I got an interview invitation! Holy crap, I didn't think this was actually going to happen but here we are.
There are many reasons to be excited about this, but mostly it means that my general surgery program director didn't completely screw me over with his letter of recommendation. I had been worried about what it would say because the month I rotated on his service, everything went to hell.
There was one particularly bad week where on Wednesday, the home ortho program told me flat out they wouldn't match me, on Friday my dad called to say his cancer had reappeared, and the following Wednesday I got into a car accident and couldn't get my car fixed because I was on day 3 of working 12 days straight. So I was way off my game.
To top it all off, my chief (my PD's pet) and I got in a tiff that unnecessarily spiraled out of control.* To say I didn't make a good impression on my PD during that month is an incredible understatement. As such, I'm pleasantly surprised that the letter didn't turn out to be ruinous, and in fact, got me an interview.
I'm also very relieved to get the invitation from this particular program. I had become convinced that I had forgotten to apply there because it's listed under a different name on ERAS. I was beating myself up about overlooking them because they have a baller research opportunity for people who don't match, and I figured it'd be hard to explain that I wanted to do research with them when I didn't apply to their program in the first place. Luckily, that is not the case and not only did I apply there, but now I'm even interviewing for a PGY1 spot!
All in all, I'm incredibly happy that one program is willing to take a chance on me. My program is also being really good about giving me time off to travel, so not only do I get to go to the pre-interview dinner, but afterwards, I get to hang out with friends I have in the area. It'll be really nice to see old friends and get some time off from this general surgery nonsense, and hopefully recharge.
And I'm super excited that all my eggs aren't in one basket. I kinda sorta maybe have options. There's hope!
---
* It started as me asking him to stop being an ass to me, but more importantly, to tell me when people were being admitted from the OR and to communicate their post-op plans. He really didn't appreciate me "telling him how to do his job" and was very vocal about it. Our conversation turned into a yelling match (mostly him yelling at me) and ended with me crying in my program director's office explaining everything that was going wrong in my life that week (as mentioned above).
The whole situation was no bueno and the timing couldn't have been any worse as I had just asked my program director to write me a letter of recommendation.
My roundabout journey towards medical school, through it, and now taking the roundabout way through residency
Friday, December 21, 2018
Thursday, November 29, 2018
Feeling the need to be perfect
I realized that I've been so stressed for the past couple of years (ever since I started 3rd year in May 2016) because I've always felt I had to be at 100% every minute of every day. It's led to me beating myself up every time I get a pimp question wrong, worrying about making awesome plans for all 20+ of my patients, and just generally thinking I suck at life and my job. It's exhausting and completely unsustainable.
I've developed this weird mindset that I have only one chance to make a good first impression and there's no coming back from it. Therefore if I screw up on the first day or don't do things to my very high satisfaction, I assume that all is lost and there's nothing I can do to change it.
It started with 3rd year when I changed services nearly every week and every day was the first day of work. It continued through away rotations during fourth year for that very same reason yet even higher stakes. Because of my scores, I knew I needed to be the best med student / rotator they had ever met and it all began with that dreaded first impression that I thought I couldn't change.
Surprisingly, this same feeling has continued during my prelim year. I had hoped that by being in one place for a whole year, that pressure would disappear because I had a whole year to make good impressions and I could allow myself one "bad" day once in a while. But for some reason, it's persisted.
Part of it is the shortened time frame for everything...one month on ortho in July, needing a letter of recommendation from my PD by August, and switching services and chiefs every month. I've felt the pressure to be perfect at every turn because it's a new group of people and again, the stakes are super high (probably the highest they've ever been). Everyone has to love me on the first day, otherwise I have failed. It's a warped way to think of things and obviously has to change, because it's done a number on my mental health.
The problem with this way of thinking is that I can never be good enough in my own eyes and therefore I'm destined to "fail" (by my standards). I'm at a strong general surgery program, so all the interns have their shit together, which makes it hard to stand out among the super stars. In the back of my mind, I always knew I couldn't be top dog of the 15 or so interns in my class, but that doesn't mean I didn't put the pressure on myself to try to be the best. Of course, I had to be awesome on Day 1 and whenever I slipped up (as in intern inevitably does), I would get very upset and mad at myself, and would just spiral into self-deprecation, which would make me even more upset and the cycle would persist.
