Essay sample library > I Want to be a Neurosurgeon

I Want to be a Neurosurgeon

2023-11-14 08:03:04

In this article / report, I will do my best to explain my possible career path. I want to become many things. I am a first grade primary school student, I want to become a super hero, and this hope has existed for a while. Later on, when I was ten years old, my brain accepted new ideas, explored the world around me, and started thinking about things other than comics, I wonder if it will be a world superhero think. I began thinking about other work such as firefighters, police officers, engineers, construction workers.

I want to be a neurosurgeon. I thought the brain was so unique and mysterious. I am absolutely devoted to devoting my life to the brain and what is behind it. But before I thought of concentrating on the brain, I always had a place of science. This topic is not well known, but I have a lot of knowledge about science everyday. This is a field that will never be completed. Science has grown over the years, I know that I will grow with it. I hope to contribute as much as possible so that future generations can continue to work.

As a neurosurgeon, I do not believe in the phenomenon of sudden death. I grew up in the scientific community and I am the son of a neurosurgeon. I walked along my father's path and became an academic neurosurgeon who taught at Harvard Medical School and other universities. I understand what happens to the brain as people approach death. And I always believe there is a good scientific account of the heavenly physical movements described by people who hardly escape death. The brain is surprisingly complex, but a very subtle mechanism. The amount of oxygen that it receives is reduced by a minimum amount and it reacts. It is not surprising that those experiencing serious trauma come back from strange story experiences. But that does not mean where they traveled.

The conjugation of verbs is also becoming confusing. This is correct: "I am a neurosurgeon", "I am a neurosurgeon", or "I was a neurosurgeon, will you be" again? Graham Green once said that life had been living in the first 20 years, and the rest are simply reflections. So, do you live in a state of tension now? Have I entered past completeness beyond the current tense? The future tense seems to be empty, but there is no harmony on the lips of other people. A couple of months ago, I celebrated my 15th college party at Stanford University and stood out in a group of four people drinking a shining pink sun glass under the horizon. - "Let's meet within 25 hours!" - Answer "Well ... it may not be so" It seems very rude.