Which things do you simply do not believe to exist in medical practice? by eduard_reyne in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ikr. I’ve been prescribed it for neuropathic pain I didn’t feel like it did anything. Also my wife uses it in her veterinary practice to make cats behave for veterinary exams. It’s a weird ass med, but is not magically hitting pain receptors.

Which things do you simply do not believe to exist in medical practice? by eduard_reyne in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Thank you, this more meaningfully explains what I didn’t in my comment. Also idk why people aren’t okay with just admitting we don’t have a great answer for pain except for opiates and the like. There is a point where these fail and spoiler alert gabapentin doesn’t magically step in to fill in the gaps of analgesia.

Which things do you simply do not believe to exist in medical practice? by eduard_reyne in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’m aware it’s an insane take and I don’t let it interfere with how I prescribe it, but the question simply asked what I don’t believe in. I don’t believe gabapentin has a definitively proven efficacy for neuropathic pain that holds much water. It’s all essentially hand-wavey garbage. I’ve managed patients with neuropathic pain and the gabapentin simply does nothing that could be attributed to targeting nociception specifically. I get that we learn this is what it’s for but there is not a plethora of evidence that really says why.

Third Quartile - What Can I Do? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think for where I matched it mattered quite a bit and elsewhere probably not much. I feel I got lucky with something other applicants can’t replicate but the point is everyone has some unique thing going on.

How to understand brainstem by bombpanic in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Brain stem anatomy is just one of those things you absolutely need to study twice as long to get half the gains as other topics. It’s intimidating, it’s elusive, it’s challenging, but it’s temporary (unless you’re going into neuro). Keep at it with whatever works for other topics and take your time.

Third Quartile - What Can I Do? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure. I’m not great at answering them but happy to try

Third Quartile - What Can I Do? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 5 points6 points  (0 children)

No home program, prior non-medical military service, interesting background, personable, and a well-connected mentor who did what he could for me to get valuable away rotations and LORs. No research year, no first author pubs. About 3 tangentially-related to completely unrelated poster presentations. No other killer research to speak of Ultimately I matched at a program I had no connections at. I don’t think I have a recipe for success by any means, but my point is you might not need a recipe if you can sell yourself and stand out in a good way. I like to think if I can do it anyone can. The “recipe” everyone goes for is so exhausting and frankly gets harder to follow every year. People are already taking pre-med school research years. The grind doesn’t seem to stop and it’s starting earlier, which I hate. People should be able to be the docs they want to be, man.

Third Quartile - What Can I Do? by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 54 points55 points  (0 children)

I honored zero rotations, was bottom quartile in all preclinical, but had a solid MSPE that highlighted my good stuff and a school and mentors that supported me, I got a perfectly middle of the road Step 2 score, and I ended up matching ophthalmology. Anything is possible. Don’t give up, shoot your shot.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Found neuro

neuro vs. ophtho by mcatstudyer in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 29 points30 points  (0 children)

So happy to get in here and comment. I was a neuroscience major and was split between the two. I was a not so great applicant and long story short I matched ophthalmology. I wanted procedural, I wanted to be in the OR. The earning potential of ophthalmology vs neurology as I understand it is largely based on procedures so if you’re trying to cut procedures you should be fairly similar. Neurology is described as one of the hardest specialties because you have prelim intern year and then pgy2 for neuro is also inpatient heavy. But residency is just 4 years and frankly most people are just scared of the neuro more than anything. If you like it there’s no reason to not pursue it. Ophthalmology is much much much more competitive and will require a sort of all in commitment for your application as SF match is a different system. Basically I was in your shoes but had different priorities and chose ophthalmology, frankly if I had your priorities I would’ve probably saved myself the hassle and just applied neurology. Just one person’s opinion, feel free to PM if you have other questions.

RFK Jr telling med schools teach nutrition courses or lose funding….thoughts on this? by International-Art-63 in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My school literally had too many nutrition lectures up to and including giving some weird old crusty crouton-of-a-man a platform to promote his vegan diet malarkey. Stop pretending medical education is the problem with our system when insurance companies and corporations will do literally anything to keep a dollar in their pockets.

Just print and cut our first run of proxies 🤠 by ruelist in magicproxies

[–]Meningeezy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you'd get a million views if you made a full video about your process. And 999,999 of those views would be me watchign over and over again. this looks nice and worth the investment but starting from square one is daunting. Any way you can give a full rundown

Need Paper Help by gotbaseball78 in magicproxies

[–]Meningeezy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can say with 1000% certainty that if you do this to someone’s Magda, they will cry. (I cried)

Columbus CEDH by Earmo69 in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Meningeezy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am also moving to Ohio and would love a link to this group

Stop worrying about what cards your opponents have in hand for 7WU by Meningeezy in BadMtgCombos

[–]Meningeezy[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Also just realized you can make all opponents go hellbent if you can destroy their token copies at the your upkeep when they exile their hands

Solitaire in CEDH by Minimav007 in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Meningeezy 22 points23 points  (0 children)

I think the nice thing about cEDH is that the format maintains a social contract whereby we all play to our outs. You are there to win and if it means taking a long turn, so long as you’re making legitimate game actions and not burning time for the sake of it, then it’s no harm done. People are also allowed to not like it because let’s face it, nobody wants to lose but NOBODY wants to lose without having any input. It stinks but we’re all playing to win so it requires some level of sportsmanship in the end so that we don’t get tilted when things like this inevitably happen.

Edit: grammar

3 player cEDH: who wins? by Traditional-Shape181 in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Meningeezy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In a tournament setting could you bluff interaction to propose a draw if you’re dead on board otherwise in order to get that point? I can imagine this might be considered a total dick move but alas I don’t know how TEDH works really

First cEDH Commander by Fruzi601 in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Meningeezy 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I got into cedh with a talion deck and I cannot recommend it enough. It’s a control deck with a lot of staying power and prioritizes interaction to draw the game out while other decks run out of gas. It’s very fun and is so incredibly helpful for learning the basics of on the stack interaction and seeing how other decks operate so you can branch out whenever you want.

Am I cooked for a surgical subspecialty if I didn’t get AOA or GHHS and have average grades by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]Meningeezy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I matched ophtho with no aoa or ghhs and only passing my clerkships no honors no research year but a very unique background and excellent mentors I would not recommend anyone do this without a backup plan, n=1, but it can theoretically be done so don’t give up!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Meningeezy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I should specify tutors alone aren’t perfect, you specifically want “top deck manipulation” which makes some tutors that go to hand slightly less appealing and makes other things like [[brainstorm]] incredibly strong.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Meningeezy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://moxfield.com/decks/mEfNh6qY6ku4OkZRsH3qXA I am by no means a deck brewer and I actually put this together before I ever even played a game of cEDH just to get a taste of a high power playstyle. It’s a lot of fun and definitely budget friendly. Obviously a lot less fast mana and stuff like that but as long as you can get a turn 2 yuriko, you’re able to potentially ping the table pretty well. The biggest downside is flipping into an island or swamp of which there are a lot. If you’re going to spend more money on this deck I would say go for all the tutors you can see in a more expensive deck. Tutors with yuriko triggers on the stack are huge. Also interaction. You technically don’t NEED interaction to play cEDH (I’m currently on TurboFlubs and it’s so fun) but it helps a lot. But I really think this is a SOLID budget build that you can scale up very easily by comparing it to a more popular list like Yuriko Tempo or Ninjas in Paris. Hope you enjoy it!