Doctors: do you own time to read for pleasure?

I know that medical school is incredibly demanding and akin to slave labor at times. However, I was wondering whether doctors have time to read for fun? I love to read and consider it one of life's greatest pleasures. I own considered becoming a doctor, but if that career robs me of reading, that's a sacrifice I'm not willing to make. So, do you hold time to have fun?
Answers:
Now I have time to read, but not within med school. You do learn however, not to waste time, and if reading is vital to you, you will find time for it. Medical school is a different story. You could spend every waking minute of every day studying and it would not be plenty. Takes the "pleasure" out of pleasure reading to know you should be reading your texts.

I read a book every week or two, but now I prefer non-fiction.
I'm a medical technology student contained by my senior year right now. I graduate in 3 weeks.

During the last 2 years of this program, I never have time to read for fun. I was always swamped with class demands, research projects, oral presentations, exams, finals, clinical rotations, studying for my comprehensive exam or SOMETHING.

Seriously..clinical laboratory science robbed the ultimate 2 years of my life. I never had time to hang out next to my friends, read, or do anything for pleasure. I eat, slept, and breathe clinical laboratory science right now.
I absolutely had time for reading, and agree that it's a event of prioritizing and time management. There is always more studying you could be doing, another paper you could be reviewing, etc. It wouldn't hold been bearable for me if I hadn't made time for reading for pleasure as well.

Even now, contained by residency, I never leave the house without a book in my purse. I like to take whatever time I enjoy for lunch or dinner by myself, and I don't read NEJM articles during meal breaks, even if that's just 15 or 20 minutes out of my day. For me, that's merely a sanity saver. I also read on the subway (one big advantage over commuting by sports car, as far as I'm concerned).

Whatever you have fun doing, you need to make some time to do. Source(s): Pediatric neurology resident.
Of course. One thing something like the training: you get good at time management. I'll even read a bit, or piddle around on the computer similar to this, during lulls in the ER.

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