Operating rooms tend to get loud.
When you've watched doctor shows on television, surgery scenes are always intense, aren't they? Doctors are painstakingly working on their patients, the room is filled with silence, except for the occasional indication that the surgeon is ready for another tool. These scenes are great for dramatic television programs, but they really don't come very close to what happens in reality. Operating rooms are generally quite loud, and surgeons are known to let their hair down, crack jokes with their teams, and even play heavy metal music. It might be a little bit shocking, but it's the truth.
Surgeons are paranoid about leaving tools behind.
If you've been contemplating a career in medicine, then your eyes are probably glued to any type of news regarding a malpractice case. You want to be sure you're not implicated in such a case, and surgeons feel the same way. How many articles have you read where pieces of gauze, scissors or other sponges get left behind inside of a patient's body after surgery? If you become a surgical technician, your job will be to make sure all of the correct tools are present, both before and after surgery. It's an important job, so don't be surprised when the surgeon you're working with asks you to count everything again and again.
Forget everything you ever learned about the human body from anatomy class.
When you look at an anatomy book, the pictures seem cut and dry. In fact, the inside of the human body looks fairly neat when you base your views off of what you see in books. The problem is that, while human anatomy books are good, the pictures aren't exactly true to form. The inside of the human body is much more complex than what you may think. Veins and arteries tend to vary as far as their location goes, and just as we all have our differences on the outside, we all have some minor differences on the inside too. Human anatomy will teach you the basics of what you need to know, but there's really nothing quite like real life experience.
The patient's stitches are vitally important.
Once you begin working with a surgeon, you may notice that he spends a significant amount of time working on his patients' internal organs, but you'll also notice that he spends almost as much time stitching up the outside of the patient once the surgery has been completed. That's because patients and their family members tend to judge the success of a surgery (at least in part) by how the stitch looks from the outside. Of course, the surgeon wants to be sure everything is done correctly, but they also want to reduce the look of any scars their patients may develop. When it comes to surgery, neatness really counts!
Most surgeons are thankful they work with people under anesthesia.
You might think that the "easier" physician positions would be seeing children in a pediatric facility or helping minor cuts, bruises, and colds at a local urgent care clinic. However, once you start talking to a few surgeons, you'll realize that's not the case at all. They generally love what they do because many of them lack the patience it takes to deal with these minor ailments. They love that they don't have to prescribe antibiotics or treat young children with strep throat all the time. Surgeons embrace what they do with all their hearts.