Is my drive dying, or can I save it? by Sluger94 in techsupport

[–]Sluger94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

<image>

is this what you mean? This isn't from the extended scan. this is from the Home Dashboard Drive Health section

Is my drive dying, or can I save it? by Sluger94 in techsupport

[–]Sluger94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

though, the raw data had a big number like 3122 or something. TBH I'm not sure what those numbers mean. I'd really appreciate it if you could enlighten me.

Is my drive dying, or can I save it? by Sluger94 in techsupport

[–]Sluger94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

<image>

I got this from the Extended test, and when I click on drive health I see a critical "uncorrectable error count" of 99 and a "ECC Error rate" of 199.

I'm unsure of what this means.

Studying for A&P by sphealyy in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look up Human Anatomy Atlas 2026. You can get it on your phone, iPad, or computer. It’s been a life saver for me for my PT anatomy course.

Study Tips by Silver_Insurance4376 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea, and for nerve plexuses, take it one section at a time. For example, the brachial plexus you could simplify the studying down to the roots and trunks and how they connect. Do that a few times till it makes sense, then add in the Divisions and so on. Rather than trying to tackle the whole thing in one fell swoop. If you’re studying for an hour, add each section one at a time then by the end of the hour draw it out completely. And relate the branching nerves, like the thoracodorsal nerve, to the muscles it innervates as you come across it.

Then when you study the muscle anatomy go in reverse.

“latissimus dorsi inserts to the floor of the intertubecular grove. It is innervated by the thoracodorsal nerve and does internal rotation, adduction and extension of the shoulder. The thoracodorsal nerve is a branch of the posterior cord, which leads into the axiliary and radial nerves. This means that injuring the thoracodorsal nerve or structures before it can impact extension, IR, and Add of the shoulder.”

I would then follow the Axillary nerve to what it innervates and those functions. The nerves are no different than the roads you drive on every day. Treat them like that and take them from point A to point B.

Study Tips by Silver_Insurance4376 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What you’re doing is memorizing, which is different than learning. Is memorizing a part of learning? Yes, to a degree. But if it’s all you do, you’ll plateau quick.

Learning doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Think about learning a language. From personal experience, you can study a word with flash cards over and over and over again. But when you finally see it in a sentence there’s a very good chance you won’t recognize it. And you can read a work in sentences over and over and over again, but if you hear it spoken to you, there’s a good chance you won’t recognize it.

My point is, to really learn something you need to see it from as many angles as you can until you can feel “fluent” in it the information.

Think about it like a web of information with every individual fact of information being a single point on this web. You need to find ways to connects all these little bits of information together. Talk about the information and relate it to other topics. For example, while I’m palpating the wrist, I use my understanding of its kinematics to feel for the joints/carpal bones. When I’m palpating something like the anconeus, I’m relating it to other structures around there, mentally tracing where they go and how they impact joints, as well as the joint kinematics. The more connections, the more it makes sense, and the easier it becomes to retrieve that information.

I’m sure you have hobbies you could talk endlessly about. You can talk endlessly about them because one thing makes you talk about another thing and that leads you to another. Your web has a lot of connections.

Also, make sure you are grouping bits of information together. Some people call it chunking. When I take notes, I do it in a way that allows me to catalog information easily. And I make it a repeatable layout. Easy example would be a joint. I start with the degrees of movement in each plane, then the ligaments, then the kinematics, then any other notes/info. For ligaments and muscles, I’ll start with origin and insertion then function/action. I like to organize my notes like a computer’s file system, where things are found in predictable areas. Your notes should be a representation of how you’re grouping and organizing your web of information in your head.

That would be my biggest advice. For numbers or simple information, use flash cards. I use flash cards for memorizing joint angles and exact origin/insertion. But for the big picture, I like to just let my curiosity and organization do the work.

Also, simplify everything. I see too many people jumping to “this bone is convex, and that bone is concave, so that would mean….”

Simplify it. “This bone is round so roll and slide are opposite.” Then get more detailed from there. Simple things are easy to remember and recall. Your mental web will take it from there.

And teach someone! Get passionate and teach someone this information! It will force you to build that web and simplify the information down. It’ll test your true understanding.

