Anonymous wrote:I am in my late twenties and going to med school this fall. I had post bacc friends who were lawyers. I'd say it's not worth it. The competition is so fierce to get in. You must score amazingly on mcat, which is very difficult to do. The stamina alone to do multiple 8 hour practice mcat exams (and imagine doing this for three licensing exams during med school)... I still have nightmares. You must have near perfect grades in your coursework, all of it. And the worst part is the prerequisites are not enough. You need to volunteer and prove you aren't making a mistake to every interviewer (if you get an interview!). I think you are glamorizing medicine. Try to find something in law, teaching... anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I felt similar lately. I’m a SAHM but just have no interest in getting back into finance. It didn’t make sense to me to pay for all of that school to just be ramping up when my partner will be ramping down, so I decided to become an EMT. Maybe something like that could fulfill that desire to help others without undoing all of the time and effort you’ve already put into your career.
Humm... new meaning to the phrase ambulance chaser...
Anonymous wrote:I am in my late twenties and going to med school this fall. I had post bacc friends who were lawyers. I'd say it's not worth it. The competition is so fierce to get in. You must score amazingly on mcat, which is very difficult to do. The stamina alone to do multiple 8 hour practice mcat exams (and imagine doing this for three licensing exams during med school)... I still have nightmares. You must have near perfect grades in your coursework, all of it. And the worst part is the prerequisites are not enough. You need to volunteer and prove you aren't making a mistake to every interviewer (if you get an interview!). I think you are glamorizing medicine. Try to find something in law, teaching... anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, plenty of people have. I recommend the book "The Winner's Brain" for some fascinating examples.
a handful of success in an otherwise field of failures.
Anonymous wrote:OP I felt similar lately. I’m a SAHM but just have no interest in getting back into finance. It didn’t make sense to me to pay for all of that school to just be ramping up when my partner will be ramping down, so I decided to become an EMT. Maybe something like that could fulfill that desire to help others without undoing all of the time and effort you’ve already put into your career.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, plenty of people have. I recommend the book "The Winner's Brain" for some fascinating examples.