're probably screwed amigo.
Just see what happens. Put yourself out there, don't force anything and see what happens. I wouldn't go crazy looking everyday and wouldn't put anything off. It's not a "distraction" and you shouldn't put off a natural thing. Just put yourself out there and take opportunities as they come.Title sums it up. I just want to know if I were to focus on my career throughout medical school, would I end up alone forever if I entered residency as a single person? I recognize I am going to be busier during residency especially since I may go into something surgical. I want to hear other people's stories and wisdom on this.
I [23M] am second year medical student and at the moment I think I'm probably going to enter residency single. This is mostly because of a choice. I recognize that the next 2 years of my life are going to be huge for determining what specialty I enter and what residency program I will be in which could have major impacts on my future career.
I just think a relationship would be a distraction or not a good thing for me right now. There are classmates who have made very clear moves but I don't feel that chemistry with them and I don't want to couples match as I plan to do something competitive. I've done dating apps but dates just take time and I am very focused on my career vs a relationship right now.
This is literally not true. Women who are looking for a lavish lifestyle will get a sugar daddy who can finance what they want (right there and then). There are high traffic sites for these kinds of arrangements, meaning it's a direct and upfront exchange. They're not looking for a med student or residents or even an attending unless you're willing to finance a 20k exotic trip or pay their 3k monthly rent among other expenses. You seriously think those people will "date" someone who is many years away from a income that likely won't even be enough to cover the lifestyle they want?Just tell them you work in the medical field until you are confident they like you then tell them you're a doctor. This goes for both men and women, there are quite a few people out there that will tolerate dating you to be able to live a better lifestyle or worse try to get you on the hook for some of your income. A lot of the docs at my job get people interested in them and you always hear something akin to "Get that money!"
I don't mean to hide it for months, I'm saying the first date or two that way you know the person enough know who they are. What I'm saying is basically don't go into the first date going "hi blank and I make enough money to be in the upper middle or upper class!". Honestly I'm my opinion if someone is asking about Financials on the first date that is a huge red flag.
What? An M4’s who is 26-27 can be making $300k+ in 3-4 years. That isn’t exactly a long-con or a risky con (not that being attracted to someone with financial means is even a con to begin with). Sure there might be some “gold diggers” who want the $80k car NOW, but there are also plenty of people who are fine with waiting 3-4 years to enjoy that sweet physician paycheck for the next 30 years.
And in regards to debt, 25% of US MD grads have ZERO education debt (undergrad+medical school), another 20% have less than $150k. And then even for the remaining 55%, a true gold digger will just push for 10-20 year repayment with most of the household income being spent and not saved. That still works out to being a lavish lifestyle in any scenario outside of a NYC pediatrician.
This part especially warrants a
But do you actually have any proof that doctors (in 2021, not the 1980s) attract "gold diggers"? I can tell you for a fact that in 2021, women who are into getting money from guys in exchange for some sort of benefit are findings other ways to do it (onlyfans, seeking arrangement etc) and not pseudodating someone. I can also tell you that there are a lot of single doctors who have a hard time with getting dates, which shouldn't happen in a world where money and being a physician attracts gold diggers. The vast majority of the time, you still need to spike physical and also emotional attraction.Hmm smells a little troll-y…
…okay then.
Just for others reading, $300k in debt and $200k is disingenuous because less than 15% of medical students have >$300k debt and $190k was the 25th percentile total comp for general peds for MGMA 3 years ago (MGMA is deflated and peds is the lowest paid residency). A more fair statement would be $300k salary and $200k debt, which 98% of Americans and 99.9% of the world would love to have.
Never mind the fact that $200k is 90th percentile family income in the US and $300k debt with that salary can easily be paid off in 10 years (and 3-4 years if 0 debt is your priority).
Can I just say it?
For you as a male, this is something of relatively less concern. As a male attending in a surgical specialty, you will be a hot commodity in a few years. Do watch out for gold diggers, but one decent way to get rid of them is to mention that you have debt (if you do), or just how busy you are, or the risk associated with your occupation (lawsuits etc). People who are truly invested will want to make it work despite the challenges, while other will fall away once they understand being a doctor is not all sunshine and roses.
