My husband is trying to decide what to be when he grows up. He really loves surgery-- especially ortho. When he came home each day during his ortho rotations he was animated, excited, happy... When he came home after Family Practice, Psych, and Internal Med he was somewhat interested, but definitely not excited. He is really struggling with lifestyle vs. what he really wants to do.
He knows that he wants to be a surgeon. It seems that the only surgery that lights his fire is Ortho. His second choice is ENT, but he doesn't like how detailed the procedures are, and how "teeny tiny" the instruments are. Being in the military, Ortho is one of the worst specialties to go into. I want to be supportive, really, but this is a huge deal and I'm just not sure what to do. I kind of think that he has to do what he loves, but of course I'm worried about lifestyle and all that.
So I was really wondering what I should tell him? He asks me for advice, and it's almost like he wants permission to go into Ortho. I have told him that he needs to do what he is meanto to do-- or else he won't be happy... But then again, if he's deployed for 6-8 months out of every 2 years, and when he's stateside he's working 100+ hours, does being "happy" in his profession outweigh the bitterness the kids are surely going to feel? It is really hard to get perspective on this kind of thing when you are choosing a specialty, I think...
He knows that he wants to be a surgeon. It seems that the only surgery that lights his fire is Ortho. His second choice is ENT, but he doesn't like how detailed the procedures are, and how "teeny tiny" the instruments are. Being in the military, Ortho is one of the worst specialties to go into. I want to be supportive, really, but this is a huge deal and I'm just not sure what to do. I kind of think that he has to do what he loves, but of course I'm worried about lifestyle and all that.
So I was really wondering what I should tell him? He asks me for advice, and it's almost like he wants permission to go into Ortho. I have told him that he needs to do what he is meanto to do-- or else he won't be happy... But then again, if he's deployed for 6-8 months out of every 2 years, and when he's stateside he's working 100+ hours, does being "happy" in his profession outweigh the bitterness the kids are surely going to feel? It is really hard to get perspective on this kind of thing when you are choosing a specialty, I think...
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