Re: Best time to have kids?
Hey everyone! It's nice to check back and always see new and thoughtful replies.
For the record, children would *definitely* come first for us, and I know my husband would agree. Part of me feels a guilty now because I left a career where part-time work would've been very doable (as you might have read in my intro, I was 3 yrs into a 6-yr clinical psychology PhD program), but I feel very strongly that medicine is a good match for me, and I'm so excited about it. I also mentioned in my intro that there is a good (at least 50%) chance that my husband would do consulting or research instead of a residency--he's more research based--so hopefully that would have better hrs than residency.
Finally, this may sound a little weird, but if we were put in a situation where he did enter the match and we ended up at different schools I think it would actually be better if we had kids. I am NOT willing to live in different cities anyway, and instead of having 1, 2 or more years to kill waiting to go to med school, I could be a SAHM during that time. I am most concerned about that first yr or so with a little baby, and I would likely apply and defer a yr anyway if I got pregnant soon. I am starting med school later in life anyway so rushing through everything is not important to me, but I also don't think I could wait 15 yrs or more until all my kids are in HS to start my career. I sure wish there was some sort of intermediate though, like going to school part-time (alas!).
I've been talking more seriously with my DH about starting to TTC around July of next yr (so I'd give birth at the earliest around April, after med school interviews), and his reaction really made me feel like it's the best decision for us. He is unbelievably excited, patting my stomach and the "future baby," and he even said that his current rotation has become way more bearable because during his downtime he can daydream about being a dad. Don't get me wrong, we know that having kids is going to make things much, much harder and totally change our lives but like I said earlier, we are determined to make this work.
Hey everyone! It's nice to check back and always see new and thoughtful replies.
For the record, children would *definitely* come first for us, and I know my husband would agree. Part of me feels a guilty now because I left a career where part-time work would've been very doable (as you might have read in my intro, I was 3 yrs into a 6-yr clinical psychology PhD program), but I feel very strongly that medicine is a good match for me, and I'm so excited about it. I also mentioned in my intro that there is a good (at least 50%) chance that my husband would do consulting or research instead of a residency--he's more research based--so hopefully that would have better hrs than residency.
Finally, this may sound a little weird, but if we were put in a situation where he did enter the match and we ended up at different schools I think it would actually be better if we had kids. I am NOT willing to live in different cities anyway, and instead of having 1, 2 or more years to kill waiting to go to med school, I could be a SAHM during that time. I am most concerned about that first yr or so with a little baby, and I would likely apply and defer a yr anyway if I got pregnant soon. I am starting med school later in life anyway so rushing through everything is not important to me, but I also don't think I could wait 15 yrs or more until all my kids are in HS to start my career. I sure wish there was some sort of intermediate though, like going to school part-time (alas!).
I've been talking more seriously with my DH about starting to TTC around July of next yr (so I'd give birth at the earliest around April, after med school interviews), and his reaction really made me feel like it's the best decision for us. He is unbelievably excited, patting my stomach and the "future baby," and he even said that his current rotation has become way more bearable because during his downtime he can daydream about being a dad. Don't get me wrong, we know that having kids is going to make things much, much harder and totally change our lives but like I said earlier, we are determined to make this work.
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