Clinical Psychology
Why I Chose Clinical Psychology as a Profession
Clinical psychology was not an immediately clear academic or career path for me, not that it was unappealing in any regard but simply that it took some time to come to my attention as an area of focus that was particularly interesting. Studying psychology as an undergraduate definitely piqued my curiosity and engaged a passion for application and interpersonal engagement with what I had learned and had started to experience, yet it still took several years following my undergraduate studies for me to develop a true understanding of what clinical psychology involved as both an academic and a practical/professional discipline. Several more years of semi-professional inquiry found me increasingly drawn to clinical psychology largely because I enjoyed the challenges presented in terms of interpersonal skills and especially in terms of the mental puzzles one was routinely confronted with in anything but a routine manner. Seen in this light, I suppose I can trace my aptitude for clinical psychology back much further than my interesting the field.
Since my childhood, I have been a tenacious puzzle-solver. Logic problems, word problems, complex games that require both strategy and finesse to reach a positive outcome -- these were the hobbies and pastimes with which I occupied myself. I enjoy being able to tackle a problem, and while I greatly enjoy the ability clinical psychology afford to help people it is the specific manner in which this helping occurs in a clinical psychology setting that truly draws me to its study and profession: clinical psychology is full of complex problems that require real and practical solutions, and reaching these solutions typically requires a dedicated mind and a willfully engaged spirit or drive -- not in any sort...
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