Art,
I am saddened by what you are feeling. I go through my ups and downs during this first-year of residency as a wife. I know that it seems that many of the female residents handle stress differently than the male residents. That is here and I am not sure if it is everywhere! I don't know how to say what I want to say to you in this post! Intern year is a killer for me! I never imagined it would be this difficult emotionally, yet each day, each week, each month gets a little better and a little brighter! I wish your wife would have applied to this residency program because we don't have the stress of renting or maintenance. Our residency program provides all that for us at no expense. I think your decision to stay put for your daughter's sake is honorable, I completely understand that. My hope for you is that you can find a way to live together and be together when she is off work. I totally agree separating work from home life. Bob and I want to do this. I want to be a good wife and I ask him about his day and give him the opportunity to tell me about his day, yet if he says nothing, I am okay with that too! I would have to say no to any charts or excessive journal reading in the home. Allow time for that, but in your situation, if your wife knows that she is going to do some extra reading and studying perhaps she should do that before she comes home. I want her to enjoy her time away from residency and having a journal to look at or chart is no fun for anyone. That would be a no-no here. Don't get me wrong, Bob reads as much as he needs to, but he may say, "Christy, give me 30 minutes and then we'll go out." He puts limitations on what he does b/c now after work this is *his time* with his family.
We are originally from WV, so we'll be going back there for Bob to get a job. It is an under-priveledged state, so repayments of loans will be in our future. Please find a place like this so you too can pay your debt off much earlier. My family has strongly recommended this to us. Wow! There is so much to talk about as a spouse. It does get better than this intern year. I keep having to remind myself this also. I encourage Bob to do his best at work and when he comes home, leave work behind b/c it really isn't everything and people never appreciate the interns as much as they should anyway. They essentially do all the work with no credit by paycheck or recognition. Oh and one more thing, this just came to me! When my sister went through residency she literally almost worked herself to death. She worked so diligently and did many long hours and all that she could that she literally collapsed and was hospitalized during residency. She was diagnosed with Fisher-Miller syndrome and was paralized for a time. So, here she was thinking she was going to be the best Ob/Gyn ever and ended up being out of commission for a long period of time. This can happen, please tell your wife to not let it happen to her. It scares me to think I almost lost my sister to residency. I guess the bottom-line for us would be this: no career is more important than our family. Put your family first in all areas and everything else will work out as it should.
You, your wife, and family are in my thoughts and prayers!
Christy
I am saddened by what you are feeling. I go through my ups and downs during this first-year of residency as a wife. I know that it seems that many of the female residents handle stress differently than the male residents. That is here and I am not sure if it is everywhere! I don't know how to say what I want to say to you in this post! Intern year is a killer for me! I never imagined it would be this difficult emotionally, yet each day, each week, each month gets a little better and a little brighter! I wish your wife would have applied to this residency program because we don't have the stress of renting or maintenance. Our residency program provides all that for us at no expense. I think your decision to stay put for your daughter's sake is honorable, I completely understand that. My hope for you is that you can find a way to live together and be together when she is off work. I totally agree separating work from home life. Bob and I want to do this. I want to be a good wife and I ask him about his day and give him the opportunity to tell me about his day, yet if he says nothing, I am okay with that too! I would have to say no to any charts or excessive journal reading in the home. Allow time for that, but in your situation, if your wife knows that she is going to do some extra reading and studying perhaps she should do that before she comes home. I want her to enjoy her time away from residency and having a journal to look at or chart is no fun for anyone. That would be a no-no here. Don't get me wrong, Bob reads as much as he needs to, but he may say, "Christy, give me 30 minutes and then we'll go out." He puts limitations on what he does b/c now after work this is *his time* with his family.
We are originally from WV, so we'll be going back there for Bob to get a job. It is an under-priveledged state, so repayments of loans will be in our future. Please find a place like this so you too can pay your debt off much earlier. My family has strongly recommended this to us. Wow! There is so much to talk about as a spouse. It does get better than this intern year. I keep having to remind myself this also. I encourage Bob to do his best at work and when he comes home, leave work behind b/c it really isn't everything and people never appreciate the interns as much as they should anyway. They essentially do all the work with no credit by paycheck or recognition. Oh and one more thing, this just came to me! When my sister went through residency she literally almost worked herself to death. She worked so diligently and did many long hours and all that she could that she literally collapsed and was hospitalized during residency. She was diagnosed with Fisher-Miller syndrome and was paralized for a time. So, here she was thinking she was going to be the best Ob/Gyn ever and ended up being out of commission for a long period of time. This can happen, please tell your wife to not let it happen to her. It scares me to think I almost lost my sister to residency. I guess the bottom-line for us would be this: no career is more important than our family. Put your family first in all areas and everything else will work out as it should.
You, your wife, and family are in my thoughts and prayers!
Christy
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