What is the purpose of your study of medicine?

I really didn't have those lofty metaphysical ambitions when I volunteered in high school. I chose clinical medicine for a reason: I was born in a family with a strong medical atmosphere (my grandfather is a Chinese doctor and my father is a western doctor). Because these two elders have both medical ethics and medical skills, cured patients will bring their own agricultural and sideline products to express their gratitude, and those native eggs will become volunteers for the college entrance examination that will affect their lives. I'm glad I met my tutor when I was in graduate school. It is one thing to learn professional knowledge, but the most important thing is to learn to be a man. Tutors belong to others' eyes and will not come to work. They focus on their own academics, strictly follow the guidelines for diagnosis and treatment, and never cross them. My postgraduate major is urology. When I graduated, I just entered the newly established reproductive medicine department of the hospital and worked in reproductive andrology. In China, a country with a deep infiltration of traditional culture, fertility is an unavoidable topic. In the past few years, I have seen many patients hollowing themselves out economically and mentally in order to have offspring. As a doctor, in the face of patients on the verge of collapse, you can't lose your temper. In the face of patients with violent tendencies, you should learn to manage your emotions. The work in recent years is also a physical and mental cultivation for myself, and the initial intention of treating diseases has never been forgotten.