For a long time, I thought I would like to be a doctor. Such a good profession. So explicitly good. Never a waste of time.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I always knew I wanted to be a doctor, but I also knew that being a doctor meant more than treating just the patient in front of you.
For as long as I can really remember, I wanted to be a doctor.
I'm from a family of doctors, and I think they really wanted me to be a doctor. I even sort of assumed I would be a doctor.
I wanted to be a doctor since I was five.
I really wanted to be a doctor, until my freshman year of college when I realized that while I was good at chemistry and biology, I really wasn't feeling challenged by it.
I was involved in music, acting, and some running, but my firm wish was to become a doctor. That was the formative age when I had decided on the pattern of my career.
To become a doctor, you spend so much time in the tunnels of preparation - head down, trying not to screw up, trying to make it from one day to the next - that it is a shock to find yourself at the other end, with someone shaking your hand and asking how much money you want to make.
I wanted to be a doctor that I might be able to work without having to talk because for years I had been giving myself out in words.
I wanted to be a doctor in sports medicine; I was into sailing and all that sort of thing.
I always wanted to be a medical doctor, and I never thought of business.