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perez639
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He is just beginning his pre-reqs and is going to bomb through them all by next summer. He is managing to pull off straight A’s so far. For example, this fall will be physics I and Chem II and calc and the corresponding labs.Let’s give the guy some credit here! He may well know what medical school entails. There are lots of folks who enter medical school with English, or Theatre, or History degrees. He may have taken all of the required coursework for med school along with the English major- it’s not that hard to do- or he may only have a few classes to go. We just don’t know.
That is another thing I forgot, residents do make a small pay. I am pretty sure hospitals are only doing 24hr shifts verses 36hr shifts which is a plus. I am willing to provide while he does all of this. However, if I were to become pregnant raising would also be up to me on my own. He believes that if it is the will of God that should happen then it will. We are very anti- birth control and would only use NFP.Actually, the *four *years of med school are the only ones you pay for. After that, you’re in residency and while the pay is slim (especially if you calculate it per hour!), you are paid enough to live on (and support a small family on, no less). I agree: focus on what your priorities are, and if they match with his. The 10 years of med school plus residency might be endurable if this is truly his calling – you know these years are finite. My question would be what his thoughts are on practice after training. You *can *find positions, even as a surgeon, with reasonable work hours. The trade off? Money. You won’t get paid nearly as much, you probably won’t have status and publications, you won’t be the star of the hospital. Do those things matter to your boyfriend?