Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Grumbles in the Night

In this day and age, it's hard not to compare yourself to other riders, and lately, I've been finding myself regretting my career path and wishing I had chosen a more financially rewarding path in favor of bigger jumps and better horses.

Like many riders, I can certainly be prideful, and used to consider myself a competent rider. I'm just now beginning to find my footing over 2'6" jumps on Lexie, and, when I remember 4 years ago, I was schooling 3'-3'6", it stings. I almost feel like my riding has regressed. I've been so busy studying, working, and now, traveling to externships, for the last 3 years that my riding has suffered greatly. 

Is it normal? Probably.
Am I making the best choice for both my riding career and work career? Maybe.

I plan on putting financial stability on hold for another four to five to six years to pursue an internship, possibly specialty internship, and residency all in the pursuit of becoming a boarded criticalist. What does this mean? Four to six years of making a very very low salary, while student loan interest accumulates on itself. Four to six years of living uncomfortably paycheck to paycheck working 80-120 hours a week, all in hopes of sitting through yet another massive exam in addition to case reports, and research papers to add another handful of letters to the end of my name. Is it worth it?

I'm not sure. For the first time, what I want, what I think I should want, and what I can actually achieve are all diverging. Do I want to work away for pennies, unable to ride until my student debt is paid off? Or hit the ground running in the work force to fund horses and give up on my dreams of becoming board certified in critical care?

This is more of vent or a cry into the void for guidance. I'm not sure where I'm headed, and that uncertainty is scary to me.



- K & C & L

5 comments :

  1. I'm in the same boat, though only in my first year of vet school. I'd like to specialize as well but it's so daunting with how much debt we graduate with to take such a low paying job for 2-3 years! I'm not really sure I want to put horses on the back burner either, I'm afraid I wouldn't get back into them in the future...

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    1. Skimming back through my blog (clinical rotations put you in a time warp)- I think a lot of equestrian vet students are in the same situation. Some put their horses on the back burner... and some don't. I'm one of the more intense ones, but I'm not alone, and neither are you!

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  2. I have definitely felt like even though I have achieved much in the last couple years, there was a huge swath of dead time as I survived the recession and then tried to pull myself out of the hole. Now even though I am achieving some goals, I feel like my riding as suffered a lot because of Grad School and my inability to ride more. Will I benefit when I graduate... I'm sitting here and realizing I have no fucking idea. That is a scary place to be as you well know. But in some cases I also realize, wow I've been through a lot already so I know that I can survive it even if its not what I first expected.

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    1. Undergrad is weird, because for most, you know where you're sort of going, and where you'll sort of end up. Grad/professional school is like being in a maze with no idea of where you're going or where you'll end up. We'll all get through it! <3

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  3. Nothing but hugs and offerings of support <3

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