I realize I can't continue this way for the rest of the year because I have been absolutely miserable and it has affected every part of my life. I have to accept that I will make mistakes and that it's okay to be wrong. I don't have to be perfect because that ship sailed long ago and my fate is probably sealed at this program already.
What I can do is continue to improve throughout the year. I can go back to the basics of checking all my boxes, following up on labs and consults, and being agreeable and affable. I can give myself a break whenever I mess up or don't do something perfectly. I can accept the fact that I am not perfect and should not expect to be the best intern this department has ever had, because that's simply not possible.
My new goal should be to impress my bosses with my improvement and growth throughout the year. I won't strive for perfection, but I will strive for being solid and strong, and on an upward trajectory. Although rank lists are due in only a couple of months, I still have 6.5 more months with this program and I'm sure if I do all those things, I can get a solid letter at the end of the year for the next application cycle.
I keep wanting to throw in the towel because the first impressions have already been made and I've had a rough couple of months. But another way to get good evaluations is to show how much I've improved and that I can turn things around, and that should be what I strive to do with all the time I still have left here.
I've developed this weird mindset that I have only one chance to make a good first impression and there's no coming back from it. Therefore if I screw up on the first day or don't do things to my very high satisfaction, I assume that all is lost and there's nothing I can do to change it.
It started with 3rd year when I changed services nearly every week and every day was the first day of work. It continued through away rotations during fourth year for that very same reason yet even higher stakes. Because of my scores, I knew I needed to be the best med student / rotator they had ever met and it all began with that dreaded first impression that I thought I couldn't change.
Surprisingly, this same feeling has continued during my prelim year. I had hoped that by being in one place for a whole year, that pressure would disappear because I had a whole year to make good impressions and I could allow myself one "bad" day once in a while. But for some reason, it's persisted.
Part of it is the shortened time frame for everything...one month on ortho in July, needing a letter of recommendation from my PD by August, and switching services and chiefs every month. I've felt the pressure to be perfect at every turn because it's a new group of people and again, the stakes are super high (probably the highest they've ever been). Everyone has to love me on the first day, otherwise I have failed. It's a warped way to think of things and obviously has to change, because it's done a number on my mental health.
The problem with this way of thinking is that I can never be good enough in my own eyes and therefore I'm destined to "fail" (by my standards). I'm at a strong general surgery program, so all the interns have their shit together, which makes it hard to stand out among the super stars. In the back of my mind, I always knew I couldn't be top dog of the 15 or so interns in my class, but that doesn't mean I didn't put the pressure on myself to try to be the best. Of course, I had to be awesome on Day 1 and whenever I slipped up (as in intern inevitably does), I would get very upset and mad at myself, and would just spiral into self-deprecation, which would make me even more upset and the cycle would persist.
I realize I can't continue this way for the rest of the year because I have been absolutely miserable and it has affected every part of my life. I have to accept that I will make mistakes and that it's okay to be wrong. I don't have to be perfect because that ship sailed long ago and my fate is probably sealed at this program already.
What I can do is continue to improve throughout the year. I can go back to the basics of checking all my boxes, following up on labs and consults, and being agreeable and affable. I can give myself a break whenever I mess up or don't do something perfectly. I can accept the fact that I am not perfect and should not expect to be the best intern this department has ever had, because that's simply not possible.
My new goal should be to impress my bosses with my improvement and growth throughout the year. I won't strive for perfection, but I will strive for being solid and strong, and on an upward trajectory. Although rank lists are due in only a couple of months, I still have 6.5 more months with this program and I'm sure if I do all those things, I can get a solid letter at the end of the year for the next application cycle.
I keep wanting to throw in the towel because the first impressions have already been made and I've had a rough couple of months. But another way to get good evaluations is to show how much I've improved and that I can turn things around, and that should be what I strive to do with all the time I still have left here.
Saturday, November 10, 2018
Funk again
I feel like I start all posts the same way by saying things have been rough. I'm in the midst of orthopaedics interview invitations going out, and as expected, I'm coming up empty. I suspected this was going to be the case, but it's still very hard to see that I was right in my pessimism.
One of the programs that "ranked me very highly" last year and where I did an away last fall, sent out their invitations last week and I didn't get one. I wasn't very surprised because if they didn't want me last year, they probably weren't going to want me this year. But it was also my only other "real" shot at getting an interview this season and it's rough to know that now my options are even slimmer at matching ortho this year.
