Takeaway
Failing calculus, not being chief resident, and sticking out a season with a horrible coach – physicians share a gifts in disguise from their lives.
Lifelong Learning in Clinical Excellence | May 31, 2019 | <1 min read
Highlights
My first year of college I failed calculus - they put me on academic probation, and I sat staring at my desk and thought maybe books I liked could help me choose my career: Jung's "Modern Man in Search of Soul," Peck's "The Road Less Travelled" - I became a psychiatrist!
David Kopasz, MD, Seattle VA
I wasn’t elected chief resident during residency. I think having the mental space as a 3rd year resident to focus on myself and my husband has set me up for better balance and stronger boundaries that allow me to LOVE MY JOB!!
Miranda Huffman, MD, MEd
... I learned the value of never giving up.
Mariah Robertson, MD, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Multiple rejections from various programs at various points in my training. My path has been wonderful, but never one I could have predicted a decade ago.
Carl Streed, Jr., MD, MPH, Boston Medical Center
... It was one of the first times I realized just how much of a rock and support system my mom was, and is to this day.
Mays Ali, MD, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Wanted to be an astronaut ... took an astrophysics courses in college ... it didn’t work out (long story). Being a doctor and treating people who have the same elemental makeup of stars and the cosmo, I feel like I still got my wish.
Panagis Galiatsatos, MD, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Rejected by the University of Tennessee and all other medical schools to which I applied; was waitlisted at Vanderbilt School of Medicine and got in with only weeks to spare. Vanderbilt was a perfect fit for me, nurturing and productive.
Stuart Ray, MD, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Rejected for an important award. These “opportunities” stir up those self-defeating explanations, “I am just not good enough,” which with much practice over the years I have been better able to replace with , “What I do most not match what they are looking for.”