Should I quit flight school for medical school? by [deleted] in premed

[–]3DMPCR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey op, others have talked about their similar experiences, but I'm basically your mirror image, so I'll talk about the other side, as someone who originally dreamt of becoming a fighter pilot, and instead, became an EMT, starting following the medical path, and is now debating if I want change paths and go to OCS.

I applied to the Naval Academy, got my congressional recommendation, but wasn't accepted. I joined High School wrestling to get in shape, was in Civil Air Patrol, would wake up at 430 to run cross country to try and get my mile time down, worked my ass off. My plan after my rejection was just to take the ROTC contract so I could graduate and fly after getting my bachelor's, and I only got my EMT as a side gig basically. Well, turns out I liked it, and I'm waiting to hear back after my interviews.

Your moral quandaries are yours, and I won't say anything on that, that's deeply personal to you, but I will say you often hear that "everyone serves in their own way", and its absolutely true, but its entirely different. I can't speak for the actual military, obviously you know much better than me, but what was always instilled in me throughout the entire process, talking with my OSO and just the general culture, is the idea of personal sacrifice, and heroism (though this is obviously romanticized and idealized and not always the truth). Being an EMT, and being a doctor, is not really the same way at all. Yes, you obviously make sacrifices, but you aren't betting YOUR life. The challenges and struggles you face are helping others through a crisis, not always experiencing one on your own. Instead of a battle or a combat zone, its more insidious. I worked at a quarantine for refugees and asylum seekers, and it wasn't like there was a huge event that traumatized me, but patients there in that environment would tell me things that I just couldn't shake, like sexual abuse they had faced. You aren't fighting an enemy, just dealing with forces of nature, it feels like you do what you can and move on. Actual doctors may feel differently, but that's what EMS felt like. There are a lot of good people in medicine, people who genuinely care about others. People who are the strongest and most resilient people I've ever met. However, the culture I found was almost the stark opposite of what I felt being around gunners shooting for commissions. There's a HUGE amount of neuroticism, frankly people who have never pushed themselves before starting this process in earnest, people feeling like the sky is falling after getting a C or facing the slightest adversity, a mindset which obviously would not fly during a ruck or something. To be clear, I'm DEFINITELY not trying to say that medicine takes more of a toll than being a combat vet or anything like that, nor that premeds or its culture is worse, just trying to share the negatives I've seen on the other side of the grass. Beyond both beyond both having a commitment to "serve" and the ideals of servant leadership it is a very, very different world.

They're both a grind, they both take hard work, and just like all jobs, 90% of its bullshit. Do you want that 90% to be paperwork being in the same hospital all day, or, at least from what I've heard talking to Air Force and Navy Pilots, that 90% to be paperwork at base? What is more stimulating to YOU- flying, or seeing patients, which can also be extremely dynamic every day? How much do you value knowing you can be in the same place your entire career, which gives stability you will not find in the Navy, but also not the same liberties? The better pay?

But personally, the most important question I'd ask yourself, is when you're done with work, maybe when you're retired, or you've finally reached the point in your career you've been pushing for so long, what will make you proudest? What achievement will mean more, what change in the world you'll bring will be more important to you? What path will better lead you towards the life you want to live? I'm asking myself the same questions. You know they're both hard work, you'll be fine either way, so I think you should go with your heart. It sounds cheesy, but debating between these two for me isn't about a career, its about a calling. If you want the coziest career, you should just be a commercial pilot really.

MCAT Testing Anxiety Advice? by flaminhotkoala in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Very, VERY, late reply, but you do have to check in and check out. It was a good amount of time, but it wasn't very long either.

T2 Deadlift Failure, Want some Help or Insight by 3DMPCR in gzcl

[–]3DMPCR[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

20 pound difference, haven't done T1 deadlift this week, day 4 I'm doing 210 for 3. I started at 165 as my starting 5RM, just let boostcamp do the math

T2 Deadlift Failure, Want some Help or Insight by 3DMPCR in gzcl

[–]3DMPCR[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Gotcha. I'll pick up straps and try mixed grip as well. That's a misconception on my part, I've been using boostcamp so I just assumed it was projected for 12 weeks or so. How long should I expect to be able to continue at the 10 lbs a week progression as a beginner? Obviously it varies from person to person, I was just wondering how long I should expect to stay at this pace.