Additionally, my prelim home ortho program told me that it is "very unlikely" that I'll match with them, mostly because of my Step 1 score. I was hoping the programs that got to know me, either from aways or from this prelim, would be able to overlook my Step 1 and see that I'm a hard-working resident that gets along with everyone, because I knew my application would be screened out due to my scores. But it doesn't look to be the case and I'm really worried that I'll go unmatched again this year.
Somewhat understandably, I'm in an incredibly deep funk that I can't seem to get out of. I'm back to crying in inappropriate situations, such as at work, and shutting down to the point that I don't have the mental energy to do basic things such as clean, cook, or do laundry. I'm fully functional at the hospital and am surprisingly still kicking butt at my job (with a few teary exceptions), but that's about where my mental strength ends. Everyone keeps telling me to stay positive and keep my chin up, but it's really hard to be optimistic when I literally have ZERO interviews and thus no hope of doing what I'm passionate about.
What keeps me going is the fact that I'll be with my family in 8 days for vacation and it couldn't come at a more perfect time. I need the break from work, but more importantly, I need a hug. No matter what age I am, a hug from Mom makes everything better, even if only temporarily.
One of the programs that "ranked me very highly" last year and where I did an away last fall, sent out their invitations last week and I didn't get one. I wasn't very surprised because if they didn't want me last year, they probably weren't going to want me this year. But it was also my only other "real" shot at getting an interview this season and it's rough to know that now my options are even slimmer at matching ortho this year.
Additionally, my prelim home ortho program told me that it is "very unlikely" that I'll match with them, mostly because of my Step 1 score. I was hoping the programs that got to know me, either from aways or from this prelim, would be able to overlook my Step 1 and see that I'm a hard-working resident that gets along with everyone, because I knew my application would be screened out due to my scores. But it doesn't look to be the case and I'm really worried that I'll go unmatched again this year.
Somewhat understandably, I'm in an incredibly deep funk that I can't seem to get out of. I'm back to crying in inappropriate situations, such as at work, and shutting down to the point that I don't have the mental energy to do basic things such as clean, cook, or do laundry. I'm fully functional at the hospital and am surprisingly still kicking butt at my job (with a few teary exceptions), but that's about where my mental strength ends. Everyone keeps telling me to stay positive and keep my chin up, but it's really hard to be optimistic when I literally have ZERO interviews and thus no hope of doing what I'm passionate about.
What keeps me going is the fact that I'll be with my family in 8 days for vacation and it couldn't come at a more perfect time. I need the break from work, but more importantly, I need a hug. No matter what age I am, a hug from Mom makes everything better, even if only temporarily.
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
It's clear - I belong in the OR
I'm on a particularly hard rotation where I work even longer than usual hours, am writing way too many notes, and am running around several different hospitals all day. Being an intern, I never get into the OR.
But today was different. My fellow was in a super duper long case so I stuck around late to sign out to him. I eventually met him in the OR, where the patient started bleeding profusely through his dressings as we were moving him off the table. I held pressure to stop the gushing while they re-intubated, re-set up the room, and all that jazz. Once everything was under control, I asked the fellow if I could scrub while they re-opened the patient. The words came so naturally out of my mouth that I couldn't stop them. It was a no-brainer, literally. I am soooo glad I did because it lifted my mood instantaneously.
With ERAS opening up last week, I have been pretty bummed the past few days and have struggled to keep it together at work. I should be excited about this application cycle but instead, all those feelings of sadness from March and April keep creeping in. I'm terrified I won't match again and will have to settle for something else. I also feel incredibly incompetent at my job and keep screwing up, which my fellows and attendings have no qualms about pointing out. So it's been a rough few weeks.
For 1 hour in the OR today, though, even though I was doing the usual retracting, suctioning, and bovie-ing (read, nothing exciting), I was so content and even happy (gasp!). It didn't matter that I left the hospital at 11 pm or that I still had notes to write or that I truly hate (almost) everything about this current rotation, including the types of cases they do. I walked out of the hospital with a smile on my face and pep in my step simply because I got to scrub.
That's how I know I want to be a surgeon.
