This woman has second thoughts about marrying a doctor

January 2, 2007

Quite a bitter rant.



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{ 14 comments }

1 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 4:15 pm

what a nasty person. I could see her points. I certainly didnt need the colorful language. Maybe with her problems she needs a good psychiatrist. She seems like she has some personal problems to clean up. Big Deal, she had a bad new years. She needs to grow up and be an adult.

2 trenchdoc January 2, 2007 at 4:29 pm

interesting, now even the residents fiance’s are complaining. Perhaps, they need a union too.

3 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 5:32 pm

hmm. if you read far enough.. she admits being HIGH on something.

4 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 5:44 pm

Under the influence, probably lonely, feeling sorry for herself and just venting.

Move along, folks. Nothing to see here.

5 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 5:55 pm

I think someone posted this rant as a joke.

6 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 7:09 pm

She’ll learn. She’s the “Practice wife”. The real one comes once he’s done with training.

7 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 9:19 pm

“dating an engineer, even though they are the most goddamned boring fvcks on the planet”
Maybe so, but my wife of 20 years loves me anyway. You should be so lucky.

8 Anonymous January 2, 2007 at 11:44 pm

Well, I’m sorry about his luck if he actually marries her! No wonder the poor guy wants to sleep every minute he is at home.

What a bitch!

9 Bruce Small January 3, 2007 at 12:10 am

My goodness, what a horrid personality. I can’t imagine being around someone that miserable. Run, doc, run, while you can. Out the door and down the street. Run.

10 DocMalk January 3, 2007 at 9:24 am

Hmm, just bitter. I’d suggest an SSRI. Hey, my wife is perfectly happy. Then again, she met me when I was on my long, health-related sabbatical from medicine.

11 Gasman January 3, 2007 at 9:50 pm

I gotta cut my residents some more slack for having tough lives if this is the kind of wife typical for doctor wife wanna-bees.

12 DBR January 4, 2007 at 9:36 am

Six weeks before my wedding to a recent medical school graduate (we got married one week after graduation) my best friend’s mother sat me down for a long talk.

The longtime (first and only)wife of a highly successful general and thoracic surgeon and mother of six, she had a lot of experience in being married to a doctor with all the good and bad things that go with it.

I remember her words almost exactly: “OK, this is what your life will be like. He won’t be home for Christmas or New Year’s. He won’t be there for your birthday – or your childrens’ birthdays. He’ll miss your anniversary. You’ll burn dinner more often than not because he won’t be there to eat it with the family. You’ll have to make most decisions about your lives on your own. And if you can’t handle all that and more WITHOUT MAKING HIM FEEL GUILTY ABOUT IT, don’t you DARE walk down that aisle. Because he’d MUCH rather be with you and his family, but he has something more important to take care of – his patients. And if you can’t deal with being second to that, you have no right to marry him.”

I assured her I’d give a lot of thought to what she said, and I did. Just before the wedding, I told her I COULD handle all that, and she smiled and said, “I know you can, dear – I just wanted you to hear the words.”

That was 23 years ago, and I’ve seen that everything she told me – and more – was true, PARTICULARLY the part about NOT MAKING HIM FEEL GUILTY for the things he’s missed -because he doesn’t need me to make him feel any WORSE about those things.

In gratitude for her guidance and honesty, I’ve passed her excellent advice along to every resident’s significant other I’ve met over my husband’s many years of training surgical residents. I’ve even passed it along to the newly married ones, and from time to time, one of the young wives (or husbands) will come back to me and thank me for telling them the truth – particularly the part about not making their physician spouse feel GUILTY about doing what they do and the things they’re forced to miss because of it.

Sure, sometimes it really sucks to be married to a surgeon. I jokingly tell non-medical friends that I’m a single parent. But when it sucks the most and I’m the most frustrated, he’s the LAST person I’d ever tell. Thank god for a good support system of other physicians’ spouses who GET it – we keep each other level. If you (or your spouse) don’t HAVE that support system, it’s doubly difficult – so it’s a good idea to seek out your local chapter of the county or state medical society Alliance to find other physicians’ spouses who GET it.

And in the meantime, my gut tells me that this angry young woman probably SHOULDN’T walk down the aisle with her fiance, no matter how much she thinks she loves him, because I’m afraid that she’ll be miserable and so will he….

13 Anonymous January 4, 2007 at 3:06 pm

What a sensible poster DBR is.
I sat down with my fiance years ago when I was still a medical student and had ‘the talk’ highlighting some of the realities of medicine as a career.
It was later followed by an amicable parting clearly driven by our discussion. It was heartwrenching to walk away from such love, but my next fiancee, a medical student, understood things perfectly. This has worked out quite well.

14 Anonymous April 18, 2007 at 12:46 pm

I’m engaged to a second year EM resident, and all I can say is…it isn’t easy. I think this rant was written in a moment of frustation, and while i wouldn’t have chosen her wording, i understand where she is coming from. Sometimes it’s hard to ‘live the relationship’ for both of you, especially when the rest of the world seems to take on the mindest that ‘he works so hard’ and his work/life/stress is somehow more valid than your own.

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