There is no question that being different is an asset in
medicine. Those who think outside the box consider diagnoses that others miss,
craft approaches to tough patients that others don’t conceive of, and come up
with solutions to systemic problems that can positively change medicine as a
whole. However, being different does not mean being unprofessional.
Yes, you want to distinguish yourself in your residency
personal statement, but you want to do that by showcasing your unique and
impressive pre-professional accomplishments, not by submitting a zany essay.
Think of it this way: It would be a shame to annihilate your career goal
because you’ve made a reader cringe when you were simply trying to write
imaginatively.
This is not to say your residency personal statement should
be boring! By using good writing techniques – crafting a catchy intro, using
robust language, even choosing a compelling sequence – you can write an
outstanding essay while still showcasing your accomplishments.
For the skeptic who insists, “Michelle, I’m special. I can
do something wild and not scare off the reader,” I will tell you the following
anecdote: In all of the time I read essays at Harvard, I remember only one
applicant who submitted a truly wacky essay who still received rave reviews.
(There was a lively discussion about his weird personal statement, however,
before he got the thumbs up.) This person was a true superstar applicant. He
came to our program, was loved by patients and staff alike, and eventually
became an emergency medicine chief resident. The point of this story? I
remember him because he was an outlier - the only applicant in years of
assessing candidates whose strange essay did NOT kill his candidacy. Much like
CPR, the vast majority of eccentric essay writers don't respond to heroic
efforts to save their candidacy.
Take home point: You
get one bullet. Don’t use it to shoot yourself in the foot.
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