For better or for worse, society is still relatively sexist, and a female’s relationship prospects dwindle with age, while men’s does less so. Women’s looks (unfortunately) are a big part of their perceived attractiveness, and those decline with age. For men this applies less. Women’s fertility also declines with age, which is a whole other reason why women in medicine get the short end of the stick.
Finally, there is less stigma with men dating partners younger than them while for women there definitely is, so as you age your dating pool doesn’t narrow as much.
I think the only possible issue is that if you are 30 and you have *never* had a relationship potential partners may wonder if there is something more “wrong” with you than just being busy with your career. Not much to be done there except just go with the flow and date of you feel a strong attraction, but no need to force anything.
Although, I feel I need to introduce a caveat in the interest of injecting more absurdity into this conversation.
Some gold diggers are tenacious. Where I come from, there is a saying, “if you want to be a general’s wife, you have to nab him as a lieutenant.” In medicine, if you want to marry a doctor, you need to date a Med student.
Wut…???"Gold digging" isn't a real thing anymore. Those women want a sugar daddy, which means they want one today and they'll have a set arrangement. And the type of spending they demand far exceeds what most doctors can afford, depending on how attractive they are.
No one is going to date someone they aren't attracted to so that in 7-8 years - they can have a lavish lifestyle. I say 7-8 because no one is buying a mansion/ exotic sports car straight out of residency.
I think you're talking about how you think it goes rather than how things actually go.
But do you actually have any proof that doctors (in 2021, not the 1980s) attract "gold diggers"? I can tell you for a fact that in 2021, women who are into getting money from guys in exchange for some sort of benefit are findings other ways to do it (onlyfans, seeking arrangement etc) and not pseudodating someone. I can also tell you that there are a lot of single doctors who have a hard time with getting dates, which shouldn't happen in a world where money and being a physician attracts gold diggers. The vast majority of the time, you still need to spike physical and also emotional attraction.
Wrong, there are only 2 kind of women:Wut…???
Women and men are both incredibly diverse in what they find attractive and desirable in a partner.
So you think that
1. women being attracted to financial stability is “dead” because of Onlyfans
2. wealth only becomes a factor in picking a partner when you have the wealth to instantly buy exotics cars and make multiples of what an attending makes
3. “Gold diggers” are and were never attracted to their spouses in any way
4. The only two types of relationships that exist in 2021 are either two very attractive people or well-defined sugar daddy arrangements
It’s hard to put into words how much your post hit every major incel talking point. I mean how can you unironically think that every woman who was attracted to a man’s financial success in the past decades is now the exact type of woman that wants to sell naked pictures on Onlyfans.
For you to speak so confidently about “how things really are” and then talk about dating like your only exposure to the outside world is 4chan and gym influcencers on Tiktok is…frightening.
Never said that. And no one said financial stability is not an attraction point. But your argument is that women are out looking for guys to provide for them and are disregarding any and all things otherwise.Wut…???
Women and men are both incredibly diverse in what they find attractive and desirable in a partner.
So you think that
1. women being attracted to financial stability is “dead” because of Onlyfans
If you're looking for someone rich, you aren't going off of a probability of a decent income/wealth 8 years down the road.2. wealth only becomes a factor in picking a partner when you have the wealth to instantly buy exotics cars and make multiples of what an attending makes
??ok3. “Gold diggers” are and were never attracted to their spouses in any way
Generalizations. Or just that people have normal relationships and also have sugar daddy arrangements when they're after money. It's laughable to even suggest that a 22 year old is thinking about their potential spouse's financial status a decade later as the number one factor.4. The only two types of relationships that exist in 2021 are either two very attractive people or well-defined sugar daddy arrangements
You seem confused. I'm pointing out that people who are after money will want it right now. They don't want or care about your financial status a decade later. It doesn't mean that financial stability is of 0 importance. It just means it isn't as high priority as looks/personality.It’s hard to put into words how much your post hit every major incel talking point. I mean how can you unironically think that every woman who was attracted to a man’s financial success in the past decades is now the exact type of woman that wants to sell naked pictures on Onlyfans.
Never been on 4chan, I don't have tiktok and this is the only forum I (rarely now) post on. I would avoid making such generalizations based on out dated ideas and instead try to keep an open mind to learning.For you to speak so confidently about “how things really are” and then talk about dating like your only exposure to the outside world is 4chan and gym influcencers on Tiktok is…frightening.