I've just read a few posts and I'm in tears because I didn't know there were so many residents/young docs out there like my husband....so cynical and burned out and ready to just forget it all and work in anything else. I mean I knew residents for the most part are nothing like they were entering med school. But I was convinced my husband's very negative feelings towards medicine at this point were atypical. I was beginning to think he was losing his mind or something. You have no idea how stressful and emotionally draining it has been worrying over him, pepping him up over and over, basically forcing him to make tough decisions the whole way through..since the third year of med school really. He's stuck it out incredibly and works himself silly when he has too. But he hates it, really he does. He dreads starting his new job and thinks his life will be a continuation of the hell of residency. All I can do is try and keep him motivated and even nag him to keep going. He's given too much to this choice to give up now. He feels that too, but feels he's got no other choice and will be forced into unhappiness forever.
Does this negative view from a fresh trainee with burnout ever get better? A few weeks ago he swore up and down he needed antidepressants. He rebounded though like he has before and seems to be coping again. He could have taken a VA job here in Memphis that paid less and had better hours and more time off. But it's a very dangerous city and we've never liked living here. WE have no family nearby to help us with Sarah also. After so many years of being miserable about having to live here I wanted him to consider moving back to where we're from. He didn't want to because it was easier and less stressful just to stay here in an environment he's familiar with. But I knew and he admitted it that if we stayed we'd probably never leave. So we went for it..stress and all..and looked back home. The job pays more, is shift work for the most part and will have 1:3 call with two/three days off every 8 days. I thought that was pretty good, but David says it's going to suck. Compared to the horrible months he's had as a resident..working ICU and trauma especially..I would think anything would be better. All he says is, "You just don't know what I go through." I can't know, but I would think after all this time he would have gotten more used to it and not be so miserable. Am I unreasonable? I worry I've forced him to take this job back home and it indeed may be too much for him and he'll go over the edge. Or is this typical for resident's entering the private world?
Any advice from those who've been here would be greatly appreciated. I think he feels I'm the bad guy sometimes forcing him to be a doctor or something. Hell I'm the first to say people shouldn't go into medicine unless they REALLY know what they're in for. If I knew seven years ago what I know now I wouldn't have been so gung ho for him to get that white student coat, KWIM!! And he most certainly wouldn't have been. He has told anyone thinking of becoming a doctor to run the other way since he was a third year student! And now entering the private world and seeing what life as a doctor long term will be he's really negative. All I can say is that people who think doctor's are rich and live cushy life are just full of crap. No doctor ever gets paid close to what they work and to compensate for what they endure in terms of stress and thing they give up, namely time off with family and friends. No other profeession that I can think of requires so much emotionally, mentally and physically from a person than medicine..I think anyway. Maybe the military. I'm just really worried about him, us and what's to come. We at one point were looking forward to the end of residency. Now it's just like every step before...the unknown and very scary.
amy
Does this negative view from a fresh trainee with burnout ever get better? A few weeks ago he swore up and down he needed antidepressants. He rebounded though like he has before and seems to be coping again. He could have taken a VA job here in Memphis that paid less and had better hours and more time off. But it's a very dangerous city and we've never liked living here. WE have no family nearby to help us with Sarah also. After so many years of being miserable about having to live here I wanted him to consider moving back to where we're from. He didn't want to because it was easier and less stressful just to stay here in an environment he's familiar with. But I knew and he admitted it that if we stayed we'd probably never leave. So we went for it..stress and all..and looked back home. The job pays more, is shift work for the most part and will have 1:3 call with two/three days off every 8 days. I thought that was pretty good, but David says it's going to suck. Compared to the horrible months he's had as a resident..working ICU and trauma especially..I would think anything would be better. All he says is, "You just don't know what I go through." I can't know, but I would think after all this time he would have gotten more used to it and not be so miserable. Am I unreasonable? I worry I've forced him to take this job back home and it indeed may be too much for him and he'll go over the edge. Or is this typical for resident's entering the private world?
Any advice from those who've been here would be greatly appreciated. I think he feels I'm the bad guy sometimes forcing him to be a doctor or something. Hell I'm the first to say people shouldn't go into medicine unless they REALLY know what they're in for. If I knew seven years ago what I know now I wouldn't have been so gung ho for him to get that white student coat, KWIM!! And he most certainly wouldn't have been. He has told anyone thinking of becoming a doctor to run the other way since he was a third year student! And now entering the private world and seeing what life as a doctor long term will be he's really negative. All I can say is that people who think doctor's are rich and live cushy life are just full of crap. No doctor ever gets paid close to what they work and to compensate for what they endure in terms of stress and thing they give up, namely time off with family and friends. No other profeession that I can think of requires so much emotionally, mentally and physically from a person than medicine..I think anyway. Maybe the military. I'm just really worried about him, us and what's to come. We at one point were looking forward to the end of residency. Now it's just like every step before...the unknown and very scary.
amy
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