I'm
a PGY2 who started off residency last year in an Ob-Gyn program while
about 25 weeks pregnant. While not ideal, I thought I could make this
work -- there had been an resident a few years before me who had a baby
during the fall of her intern year, and many residents in the program
(female dominated) had babies during residency. My program directors
and co-residents were extremely supportive, and I luckily had a very
easy pregnancy, healthy baby, and smooth recovery.
While
being pregnant was easy, though, going back to work was harder than I
had thought. Many days, I was at work for 14 hours a day, plus I'd work
weekends or nightfloat, and this would go on for months at a time.
Despite how much I was working, I hardly violated duty hours and I
really did enjoy what I was doing and hardly thought about missing out
on things at home because I loved my job. Meanwhile, my husband was
left home alone for most evenings and weekends with a baby, feeling
unsupported and exhausted. He's a wonderful father and in general a
helpful, loving husband, but he grew increasingly disgruntled with the
situation, and soon we were constantly bickering over my terrible
schedule. Our families, while on the same coast as us, are hours away.
We live in an apartment, so there was no space for a live-in nanny, and
our daytime nanny fell through, so our son started daycare (which we
all love). I offered to hire more help for the nights and weekends, but
my husband resisted, saying it was unfair to deprive our son of his
mother. Honestly, I think my husband was just feeling overworked,
exhausted, unappreciated, and unhappy in his own job, and I actually
think he felt that even though I was at work from 5:30 am to 7:30 or 8 pm many days and weekends, my time away from home was actually a "break" from having to take care of a new baby.
Tension
at home worsened after I got into a car accident while coming home from
nightfloat during the beginning of PGY2. No one was hurt, but my
husband was extremely upset -- not that I damaged the car -- but that I
was willing to risk my life for the sake of a "job." I tried to explain
that I loved this job. I asked about what his expectations were. I
insisted that other people have kids in residency and make it work. It
was all to no avail. When he basically threatened that our marriage
would eventually end and he would seek custody of our baby if this
situation continued, I tried to negotiate a part-time position with my
residency director, but it wasn't possible. Long story short, I ended
up taking a month off from the program, talking to lots of other people,
and then switching into Psychiatry, which is the other field I was
considered during 4th year of med school.
My quality of
life is much better, but I still feel sad when thinking about this whole
ordeal. I'm adjusting to my new program, and 4 months into it, I feel
like I'm getting the hang of things, but I know deep down it's not what I
100% really wanted to do. And every time I open my inbox and see
emails from ACOG, or open my mailbox and find an Ob-Gyn journal, or run
into a med student who I worked with as an Ob-Gyn resident and have to
explain why they're now seeing me on their Psych rotation (I stayed at
the same institution), or run into my former Ob-Gyn attendings or
co-residents, or see friends posting on Facebook about how much they
loooove their residencies or are doing really cool things, it's like
opening the wound all over again -- the hurt, sadness, anger, and
embarrassment all come flooding back. It's especially upsetting to me
when I see other female residents, especially surgical ones, who are
having their second babies while in training! I know there must be more
going on in their relationships that what meets the eyes, but it makes
me sad that other people's husbands must be so much more supportive than
mine.
So, I guess I'm
writing to ask: has anyone else had to make huge sacrifices (such as
switching residencies) in order to save a relationship or pacify a
partner? And if so, how did you handle this? The resentment towards my
husband is fading as I'm beginning to see how wonderful it is to have a
life outside of work, but I'm wondering if I'll always feel a little
sad about having to make this switch?
Thank you so much for your support and advice,
Anonymous