But today was different. My fellow was in a super duper long case so I stuck around late to sign out to him. I eventually met him in the OR, where the patient started bleeding profusely through his dressings as we were moving him off the table. I held pressure to stop the gushing while they re-intubated, re-set up the room, and all that jazz. Once everything was under control, I asked the fellow if I could scrub while they re-opened the patient. The words came so naturally out of my mouth that I couldn't stop them. It was a no-brainer, literally. I am soooo glad I did because it lifted my mood instantaneously.
With ERAS opening up last week, I have been pretty bummed the past few days and have struggled to keep it together at work. I should be excited about this application cycle but instead, all those feelings of sadness from March and April keep creeping in. I'm terrified I won't match again and will have to settle for something else. I also feel incredibly incompetent at my job and keep screwing up, which my fellows and attendings have no qualms about pointing out. So it's been a rough few weeks.
For 1 hour in the OR today, though, even though I was doing the usual retracting, suctioning, and bovie-ing (read, nothing exciting), I was so content and even happy (gasp!). It didn't matter that I left the hospital at 11 pm or that I still had notes to write or that I truly hate (almost) everything about this current rotation, including the types of cases they do. I walked out of the hospital with a smile on my face and pep in my step simply because I got to scrub.
That's how I know I want to be a surgeon.
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
It's okay to be sad
The past couple of months have
been hard. I would even extend that to a few months of sadness since the month
leading up to Match Day was fraught with anxiety and stress. Since then, my
life has been full of tears.
I’ve cried in places I never thought I’d be comfortable
crying at, including multiple public parks, on an airplane, dinner at a fancy restaurant, on a
catamaran cruising the Greek islands, during our class picture, in the school
auditorium in front of my whole class, and the list goes on. By this point,
I’ve gotten really good at crying silently, whether it’s in a public restroom
stall or a car ride with friends.
I also stopped giving a shit if seeing me cry makes someone
uncomfortable. Life is not all unicorns and rainbows and sadness needs to be
normalized as much as happiness and the highlight reel of life that is splattered
all over social media. This isn’t to say I cry in public to make a statement. I
cry because I can’t hold in my grief any longer and need an outlet. A deluge of
tears seems to do the job very well, if only temporarily.
Honestly, I don’t even know why I’m still so sad. I like to
think that I’ve accepted the fact that I didn’t match and that I’ve made a plan
for the next year to succeed. But every time I think I finally have things
under control, a random comment or thought will trigger a wave of sadness and I
feel the tears welling up.
So I’ve accepted the fact that I’m not over anything and
allow myself to continue to feel the way I feel, only truly suppressing my emotions
when absolutely necessary, such as during an important meeting with the ortho
chairman (powerful men don’t like seeing women cry). Other than that, I embrace
my sadness, let it all out, and hope that as the days pass, I will cry a little
bit less.
When people ask if I’m doing okay, I don’t even bother with
pleasantries anymore and go straight into, “No, I’m not.” Most times, I leave
it at that but often I add, “I’m in a rough place.” Most people don’t know what
to do with that, but I figure they should stop asking if they don’t want an
honest answer (these are people who know my situation, not randos on the
street).
I had a brief respite from sadness on vacation, where, for
the most part, I was able to forget how shitty everything was going. I became
an aunt (!) and the subsequent barrage of newborn pictures has brightened many of
my days. I also spent some quality time in the motherland with family I hadn’t
seen in years and relaxed for nearly a full week on the family homestead. It
was soooo nice.
The peaceful homestead |
Then I came back to reality where I had to pack up all my
things, leave my best friend with whom I’d lived for 13 years, and move to an
apartment I absolutely hate in a city where I know nobody. I had planned this
early move before graduation to start kissing some ortho butt at my new
program, get started on research, and start attending conferences to get my
face out there before the onslaught of intern year began.
But these plans seem to be backfiring just as badly as my
ortho dreams. The apartment I had rented on a house-hunting trip before
vacation was supposed to be “luxury” and full of natural light but instead is dingy and
dated*. The research coordinator is dragging her feet about getting me on a
project and has stopped answering my emails. The general surgery coordinator
said she will TRY to get me a month of ortho, although it’s not guaranteed (I
was promised a month by the PD during my SOAP interview, which is the only
reason I chose this program).
