I like drugs. I like to talk to people about their drugs. I like thinking about drugs and how I can use them to make people better. I don't like touching people. I don't like having to know each little anatomic detail (e.g. where the flexor hallucis longus inserts, what organs the superior mesenteric vein drains, etc.) I wouldn't be able to survive a medical residency; I like sleep too much and I hate getting paid that little for so much work. I don't want to tell a patient that there's nothing more I can do for them, and I don't want to pronounce death. I don't want to perform procedures. I don't want to pay an arm and a leg in malpractice insurance. There are a lot of things that attract me to medicine, but even more things that repel me. It isn't what it looks like on ER, House, Gray's Anatomy, etc.
I think humility is a big part of our job in that we are here for medication safety and need to distance ourselves from the pissing contest and just do whats best for the patient. MDs will always make the most money in Healthcare, thats how the hierarchy works. Ive seen them talk down to pharmacists, rip nurses apart, and call people useless midlevels.
First year residents get a bit of this out of their system early on. The rigors of residency beats it out of them. I've worked with several physicians who said they came around when a pharmacist "caught a mistake and saved my ass." So let them talk for now. They'll figure it out eventually that we are a team.