"Physics engineer" was the standard answer I gave as a boy to the standard question about my future. The only reason was that I wanted to follow in my father's footsteps. But in my teenage years it became clear that I had less talent for, say, geometry than for languages. I was especially impressed with the French teacher who not only enthused classes about literature but also gave reading tips pitched at our age: not (yet) Balzac, Flaubert or Proust, but Gide, Camus, de Saint Exupéry and Fournier. I did not fancy becoming a school teacher myself, while I had no aptitude for writing fiction. Medicine, especially psychiatry, seemed a convenient middle road between physics and literature. I knew very little about it, apart from admiring our family general practitioner, the father of a classmate. Studying medicine in Leiden initially came down to alternating periods of intense rowing and...]]>