I know nobody at the morning ortho conferences and
it’s weird to start introducing myself to random residents, especially since I
don’t even know how that introduction would go. Am I a 4th year med
student since I haven’t graduated yet? A future surgery resident? Either way,
I’m still embarrassed I didn’t match and feel like I’m being judged every time
I mention it, which is something I need to work on hardcore for the next month or
so.
In short, moving early seems to be a terrible mistake thus far, taking me away from my friends prematurely and getting nothing in return career-wise but rather sinking me back into despair and hopelessness about my future.
In short, moving early seems to be a terrible mistake thus far, taking me away from my friends prematurely and getting nothing in return career-wise but rather sinking me back into despair and hopelessness about my future.
I had made pretty good progress over vacation to the point
where I would go days without shedding a single tear. But I’ve seemed to
regress pretty hardcore with this move and am back to being incapacitated with
grief at least once a day.**
As before, I’m working on taking things day-by-day,
finishing everything I need to get done so I’m still a functioning member of
society, and looking forward to July 1 so I actually have something to do with
my days instead of wallow in self-pity.
---
*Apparently in this city, they REFUSE to show you the actual
unit you’re renting. I insisted on seeing something other than the model unit
(which wasn’t even my apartment’s layout), so they very reluctantly showed me
an empty unit that would resemble mine in trimmings and would be of the same
quality as mine. Let’s just say that their definition of resembling my apartment is very different than mine.
**For those concerned about my mental health, I may be
extremely sad but that’s about where my symptoms of MDD end. Well, I haven’t
been sleeping much or eating well, and I’ve lost interest in some things (such
as packing or caring what people think of my emotions). But I’m functioning as well
as any fourth year med student, that is, I don’t want to do anything, and for the most part, get everything done that needs to be done. So overall, given the circumstances, I’m doing
well-ish.
Monday, April 2, 2018
Next steps
The news is very belated but I SOAPed "successfully" a couple of weeks ago into a general surgery preliminary position. "Successfully" is an optimistic term because I can't bring myself to be too excited about a one-year position, and thus another year of uncertainty about my future. But I'm fortunate to have a job and to be moving forward with my life and career, so there's that.
I'm not even close to being over the fact that I didn't match ortho. Some days are better than others, but most days involve tears, and I'm not generally a crier. I'm also finding it hard to be optimistic about my future, at this point wondering if I can even manage to match general surgery next year and thus have any sort of career.
I've had a lot of lows in medical school and in life but I can safely say that this is the worst I've felt in a very long time. The little amount of confidence I had going into the match has completely evaporated and I've lost most of the hope I used to have in the medical establishment and more specifically, ortho program directors. I was told that crushing away rotations by busting my butt and being personable would help me secure a spot at a program, and I was too naive to believe that. In the end, I played the game wrong because no amount of hard work can overcome test scores from two years ago.*
I don't know what the future holds for me, and that's really unsettling. I vacillate between feelings of "I got this. I'm totally getting into ortho next year," to "Fuuuuuuuck. I don't think I even have a shot at general surgery." It doesn't help that the stats are not in my favor. The chairman at an ortho program I did an away at said I have a 3% chance of matching into ortho next year. That's very scary.
Everyone tells me I need a backup plan if I don't match again, with the most likely one being categorical general surgery. While there are parts of gen surg that I honestly do enjoy, I'm still repulsed at the thought of operating on bowels for 30+ years. I'm trying to keep an open mind because that seems like the most likely outcome and it's not a bad one. But I want ortho SO BADLY that not being able to do it is devastating.
I'm also somewhat regretting taking the prelim position. My Achilles heel was my Step 1 score and there's absolutely nothing I can change about that. I'm much better in person than on paper and in theory I'm really good at winning people over.** That's where the suggestion for the prelim position came into play. What I didn't think of was delaying graduation to do more away rotations and some research. It would've given me exposure to the program where I did research as well as my away programs. This way I'd have 4 chances to win people over instead of the single one I currently have.
I keep reminding myself that the prelim spot is the best path for me, but that doesn't say much considering it's the best option out of a bunch of really shitty options. On the plus side, with the prelim I have a whole year of the ortho department getting to know me instead of a month. I can prove without a doubt that I'd be an awesome resident (instead of a program having to extrapolate from my performance as a 4th year rotator). I can also slide into an ortho spot if any resident decides to quit. So there are positives...if it all works out. If I fail again, I'll always wonder, "What if?"
