The Lie We Tell Med Students About “Choosing Right”
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This week on Social Rounds, we take on one of medicine’s favorite lies: that you’re supposed to know exactly who you are, and what you want, before you even become a fully formed adult.
Inspired by a Doximity op-ed telling students to “choose specialties based on their future selves,” we ask a more honest question:
What if that’s impossible?
We break down:
- Why “know yourself in your 20s” is fundamentally flawed advice
- The problem with choosing a specialty like it’s a lifelong identity contract
- How medicine traps people into decisions they’re not developmentally ready to make
- Why values change—and what that means for your career
- The real solution: mobility, not perfect foresight
And yes—what it actually feels like when your dreams do come true… and you’re still not satisfied.
This is not about leaving medicine.
It’s about having the freedom to evolve inside it.
Because the goal isn’t to choose perfectly.
It’s to stop building a life you’re not allowed to change.
Hosted by:
Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat
Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd
Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective