Hello, iMSN members,
I found you this afternoon when a bout of tears lead me to google "med school spouse support."
My DH is an M4 applying for residency in ENT. We are late bloomers, coming to careers in medicine after spending our 20s in the worlds of theater and rock music. I am an RN who finished my Masters degree and passed the Family Nurse Practitioner certification boards in April of this year. We have been married for 6 years, so the majority of our married life has been eaten by his career hopes: from studying for the MCAT, to applying for med school, to medical school itself). In addition to being a "nontraditional student" on account of his age and educational/occupational background, my husband is, I swear, one of the most dedicated, compassionate, intelligent, hard-working medical students in his class at a pretty prestigious med school. The current cherry on top of our situation is that we are expecting our first child (after a heartbreaking 3.5 year struggle with infertility) in January.
The reason I became a forum member today is because my husband is freaking out about all of the rejections that he is receiving from ENT residency programs. I've managed to be upbeat so far because I truly believe such a gifted and hardworking student as him couldn't possibly not earn the recognition that he deserves (of course I'm biased), but today he told me that all but 12 of the 75 programs he applied to have sent out their invitations to interview, and he's only got 4 invitations (all from programs that already know him and how amazing he is from his away rotations), 2 waitlists and a slew of rejections.
I'm starting to lose faith and getting really scared here. Since a freak medical condition permanently damaged the hearing in one ear (devastating for a musician) his one dream has been to become an ENT surgeon. I'd already given up my own dreams of raising our child near friends and family, knowing that the match will determine our fate, but now I'm facing the very real possibility of nursing a broken-hearted and spirit-crushed husband while also dealing with the stress of nursing our first child (and I'm already at risk for postpartum depression based on my own medical history!)
Jesus! I thought the med school application process was rough! Dear lord, help.
I found you this afternoon when a bout of tears lead me to google "med school spouse support."
My DH is an M4 applying for residency in ENT. We are late bloomers, coming to careers in medicine after spending our 20s in the worlds of theater and rock music. I am an RN who finished my Masters degree and passed the Family Nurse Practitioner certification boards in April of this year. We have been married for 6 years, so the majority of our married life has been eaten by his career hopes: from studying for the MCAT, to applying for med school, to medical school itself). In addition to being a "nontraditional student" on account of his age and educational/occupational background, my husband is, I swear, one of the most dedicated, compassionate, intelligent, hard-working medical students in his class at a pretty prestigious med school. The current cherry on top of our situation is that we are expecting our first child (after a heartbreaking 3.5 year struggle with infertility) in January.
The reason I became a forum member today is because my husband is freaking out about all of the rejections that he is receiving from ENT residency programs. I've managed to be upbeat so far because I truly believe such a gifted and hardworking student as him couldn't possibly not earn the recognition that he deserves (of course I'm biased), but today he told me that all but 12 of the 75 programs he applied to have sent out their invitations to interview, and he's only got 4 invitations (all from programs that already know him and how amazing he is from his away rotations), 2 waitlists and a slew of rejections.
I'm starting to lose faith and getting really scared here. Since a freak medical condition permanently damaged the hearing in one ear (devastating for a musician) his one dream has been to become an ENT surgeon. I'd already given up my own dreams of raising our child near friends and family, knowing that the match will determine our fate, but now I'm facing the very real possibility of nursing a broken-hearted and spirit-crushed husband while also dealing with the stress of nursing our first child (and I'm already at risk for postpartum depression based on my own medical history!)
Jesus! I thought the med school application process was rough! Dear lord, help.
Comment