I wish I could end on a positive note but there's not much positivity in my life right now. My dean tried to cheer me up by saying I was ranked in the top 10 at my top program, but they just didn't go down that far this year. From talking to the PD, it sounds like they went to number 6 or 7 on their list (they take 5 residents) so I was 3-4 people away from matching. I know this information was meant to make me feel better, but it has the opposite effect. It hurts that much more knowing how close I was to being an orthopaedic surgeon and now I'm scrambling for any sort of career at all.
I know life isn't fair and in the end, I'll be alright. I'll have a good degree and I'll probably be able to get some sort of categorical residency position. But I (most likely) won't get to do what I set out for when I quit my previous career to go to medical school. It sucks that the dream I've had for 6+ years was crushed because of bad luck (and poor pre-clinical study skills).
---
* This came out whinier than anticipated. I take full responsibility for not matching. I knew what I needed to do to be competitive (crush Step 1) and I didn't deliver. But ever since that test, I've worked really hard to do everything right, crushing Step 2, honoring most of my rotations, and kicking butt on my aways. I also know people with my scores who got terrible feedback after their aways ("none of the residents want to work with you") but managed to match because their orthopaedic surgeon father made a phone call for them. Like I said, life isn't fair and I knew this was coming. It doesn't make the outcome any easier to stomach.
** So I was told. See previous paragraph about losing faith in people.
I'm not even close to being over the fact that I didn't match ortho. Some days are better than others, but most days involve tears, and I'm not generally a crier. I'm also finding it hard to be optimistic about my future, at this point wondering if I can even manage to match general surgery next year and thus have any sort of career.
I've had a lot of lows in medical school and in life but I can safely say that this is the worst I've felt in a very long time. The little amount of confidence I had going into the match has completely evaporated and I've lost most of the hope I used to have in the medical establishment and more specifically, ortho program directors. I was told that crushing away rotations by busting my butt and being personable would help me secure a spot at a program, and I was too naive to believe that. In the end, I played the game wrong because no amount of hard work can overcome test scores from two years ago.*
I don't know what the future holds for me, and that's really unsettling. I vacillate between feelings of "I got this. I'm totally getting into ortho next year," to "Fuuuuuuuck. I don't think I even have a shot at general surgery." It doesn't help that the stats are not in my favor. The chairman at an ortho program I did an away at said I have a 3% chance of matching into ortho next year. That's very scary.
Everyone tells me I need a backup plan if I don't match again, with the most likely one being categorical general surgery. While there are parts of gen surg that I honestly do enjoy, I'm still repulsed at the thought of operating on bowels for 30+ years. I'm trying to keep an open mind because that seems like the most likely outcome and it's not a bad one. But I want ortho SO BADLY that not being able to do it is devastating.
I'm also somewhat regretting taking the prelim position. My Achilles heel was my Step 1 score and there's absolutely nothing I can change about that. I'm much better in person than on paper and in theory I'm really good at winning people over.** That's where the suggestion for the prelim position came into play. What I didn't think of was delaying graduation to do more away rotations and some research. It would've given me exposure to the program where I did research as well as my away programs. This way I'd have 4 chances to win people over instead of the single one I currently have.
I keep reminding myself that the prelim spot is the best path for me, but that doesn't say much considering it's the best option out of a bunch of really shitty options. On the plus side, with the prelim I have a whole year of the ortho department getting to know me instead of a month. I can prove without a doubt that I'd be an awesome resident (instead of a program having to extrapolate from my performance as a 4th year rotator). I can also slide into an ortho spot if any resident decides to quit. So there are positives...if it all works out. If I fail again, I'll always wonder, "What if?"
I wish I could end on a positive note but there's not much positivity in my life right now. My dean tried to cheer me up by saying I was ranked in the top 10 at my top program, but they just didn't go down that far this year. From talking to the PD, it sounds like they went to number 6 or 7 on their list (they take 5 residents) so I was 3-4 people away from matching. I know this information was meant to make me feel better, but it has the opposite effect. It hurts that much more knowing how close I was to being an orthopaedic surgeon and now I'm scrambling for any sort of career at all.
I know life isn't fair and in the end, I'll be alright. I'll have a good degree and I'll probably be able to get some sort of categorical residency position. But I (most likely) won't get to do what I set out for when I quit my previous career to go to medical school. It sucks that the dream I've had for 6+ years was crushed because of bad luck (and poor pre-clinical study skills).
