Bull.Now, in my opinion, there is no future in doing something I don't like. As big of a ****** bag as Donald Trump is, one thing that he said has always stuck with me, 'if you aren't doing something you love you will never be successful.'
Cry me a river.I'm making $81k a year right now and based on what my boss is making, I may end up at $140k in 10 to 15 years. I don't see any future in that.
I don't think you understand what I'm saying.Bull.Crap.
I know plenty of successful people who don't particularly enjoy their jobs.
If you have to provide for you family by enduring a little dissatisfaction, so be it. If it really sucks, find another job. I just don't see reason to throw all that time and money away.
Money is definitely a concern, but going to medical school would probably end up costing more money than it paid, so no, medical school is not about money.Cry me a river.
Are you sure it isn't all about the money?
When you have two kids, a wife that doesn't work, and live in Charleston, $81k doesn't go very far. We aren't saving any money. We just break even every month.Chuck, I don't know the circumstances of your youth, but 81K is a LOT of money. There are a LOT of poeple who make nowhere near that.
Maybe so, but I know plenty of successful people that love their jobs, and I'm not one of them.And people who love there job AND are successful are very few and far between.
I agree that I have a good life, not arguing there, but right now my career is not very rewarding, financially or from a personal fulfillment standpoint.I am really not trying to be ugly. You have it very good. I think you might have lost sight of that.
How much mroe money do you see as necessary to go the distance you are seeking? Does going to medical school bring you to that point? Could that same point be accomplished via a different job, different lifestyle, other changes?When you have two kids, a wife that doesn't work, and live in Charleston, $81k doesn't go very far.
I happen to be in the same boat and if you polled this board, an honest answer would probably be close to AT LEAST 80%. We are living in hard economic times ... it is hard to live and save under those conditions even with better-than-modest salaries.We aren't saving any money. We just break even every month.
Continuing the thought above - have you considered that accomplishing those goals IS an impossibility for our generation? The idea of wealth and what we can offer as salaries are stagnating yet the price of goods and especially college education are escalating make it VERY hard to account for things that in previous genearations seemed to be almost a given.My parents are wealthy, I know that now but didn't know it when I was young and we (me and my brothers) didn't grow up thinking that we were. Being able to pay for retirement and/or school for my children seems to be an impossibility at this point.
I think you are right in thinking about changes especially if you are unhappy - I think what most of the posters are asking: given the investment-to-date of time, materials, money towards your existing education/experience, is there some way to actually build on that in a way that isn't going to take away another +/- 10 yrs on pursuits you are fully sure will achieve your goals. Nobody is suggesting that you should just take it endzone for no gain; however, you should be honest with yourself about what you want whether it is financial gain, job satisifaction, family time, etc.I agree that I have a good life, not arguing there, but right now my career is not very rewarding, financially or from a personal fulfillment standpoint.
Sounds like someboy needs a bailout!When you have two kids, a wife that doesn't work, and live in Charleston, $81k doesn't go very far. We aren't saving any money. We just break even every month.
What hospital near Boston? I don't want to trust my health to some guy who just graduated med school and is making $12/hour.I have a friend who just graduated med school...and has $200K in debt. He's single and glad that he is, because his married friends struggled the whole way through. One doctor he's working with in Residency is already talking divorce with her husband. He's making $12 an hour living just outside of Boston. I echo what everyone else has said...this has to be absolutely what you want to do, because the demands of med school are huge and the payoff just simply isn't there financially.
Seriously! I'm glad I had my foot operations in Worcester, which falls outside the 'just outside' category.What hospital near Boston? I don't want to trust my health to some guy who just graduated med school and is making $12/hour.
rlyflag:Seriously! I'm glad I had my foot operations in Worcester, which falls outside the 'just outside' category.
The doctor is the one making $12/hour and he's at UMass in Worcester. Kinda the same way we all make crap money when we first start, he makes crap money. He's hoping to pay off his loans in many years. He's still got some other loan out that makes it possible for him to make ends meet. There are so many costs that went into him becoming a doctor that were over and beyond tuition...when he interviewed for residencies, a lot of the travel was on his own dime. Just to apply for residencies cost hundreds of dollars. All this was coupled with him not being allowed to work an outside job, so basically he lived on loans. This was after having been a full ride undergrad and getting scholarships during medical school. It's just a lot of money.Seriously! I'm glad I had my foot operations in Worcester, which falls outside the 'just outside' category.
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