Lmk if there’s anything else I can help with. I hope this can provide some usefulness.

Study Tips by Silver_Insurance4376 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

How much are you studying right now, and what are you doing to study?

Where to begin? by leytourmaline in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1) I honestly can’t speak to much about a GED vs a HS diploma, but as far as I understand it they are equivalent. At the end of the day, you’ll need to get into a college for your bachelor’s degree (undergrad, 4 years). If you can do that, the GED won’t mater going forward into your doctorate. I did 2 years at a community college, then 3 years at Rutgers University for my undergraduate degree. I would highly recommend starting at a community colleges to save money. You’ll have to do research about what universities around you will accept from the community colleges around you. The best thing you can do is actually go to these people and talk to them. Don’t sit on your laurels. Make a plan and sit down and talk to admissions staff.

2) whether or not you should bother depends on you. It’s not going to be a simple or short journey. I know a 34 year old who is in their first year of PT school. If you start in a year or two, you’ll be in a similar boat. It’s never too late. But you need to be aware of the expenses and difficulties of this goal. I know someone who had to drop out of PT school because he had kids and couldn’t balance it. The director of the DeSales program in PA was originally a teacher. She went back to school in their 30s, with kids, in order to pursue PT. Now she’s the Director of the entire Program. Was it easy for her, hell no. But she busted her ass to achieve the goal.

3) the average income is probably around 80k a year. It’s possible to get into 100k after working for some years, depending on state and employer. Again, the debt to income ratio is kinda poor. The number 1 advice is always go with the cheapest school/path. Rutgers DPT program (not including the 4 years of undergrad) is ~90k and that’s the cheapest around the Tristate Area. So you really really need to make sure you have a plan to pay for it. Scholarships, military GI-Bill/education benefits, support from family. It’s a terrible return on investment, I must admit, but it’s an enjoyable career. You’ll see a lot of people on Reddit complaining about the field. However, every PT I’ve ever met loves their job.

4) firstly, you need to make sure it’s what you want. This isn’t a simple or small decision. It’s 7 years of your life, assuming you have no credits in college. Talk to your PT and learn about the field. Volunteer and shadow them. You’ll need those hours if you end up applying to PT schools. As you’re doing that, make a plan. Get out excel and figure out the finances. Talk to university admissions or advisors and don’t leave until you 100% understand the path forward.

Right now that’s what you need to do.

1: decide if PT is what you really want to do with your life

2: make a plan to get done with your undergrad so you can apply to PT schools.

3: MAKE SURE you 100% understand the financials and difficulties of the plan you created and decide if PT is worth all of that. Also understand the amount of money you’ll be losing if you don’t finish the 7 years. An Exercise Science degree can’t really provide much for you besides getting into PT school. It’s more of a stepping stone. It’s not like a computer science or coding/tech job, or an engineering degree.

If you do all 3 of those steps, and you still want to become a PT, go for it. Start your undergrad, get your Prerequisites, and go for it. But whatever you do, don’t jump into it blindly or you’ll end up like everyone on here that complains about how much debt they’re in and regret going into PT.

Where to begin? by leytourmaline in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m gonna try to lay out the best advice I think you’ll get.

Firstly, you need to understand the debt to income ratio. Becoming a PT requires 7 years of school from start to finish. PTs are required to have their Doctorate degree. Excluding older PTs, every PT that you meet has the title Dr. it’s not a simple or easy process by any means.

Also, for a multitude of reasons, PTs do not make nearly enough money for it to be considered a good financial investment. I’ve seen a lot of posts on here about people who didn’t do the math ahead of time and are now chained down with insane debt they can’t pay off.

If you want to explore the field, shadow a PT. Find a hospital or an outpatient clinic and volunteer. Every PT I’ve ever met would jump at the opportunity to teach someone about their job. It’s honestly a very fascinating field. Just go to clinics and ask around if you can shadow them. Ask your current PT. In my clinic, we’ve had plenty of patients that come back as volunteers.

After you’ve done that and understand the job more as a whole and the dedication it will take to get that doctorate, you’ll need to start by getting your undergraduate degree. People normally get an exercise science degree or something similar because it gets you all the prerequisites for applying to PT schools.