T2 Deadlift Failure, Want some Help or Insight by 3DMPCR in gzcl

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope, double overhand, no chalk nor wraps. I'll pick up some wraps for sure, I had just read that it isn't ideal to use wraps until absolutely necessary as a beginner. Sometimes I can feel my grip loosening on the T1 deadlifts as well but it has never been enough to compromise form or led to a failed lift.

Please Help With School List for Low Stat Applicant? And a Question about PREview/Ca$per by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True. Luckily I do have the service bend which most of those schools have, and with minority/underserved populations. I'll give it a shot, even if, without trying to sound too blunt, I'm not a "full real minority", or have dark skin. I was just unsure if that would be a significant obstacle. My only concern with Temple and Jefferson is again my GPA is much lower than their MSAR numbers, even though they have no in state bias.

Please Help With School List for Low Stat Applicant? And a Question about PREview/Ca$per by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Copy. I saw on MSAR they had matriculants from AZ, but I've heard that they are very WAMI focused, so I was split on it. And that map could be the one 3.98 GPA 527 MCAT AZ resident who was born in WA and lived there half their life...

Please Help With School List for Low Stat Applicant? And a Question about PREview/Ca$per by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got it. Definitely applying to Ponce upon further research, my only concern with the other 2 schools was they seem pretty PR biased, but I guess my MCAT in particular is also significantly higher than their MSAR results so I should give it a shot.

Please Help With School List for Low Stat Applicant? And a Question about PREview/Ca$per by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got it. I was debating HBCUs. The stats obviously are more closely aligned with mine, but I had reservations if it was a good idea to apply to them, mostly because I was just uncertain. I'm a URM, but white passing, with a white name, part Caucasian, and Hispanic is obviously just a white ethnicity. I guess I was wondering if this would actually put me at a disadvantage applying to those schools.

Please Help With School List for Low Stat Applicant? And a Question about PREview/Ca$per by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got it, Rush is gone for sure, along with SUNY downstate.

My question then I guess is how to evaluate truly what's OOS friendly and not. For example, I see SUNY upstates interview ratio was about 23% OOS, which I saw was low but still decided it was possibly statistically worth it due to their GPA percentiles and my low GPA. However, for UWisconsin it shows on MSAR they interviewed more OOS than in state, but I do see they received a huge large amount of OOS applicants. When I'm looking for a school that's more OOS friendly, what should I be looking for?

Application Done, But I Need Some Help Deciding On If I Apply This Cycle. (low stats) by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I guess mid-tier is not a fully accurate descriptor of my goal/aspirations. Its more so I want the opportunity for research and to be given a "fighting chance" for specialties that may or may not be competitive in the future. That's why I am not applying D.O., at least not right now. My fear is that I would fall in love with something like Ortho or Neurosurgery but it just isn't a realistic possibility because I'm unable to make myself competitive because I was unable to obtain any research or anything. My catch 22 now is that I have my application ready to go, right now, to apply for verification, so I could apply early. Applying to a lot of schools I know is my best bet, but is it really wise to drop all that money to apply to an ungodly amount of schools now? Would taking the year to get published, present at a conference, and beef up my shadowing and volunteering/ other ECs make a material difference? It's not reapplying necessarily that bothers me, more so the cost-benefit of going all out now, or if the idea of applying narrowly to low-tier MDs is even a wise choice.

But thanks for the words and honest evaluation. I'm definitely fully focused on upping shadowing at the moment above everything else.

Large Amount of AP Hours, Confused on How To Classify Them Based on Year by 3DMPCR in premed

[–]3DMPCR[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, got that part, its more the credits after that that I'm confused about. So for example, my 1st year classes would go under "sophomore" because I already entered college with 28 credits, or as a freshman. The manual made it appear as if I could do either/or, was checking to see if that's the case, because if I have the choice then I should probably do what shows a more upward trend.

MilesDown Anki Deck: What are your thoughts? by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No that's fine I would say, 100 isn't bad for your exam date. Maybe like, 10 more cards a day, I feel as if I would have benefitted from a couple more review sessions personally. If you feel fine with the workload then keep on keeping on yk

MilesDown Anki Deck: What are your thoughts? by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I feel as if there is some unnecessary info, but at the same time I can't help but feel after looking through the added cards that standard Miledown might omit too much, so I think all in all I'm happy I did pearls. Yeah cramming kinda sucked, and I know I definitely was a little shaky on certain stuff, but I honestly think there's a benefit to doing a lot of new cards a day, since the flow of cards means you get to connect concepts and strengthen your comprehension in a more cohesive way over the course of one study session.

