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10 things you need to give up to be a doctor
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10 things you need to give up to be a doctor
~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
~A Rolling Stone Gathers No MossTags: None
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Jesus, I would kill to read ANYTHING about the pros of having a medical career/being married to a doctor. ANYTHING that isn't so fucking bleak and a reminder of all the ways this career strips you of everything you thought you were/wanted. (Not your fault, in order to read something like that it would have to be written first which obviously isn't the case). It's to the point now where if I'd known a fraction of this before getting into it, I would have begged DH to pursue a PhD or...I would have had to seriously consider whether or not we should have gotten married. It's so fucking sad.Last edited by WolfpackWife; 01-23-2015, 10:22 AM.Wife, support system, and partner-in-crime to PGY-3 (IM) and spoiler of our 11 y/o yellow lab
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Originally posted by Thirteen View PostChurch. *sigh*
A lot of the ones on the list (maybe half) didn't apply because they were never things that mattered to us.
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Originally posted by WolfpackWife View PostJesus, I would kill to read ANYTHING about the pros of having a medical career/being married to a doctor. ANYTHING that isn't so fucking bleak and a reminder of all the ways this career strips you of everything you thought you were/wanted. (Not your fault, in order to read something like that it would have to be written first which obviously isn't the case). It's to the point now where if I'd known a fraction of this before getting into it, I would have begged DH to pursue a PhD or...I would have had to seriously consider whether or not we should have gotten married. It's so fucking sad.
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWife to Family Medicine attending, Mom to DS1 and DS2
Professional Relocation Specialist &
"The Official IMSN Enabler"
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Originally posted by WolfpackWife View PostJesus, I would kill to read ANYTHING about the pros of having a medical career/being married to a doctor. ANYTHING that isn't so fucking bleak and a reminder of all the ways this career strips you of everything you thought you were/wanted. (Not your fault, in order to read something like that it would have to be written first which obviously isn't the case). It's to the point now where if I'd known a fraction of this before getting into it, I would have begged DH to pursue a PhD or...I would have had to seriously consider whether or not we should have gotten married. It's so fucking sad.
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Originally posted by Thirteen View PostYou get us, man. We're pretty awesome!
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWife, support system, and partner-in-crime to PGY-3 (IM) and spoiler of our 11 y/o yellow lab
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Originally posted by WolfpackWife View PostJesus, I would kill to read ANYTHING about the pros of having a medical career/being married to a doctor. ANYTHING that isn't so fucking bleak and a reminder of all the ways this career strips you of everything you thought you were/wanted. (Not your fault, in order to read something like that it would have to be written first which obviously isn't the case). It's to the point now where if I'd known a fraction of this before getting into it, I would have begged DH to pursue a PhD or...I would have had to seriously consider whether or not we should have gotten married. It's so fucking sad.
DH's work is generally interesting. He doesn't love some of the passive aggression he sees in radiology/physicians and the politics of academia but he loves to figure stuff out. I wouldn't go back and steer him another direction of I had the chance but, again, I think we have had a unique experience. Even when we changed from surgery because DH didn't like where our lifestyle was headed, we were met with understanding and grace (which seems to be extremely rare).
I realize that we are extremely lucky because I have seen it go the exact opposite (and terrible) way. It's not that DH's road had been perfect, but we've definitely lucked out in a lot of ways.
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Mrs.MD - I'm glad your journey has been a largely positive one. I'm just angry when I read stuff like that, and yes, I should avoid it. I just keep thinking I'll stumble upon something that's positive and constructive about the career...but that kind of thing doesn't garner a lot of attention no matter where it's posted. And yes, I also approach a lot of stuff with the assumption that it's all going to be horrible and a huge disappointment. And then articles like that or comments here or elsewhere reinforce it...but there's a lot I can do to taper my intake of that stuff - I can choose to not read it! I just let myself vent a bit because it's frustrating and seemingly getting worse. I want better for my husband and myself and whatever our future may hold and sometimes it seems like that's asking waaaay more than medicine can ever give us.
Not trying to hijack/make this about me - I just had a little outburst...sorry about that!Wife, support system, and partner-in-crime to PGY-3 (IM) and spoiler of our 11 y/o yellow lab
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I wanted to add that while I think these things are true for us, they're not whole truths.
We are not wealthy but we manage our money well. We are able to afford certain luxuries, saving for retirement and our kids college, more so than most people I know.
DH doesn't have every weekend off but gets 3 of 4 off or 2 on a rough month.
He gets to be creative through research and loves it.
He does his absolute best to put his family first and the time we have together is quality time. We don't take it for granted.Student and Mom to an Oct 2013 boy
Wife to Anesthesia Critical Care attending
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1. Your desire to be wealthy
Not important to us, and is specialty-dependent, location-dependent, and lifestyle-dependent, and also dependent on your definition of "wealthy", anyway. You're not very likely to be struggling financially, at least, once through training (though that can happen with a bad mix of specialty and location).
2. Your desire to change the world
You're MORE likely to be able to do this as a doctor than as a lot of other things, and regardless of whether or not you become a household name for curing cancer, you WILL "change the world" for many patients along the way.
3. Your free weekends
DH has one completely free weekend per month right now, but lots of other random days off. It was worse during some med school and PGY1 rotations, and it was better the first two years of med school and will be better again with an attending schedule. This is also specialty-dependent. EM is a rough schedule, but tends to make up for it with more time off (and no call); there are a few specialties that are pretty much weekdays. Being a doctor does NOT have to mean never having a free weekend again.
4. A good nights sleep
This depends, as well; DH's schedule is all over the place, but he gets decent sleep. I think no call (thanks, EM), and no kids (sleeping during the day works fine) helps with this.
5. Your desire to avoid feeling like a fool
Yeah, this one's probably unavoidable, but 'feeling like a fool' is hardly the end of the world, either. Abuse from attendings can be brutal, but it seems to (hopefully) be on the downswing, too.
6. Your desire to always put friends and family first
This one is hardly unique to medicine, though it's got that little extra push of "I'm saving lives", of course.
7. Your desire to please everyone
Again, hardly unique to medicine.
8. Your creativity
This might be true during training, but doesn't have to be true afterwords.
9. Your desire to stay in one place / live close to friends and family
Yup. Unless you're REALLY lucky, this one's a bitch, and it's slightly more true of medicine than some other careers. Again, though, it tends to be more true during training, though of course there are specialties that don't give you many options, and others that give you more.
On the other hand, moving is definitely an adventure, and experiencing new parts of the country (and world) is pretty cool, and not something a lot of jobs afford.
10. Good health
This doesn't have to be true, but it's really easy for it to be, for sure.Last edited by poky; 01-23-2015, 11:17 AM.Sandy
Wife of EM Attending, Web Programmer, mom to one older lady scaredy-cat and one sweet-but-dumb younger boy kitty
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