NOT SURE ABOUT MED SCHOOL?
Its been about 2 months since school started, and I still
don’t regret going to Med School.
Through the weeks, different horror stories came up about
students who got kicked out, or realized
by the end of their 1st year in med school that it just wasn’t for
them.
I was just sitting through it all and thought, can that
ever happen to me?
Well it can.
I just said that there IS a possibility that later on in
med school that I might realize that I don’t really want it, or that I’m not
made for it; but the truth is, I want to be here, and I have to be here.
Horror stories:
Ø
Med school is hard, and it will suck the social
life out of you.
Ø
If you are not smart, don’t go into med school.
Ø
The professors/doctors are terrors.
Ø
Average sleeping time for med students is about
2 hours a day.
Ø
Its expensive and time consuming.
Ø
Your classmates might not be there by the next
school year.
***all pictures included are not mine, just got them off the internet. http://www.flickr.com/photos/sylvar/6955985416/
The truth is...
Ø
Med school is hard, and it will suck the social
life out of you.
Its hard only if you think it
is, and if you don’t set your priorities right, it will suck all the life out
of you. Honestly, med students still have fun, get drunk, and party. With all
the exams, practicals, quizzes, and workload, it just gives us more reasons to
unload and celebrate.
Ø
Its expensive and time consuming.
Expensive,
yes, you can see my previous blog on med school expenses for that. Time
consuming, absolutely. Sometimes 24 hours isn’t enough to tackle everything you
wanted to.
Ø
If you are not smart, don’t go into med school.
If you are not COMMITTED or at
least DEDICATED (in general), DONT GO INTO MED SCHOOL.
A lot of students here never
planned on taking up Medicine. Some were forced by parents, some, just wanted
to study a little more, and some just want to be kick ass doctors.
But in Med School, I will
reiterate, you need to be committed. Just baseline COMMITTED.
You don’t have to like Med
School 100% of the time, you can have your down periods too ( like I do,
sometimes I just get frustrated with certain subjects and think, wtf am I doing
here anyways?) . But the most important thing you can do is STAY COMMITTED.
First off, you
owe it to your parents. Medicine is no joke. Php100k+ is no joke. You can feed
a 100 families for a week with that money. The least you can do is study hard.
I’m not saying
that if you do fully, and truly realize that Med school is not for you, don’t
quit. If you are absolutely, 100% sure that its not for you, go.
But if there
is even a .05% that you still want to be a doctor, I say fight for that .05%
and let it grow along with your commitment.
In med school,
there are lot of smart people. But being smart can only get you so far.
COMMITMENT and DEDICATION is the key.
Ø
The professors/doctors are terrors.
Partially true. I think all
doctors/lecturers/professors can become terrors if you don’t listen,
understand, and participate in class. Whats there to be scared about anyway?
That there is a graded recitation? Then why didn’t you study? That they can
shame you in front of the class? Then why didn’t you put in the extra effort to
study harder, or at extremes, grow a set of balls in that moment?
I honestly think that Med
School, to a certain extent, should scare you, terrify you, and turn your life
upside down. Why? Because in the real world, when you are actually practicing,
there will be moments where it does exactly that—life or death situation,
conflicting schedules or parties, horrible patients, you’re getting sued for
malpractice, etc.
But here at DLSHSI, the professors
are nurturing. Yes, I used the word nurturing. They will guide you every step
of the way, they will get mad you but will let you know that its for your own
good, they will be there for you when you need help (academic, financial,
personal, etc).
Dont mistake nurturing for
babying. Babying implies that you can sit on your ass all day and get spoonfed,
and when you fail or meet an obstacle, the professor does it for you. No.
Nurturing, they help you grow,
they encourage you.
With the professors here at HSI,
all I have to say is that they are AWESOME. Want to know why? Well, enrol here.
Ø
Your classmates might not be there for the next
school year.
I personally haven’t encountered
this yet since we’re just 2 months into the school year, but upper years have
told us that there are cases of classmates who just left.
Some didn’t continue medicine
because they realized they really didn’t like it.
Some just took a leave of
absence—maybe they got burnt out, tired, or just needed to step away and see the
big picture.
AND some just failed too many
subjects that they had to get kicked out.
Ø
Average sleeping time for med students is about
2 hours a day.
True IF you didn’t study
beforehand and is used to cramming. I have classmates who have time to go to
the gym, work out, join afterschool activities, party, and whatnot. They
learned how to manage their workload.
***all pictures included are not mine, just got them off the internet.
As one doctor/professor said,
“There is not such thing as time management.” Really? Well he does have a
point, you cant really manage the time, you can only manage your tasks.
Study a week earlier, tackle the
hard subjects first when you’re still fresh, learn new techniques for studying
at the same time. Try to discover what learning style works for you. DONT CRAM.
I mean, you owe it to your patient to be the best damn doctor that they
have ever encountered. Am I right?
I LOVE the bumper sticker!!!
ReplyDeleteYou just made me fill out my application form at hsi.. hahaha.. ^^
ReplyDeleteCramming might be inevitable in your second year though
ReplyDeleteHey, just wanted to say thanks for this post. I just got my acceptance letter from HSI last week and was pretty ambivalent on enrolling (i.e. paying for the RF) once and for all. I really feel like I'm not smart enough for medicine but this post made me have some confidence in myself. So really, thanks for that :-)
ReplyDelete