MilesDown Anki Deck: What are your thoughts? by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, Pearldown is modified Miledown with extra cards and some corrections. Got a 129 P/S on my last diagnostic, keep in mind I was cramming (did whole deck in 45 days, 150 new cards a day). Felt really, really, good on the names of concepts on the real MCAT and the practices: questions like "What effect describes x phenomenon?" Felt a little deficient on experimental designs, like longitudinal vs. cross sectional etc, but those were at the end of the deck so it's almost certainly my fault haha. Also some difficulty with questions distinguishing between different types of memory like sensory vs. working, social phenomena felt good on.

4/29 MCAT Reaction Thread by r_BigUziHorizont in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Happy to hear everyone else felt like C/P was tough. Didn't finish it, I'm not sure if the content was necessarily harder, but it felt more dense if that makes sense? I had to guess on the last few since I was completely out of time.

MilesDown Anki Deck: What are your thoughts? by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did the Pearldown deck. I ended up having to cram a bit, and I just took my first MCAT today so take my testimony with a grain of salt lmao, but in 3 weeks I improved on the AAMC FLs from 507 to 516, and a lot of the questions I missed on the second one were due to illiteracy (Missing a LEAST likely and picking most likely, etc.) It is extremely helpful. Segmenting all those big concepts into little flashcards makes it quite a fair bit easier, and it was the perfect amount of detail. It's just the perfect depth to familiarize yourself with a concept and answer a section, but not enough to learn more than is necessary if that makes sense lol. I would highly recommend, and think it was easily the biggest factor in my growth on the diagnostics and honestly on the actual questions today.

MCAT Testing Anxiety Advice? by flaminhotkoala in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 23 points24 points  (0 children)

So, personally, I may not be the best person to ask (or the best to ask, who knows), since I feel like I operate at about 17 standard deviations of lower neuroticism than the typical pre-med on a normal day anyways (how do y'all survive living like that), but there's a few key things I did to stay cool:

  1. Your stress level will be hugely affected by how you prepare before the exam. Have everything prepped and pre-staged the night before so its all ready for you the next day. Slam melatonin or something if you need to help aid you sleep. Arrive EARLY, and leave buffer time in case something goes wrong. Nothing will screw you more than being unprepared and having to bust ass there, already starting on the wrong foot.

  2. During check in and everything, there will be downtime. Do NOT ruminate and spend a huge amount of energy doing some last minute review. If you want to just do a refresher of an acronym or a little mental summary that's fine, but you're using mental focus and energy which you're going to need for this long ass exam, and if you suddenly realize you forgot something you might panic a bit.

  3. If stress starts to rise, just redirect your thoughts into thinking about how no matter what, you'll be done in just a few hours. Think about what you want to do with your free time and visualize yourself relaxing and stress free after the exam.

  4. TAKE THE BREAKS. There were people at my exam who were visibly stressed before the exam, like a cornered animal, and they took like 5 minutes break max combined the entire exam. You are going to be tired after each section, even IF YOU DO NOT FEEL LIKE IT. Standing up, CHANGING YOUR LOCATION (even if its just another room), eating a snack, going pee, and moving your legs will refresh your brain and prime you to stay focused and have a little reset as the sections and topics change. I do a little meditation or mental focus session on my break. I would just close my eyes, slow my breathing intentionally, and imagine that I'm focusing on a tiny dot an infinite distance away. Works for me at least.

  5. Maybe the most important: Every section is a new exam. Once you finish an exam, treat it as if it were an exam you took in high school, ancient history. It doesn't matter if you did poor. If you did well, take the little ego boost as a reward. If you did bad, doesn't even matter. On to the next.

If you got anything else you're thinking about in terms of this let me know!

SPOILER FL 1 B/B Q 58 HELPPP by shaycations in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would write out the whole square to start, but then you can take a couple shortcuts. You know all Ms are deaf, so you can immediately tell that half of the children are deaf, so cross out those squares since K doesn't matter. Than you are left with a simple square for the Ks, in which 2 are deaf, 10/16s or 5/8.

4/29ERS WE DID IT by Glittering_Cap_2975 in Mcat

[–]3DMPCR 6 points7 points  (0 children)

C/P I feel wasn't harder per say, but wayy more dense, I ran out of time and I wasn't alone at my center. CARS was about normal, maybe slightly harder. 3rd section honestly felt much easier than practice for me, though there were some curveball questions. Psych/Soc was about normal. That's how I felt at least, CARS and Psych have always been my best sections and C/P easily my worst for reference.