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Monday, August 22, 2016

Loneliness

I briefly hinted at this in a previous post, half-assedly promising I'd write about it further. Here it is.

If I could describe one feeling I've had throughout medical school, I would choose loneliness. I have never been surrounded by so many people and felt so alone.

Every day I go to the hospital, to lecture, to the library. I come home to a roommate. I bike with a cycling group and run with the November Project. I organize events on a group text. I host people for taco night, pizza night, happy hour.

Yet, I am so incredibly lonely.

Maybe I should clarify. I have no problem finding people whose ear I can talk off* but I cannot remember the last time anyone has invited me to anything or lent a non-hurried ear when I needed someone to talk to.

In fact, I was lamenting to a friend the other day that I'm really bad at planning things to do in town. She was surprised since she sees me as the planner of our group. I responded with, "That's because no one hangs out with me if I don't invite them to do something." She thought I was kidding, but I was quite serious. Another friend said she sees me as one of the most social people in our class. She's right in that I talk to everyone. What she doesn't know is I talk to people because I want them to talk back.

What prompted this post was the news that another medical student committed suicide last week (not at my school). People posted in our Facebook class group saying we should support one another and find the time to de-stress. All I could think of was, who do I call? The people who have already blown off my attempts at talking to them? Every time I broach the subject of my mental health or mental health in general, they try to change the subject or are visibly uncomfortable. They don't want my baggage.

Maybe my expectations for friends are too high. Maybe I shouldn't expect them to want to listen to me drone on and on about how much I hate third year or how I'm stressed because I cannot figure out how to get honors on my clinical evaluations. I get it. We're all struggling to adjust and get through day by day. The last thing they want is to talk about grades** or get dumped on by my stress.

Isn't that what friends are for, though? Shouldn't we support each other through thick and thin? It's so frustrating to have so many superficial friendships when all I long for is a connection with someone in my class. But everyone is too busy or too tired or only wants to be entertained. I'm not exactly a ray of sunshine these days.

Long story short, the last year has been really hard for me. I nearly quit medical school almost exactly a year ago, lived on the edge of passing my classes, had a season of intense verbal abuse as a rugby referee (the one thing that has consistently given me joy), finally decided to have shoulder surgery, got 10 stomach ulcers while studying for step (ibuprofen pre-surgery is partially to blame), then got a step score that may keep me out of orthopaedics. Now I'm struggling to get through each day impressing a different attending and resident on a weekly basis while feeling incredibly dumb and incompetent in the meantime. It's a recipe for disaster that realistically won't let up anytime soon.

For some reason, the last couple of weeks have been especially bad. I recently finished my psychiatry block so I can see the symptoms piling up. The good news is that I sleep well, I eat too much, and I look forward to most days (the ones I don't have to work). But I'm definitely not in a good place. I know that and I'm working to fix it.

In that respect, this is not a cry for help. I have a decent support network outside of school. Not ideal, but decent. I'm seeing a therapist once I figure out next month's schedule. Also, my roommate is the exception to everything I've written here. She's patient, understanding, does the dishes when I'm too tired to put my bowls in the dishwasher, and lends a fantastic ear.

She can't be everything, unfortunately, because a good chunk of my stress is school-related and she just doesn't understand. I wish I could find the medical school version of her, and I think part of my loneliness stems from the fact that I haven't found that yet even though I've put myself out there and tried. I have some good friends and shared some good laughs, but the elusiveness of that connection makes me sad.

To end on a positive note, I have a request. Please take time to ask your friends how they're doing. How they're really doing. Carve out an evening or a weekend, invite them over for dinner, and just listen to them talk. Shrink them, as I call it these days. They'll appreciate the gesture. I know I would and I'm pretty sure I'm not alone in that.

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*I spent 30 minutes talking to the administrative assistant for our neurology rotation, whom I haven't seen in over a month, because I ran into her in the lobby of our medical school. That's all it takes for me. I talk to everyone for a long time.

**I know grades are a taboo topic. I don't like talking about them, either. Anytime I've mentioned them has been in the context of learning from people who are doing well and figuring out their strategies because mine clearly haven't been working. I don't ask for scores, just advice. I think people are so averse to the subject that they don't see the difference.

2 comments:

  1. Sometimes when I read your blog posts I think we are practically the same person. I know that sounds really strange, but many of your previous posts have resonated with me, and none more than this one. I came home from school today, a perfectly good day with no trouble with classes or attendings or anything school-related, but I felt completely worn down by the fact that no matter how hard I have tried to be social and become the kind of person that my friends and classmates would want to spend time with, I am still an afterthought for invitations. The only way I spend time with others is if I make the plans, and I only get invited if I'm right there while they are making plans. I have spent the last several years of school trying to become more outgoing in a city far away from my family and home, but I realized today that I still have not found a true group of friends that actually think to invite me to places. I have tried talking to people able my problems, but then I get blown off, or the subject changes to something simple and happier, or I just feel like no one would care about my problems, and that they have their own worries to deal with.

    It's hard being away from home and from family, and when you move to go to medical school you expect to be busy studying and learning. But at the same time, you're all in it together, and when you put yourself out there and make the effort, it's hard when you realize that no one else is putting in that effort when it comes to you. I have gone all out celebrating other people's birthdays and making them feel special and doing nice things, random gifts, etc. But when it came time for my birthday not one person put in the effort other than a generic text/facebook post. I never want to feel like anyone is obligated to do things for me, but at the same time, all my friends know that I live alone and away from home, and the fact that I spent my birthday alone in my apartment, just like every day of med school, hurts because it confirmed to me that not only do I not have a support network, but I also don't have a friend that is willing to do the same things just one day a year that I do for them all the time, throughout the school year.

    I guess what I'm trying to say is that I know how you're feeling... at this point last year I was ready to quit too. I was on the brink of failing my classes, depressed, and lonely because I've never been in this situation before in all my years of schooling. You're not alone, and if it makes you feel any better, there is at least one person out there that is going through a similar situation and is thinking of you. Hang in there, and I hope things get better for the both of us!

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    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for writing this. As much as it hurts to know there's someone else feeling this crappy, it's comforting that we're not alone in having these thoughts. It's almost "normal" in a twisted sort of way and our timeline of struggles does point to us being the same person!

      As you mention, it's those days that seem perfectly good on the surface (good attendings, patients, etc.) that have been the hardest for me because I have the energy to look at my life as a whole, and it's just depressing. It sounds like we both have good support systems in our previous lives so I've tried to hang on to that to get me through the super rough patches. It doesn't make the day-to-day easier because I can't grab a beer with friends that live across the country, but at least I have someone to call or visit on those elusive free weekends.

      Also, your birthday story is precisely why I don't like birthdays. I'm always afraid no one will show up or flake out, which has happened more years than I'd like to admit. And I'm so sorry this happened to you when you needed it most. I can only imagine how that must've felt especially since you've put in effort building friendships that don't seem to be reciprocated. I'm in the same boat, and it sucks.

      I hope things get better for us both because loneliness has added an extra level of stress on top of an already stressful year. We're almost in the home stretch and hopefully residency will land us somewhere near good friends and family.

      Lastly, thank you for thinking of me and I will do the same for you. Hang in there as well! We've got it.

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