I'm in my 2nd year of dentistry (out of a total of 5), and I'm having doubts regarding my prospective career. It's a great job, and the research is really thrilling, but the classes are killing me.
If it were this alone, then my advise would be to start crackin' books. I've dragged a friend of mine who had similar doubts thourgh a semester. He picked up after than, and managed to finish almost a year ahead of me. Even though he's no longer interested in working in our field of study, he managed to land a well-paying temporary job in the field while he looks for other work. He's come to realise that the fact that he
finished a decent university-level education is worth more to a random company than the actual field of research. And I should think dentistry is a decent educuation. Over here in The Netherlands, it's the one field that absolutely ensures you of a job, since we have WAY too few dentists.
I also definitely don't see myself working in a clinic. If I did that, I'd probably end up bulking up the already large # of suicides among dentists.
If this is really the case, however, then you should likely quit. If you think (even if it is partly in jest) that you might off yourself if you become a dentist, then it isn't worth it. It's better to be a happy low-paid streetsweeper than an unhappy high-paid dentist.
On the other hand, some courses are really interesting (admittedly, these courses are all much more about basics science than clinic).
This may provide some information about what type of studies you'd rather pursue, I think.
I'm gonna consult a psychologist to try and figure out whether my lack of concentration and weird anxiety-esque feeling is due to the fact that I don't feel dentistry is my thing, or if there is another reason like depression or something (which would probably encourage me to try another semester with my new, improved and better-concentrated self).
By all means, talk to one. Experience shows, however, that most of the time, you really already know the answer and just need the psychologist to get you to the point where you can be fair with yourself.
As it is, I'm probably gonna take the next semester off (instead of flunking it anyway), and decide what I'm going to do during that time.
This above all, sounds like a good plan.
PS. I know that, objectively, leaving DMD would be one of the worst decision in my life ever, and that many people would really like to be in dentistry
There is no objectivity in this matter. If you leave it, and become happy one way or another, how could it be ' objectively'Â bad? The fact that many people would envy your current position, is hardly a reason to stay. I'm now forced to choose between several jobs myself, effectively plotting a course for the rest of my life. Realising that many people in Asia who work in sweatshops for a buck a day would literally kill to be in that position, doesn't make MY choice any easier. Forget about what other people think/say (or even worse: what you ASSUME they would think/say) and focus on YOU.
Summarising: None of us can tell you to quit or stay, but: do, within reason, the thing that
you want to do, keeping in mind that you need to be able to provide for yourself with it eventually, and realise that every decision has its ups and downs (such as classes you hate) which you'll have to see through (even in you choose a different career).
Also: besides a psychologist, isn't there some student counceller or career coach you could talk to?