---
* This came out whinier than anticipated. I take full responsibility for not matching. I knew what I needed to do to be competitive (crush Step 1) and I didn't deliver. But ever since that test, I've worked really hard to do everything right, crushing Step 2, honoring most of my rotations, and kicking butt on my aways. I also know people with my scores who got terrible feedback after their aways ("none of the residents want to work with you") but managed to match because their orthopaedic surgeon father made a phone call for them. Like I said, life isn't fair and I knew this was coming. It doesn't make the outcome any easier to stomach.
** So I was told. See previous paragraph about losing faith in people.
Tuesday, March 13, 2018
SOAP
I didn't match. Not the best way to come back to blogging after a 1+ year absence, but it is what it is.
I've been silent on here because I didn't want to post grumpy, sad things all the time. No one wants to read that. I was hoping to finally have some happy news after years of stress. But alas, that didn't happen and here we are.
To give some background to my story, I applied into ortho with low step scores (sub-230) and four interviews, so this didn't come as a too much of a surprise. Regardless, it still sucks.
I had a bad feeling about yesterday. I realistically only had a shot at one of my four interviews* (let's call it Program A) and when I sent them a "You're my #1" email, I got a somewhat noncommittal response. So I knew it was coming.
Having said all that, there were some reasons to be hopeful. My chairman is really good buddies with their chair and placed a call for me and our program director is also close with another attending at Program A. Both said that Program A had contacted them about me and said that they really liked me, I did a good job on my away, blah, blah, blah. I also met Program A's step cut-off, which is a rarity with my numbers and the competitiveness of ortho. Everything that could go in my favor was seemingly going in my favor, but unfortunately it still didn't work out.
So now I'm stuck going through SOAP, hoping to match a preliminary general surgery position and trying again next year. I was advised to try for Program A again because I had such a good shot this year and probably just barely missed the cut. I resisted at first because I figured if they didn't want me the first time then there's no reason for them to want me again. I equated it to a bad breakup where no one ever goes back to their number 5. A friend reminded me that if I'm using relationship metaphors for Match, then this should be considered a polygamous marriage rather than a monomagous relationship since they keep coming back for more every year. So I wisened up and at the last minute added Program A's prelim spots to my application list.
Now I wait.
---
* My interviews were at my home program (which flat out told me they won't take me because of my Step score), at an away that also had a hard Step cutoff that I didn't meet (I didn't find this out until the first day of the away), and at a very popular northeast school that for some weird reason offered me an interview.
I've been silent on here because I didn't want to post grumpy, sad things all the time. No one wants to read that. I was hoping to finally have some happy news after years of stress. But alas, that didn't happen and here we are.
To give some background to my story, I applied into ortho with low step scores (sub-230) and four interviews, so this didn't come as a too much of a surprise. Regardless, it still sucks.
I had a bad feeling about yesterday. I realistically only had a shot at one of my four interviews* (let's call it Program A) and when I sent them a "You're my #1" email, I got a somewhat noncommittal response. So I knew it was coming.
Having said all that, there were some reasons to be hopeful. My chairman is really good buddies with their chair and placed a call for me and our program director is also close with another attending at Program A. Both said that Program A had contacted them about me and said that they really liked me, I did a good job on my away, blah, blah, blah. I also met Program A's step cut-off, which is a rarity with my numbers and the competitiveness of ortho. Everything that could go in my favor was seemingly going in my favor, but unfortunately it still didn't work out.
So now I'm stuck going through SOAP, hoping to match a preliminary general surgery position and trying again next year. I was advised to try for Program A again because I had such a good shot this year and probably just barely missed the cut. I resisted at first because I figured if they didn't want me the first time then there's no reason for them to want me again. I equated it to a bad breakup where no one ever goes back to their number 5. A friend reminded me that if I'm using relationship metaphors for Match, then this should be considered a polygamous marriage rather than a monomagous relationship since they keep coming back for more every year. So I wisened up and at the last minute added Program A's prelim spots to my application list.
Now I wait.
---
* My interviews were at my home program (which flat out told me they won't take me because of my Step score), at an away that also had a hard Step cutoff that I didn't meet (I didn't find this out until the first day of the away), and at a very popular northeast school that for some weird reason offered me an interview.
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