I come from a family which loved music - my father was an oboe player in an orchestra in Poland (before migrating to Australia), my mum was (and sometimes still is) an (amateur) singer, and my brother and I both had music lessons from a young age.
Not sure how this compares to international music education systems, but music exams here have 8 grades (AMEB). I finished grade 8 on the piano, and grade 5 in flute and music theory. By then I was 16 years old, and the end of high school was fast approaching, and I had to decide what to do with my future career.
Feeling that I didn't have what it took to be a professional musician, and that I would not have survived in the world of professional music (which was far too competitive and aggressive and elitist and full of politics and back-stabbing), I decided to put the music to one side and studied medicine instead. (Yes, really...it is MUCH easier and more friendly.)
It was not until about 2 years ago, when I had finished all my postgraduate stuff and GP exams and settled in to work at my clinic, that I started to get my passion for music back. (I discovered how many frustrated would-be musicians there are in the medical profession!)
So now I work as a humble GP to feed the body, and play music in my spare(?) time to feed the soul. I try to practice an hour here and there when I can, as well as accumulating an ever-growing collection of CD's and a library of sheet music. I play piano and flute; my husband plays piano, organ and accordion. My brother plays some keyboard, as well as flute, viola (sometimes) and nyckelharpa. I share a clinic with another doctor who plays violin in the Australian Doctors' Orchestra and sings Schubert-Lieder. Another doctor who works a few miles away plays the cello. Unfortunately, times when we can get together to actually play are few and far between.
I recently acquired an alto flute

and I am busy transcribing Schubert's "Arpeggione" sonata for it.
I'm afraid that much of my music fits the description in my signature, but I love playing and it keeps me from going insane.
aldona
“all great composers wrote music that could be described as ‘heavenly’; but others have to take you there. In Schubert’s music you hear the very first notes, and you know that you’re there already.” - Steven Isserlis