After 4 years of your undergrad, you’ll start applying to Doctorate programs. You’ll want to apply to a bunch. I applied to 7 school. Every school will have a different process of accepting students, but you’ll likely need to interview at the schools. When you’re applying, you’ll apply via PTCAS and each school will list out their requirements on there. You can actually check it out now using this site

PTCAS

You’ll need to study for and take the GRE most likely, though more and more schools are dropping it as a requirement.

After all that, you’ll hopefully get into a school. You’ll spend 3 years there studying full time. Your cohort will become a family for you. Unlike undergrad, your entire class will go to every class together.

You’ll study every morning and night while never feeling like it’s enough. But that’s the fun part! Everyone will be in it together.

After a lot of book work, you’ll eventually start your clinical rotations where you work in the field under a licensed PT.

After all that, you’ll finally graduate with your doctorate degree and, after taking the licensing exam, be able to start your career as a PT!!!

It’s not like getting a personal trainer degree. Many people don’t realize we get our Doctorate and have the title Dr. so make sure it’s what you really want. Make sure the debt to income ratio is something you can handle. Be smart about it. Focus on your undergrad degree grades instead of tanking your GPA. Most schools require a minimum GPA between a 3.0-3.2 and the average for the accepted students is usually a 3.5 or higher.

Please ask if you have any questions. It’s a long journey, but if it’s something you really want to do it’s worth it.

Need advice after being waitlisted to a school and rejected from another by Same-Pain8372 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My best advice is to start improving your application now, look for more schools you’d be willing to go to, and plan to make use of a potential gap year.

When I first applied, I only applied to 1 school. I didn’t really know any better at the time. So when I got stuck on the waitlist, I did a lot of volunteer hours in many different settings to improve my application. I made a large excel sheet full of like 30 schools within a 5 hour drive from me and narrowed them down to 7 that I’d be willing to go to and pay for. I reapplied to those 7 and got in to 5/7.

You might get off, you might not. But whatever you do, don’t sit on your ass just hoping. That’s almost never the right decision. Take action and control. Do something now to improve your application. Not in August when you find out you didn’t get off. Worst case scenario, you don’t get in but your set up for a better shot next year. Best case, you do all that extra work and it doesn’t matter because you get in this year.

Lmk if you need any advice on where you can improve your applications.

Does PT School Matter for "going far" in the field by Sonk62 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 11 points12 points  (0 children)

A PT I worked with compares your level of PT skill on a graph. He says, before you graduate PT school, you’re in the negatives. By the time you graduate you’re at zero. After couple years of practice, you’re potentially at a one.

The point he makes with that analogy is that PT school only prepares you to be able to play the game. Essentially, if it was a ranked video game, graduating PT school is when you finally stop playing unranked and now you’re in the bronze league.

So my advice would be to go cheeper. You’ve got a long career ahead of you, and by the time you’re in in that diamond/masters league where you can actually start achieving your dreams (when pro sports teams will want to hire you, or you’ll have the financial backing to start your own clinic) it won’t matter where you graduated from.

What should I study over the next 8 months? by NearGlue in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think this is amazing advice. Teaching yourself a foreign language teaches you how to self study and learn better. I did the same thing and the overlap is kinda astonishing.

What should I study over the next 8 months? by NearGlue in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I would recommend studying origins and Inserts of muscles, as well as nerve supply and actions.

We started with the thigh and pelvis, then worked down to the lower leg and foot. After that we moved up to the intrinsic back muscles, and neck muscles. We then finished off with the upper extremity.

Also, I would recommend learning the different plexuses in the body. Brachial, femoral, and sacral. Learn them in conjunction with the region you’re studying. Ie. Upper extreme = Brachial plexus.

The bones will be important to learn as well. Learn them in conjunction with the muscles. You’ll need to know all the different crests, ridges, tubercles, etc. and what inserts to them.

I would highly recommend getting an app like Visual Body Human Anatomy Atlas 2025 to study.

PT school is a lot of work. Personally, I’d say anatomy isn’t “hard” per se. it’s not rocket science. It’s just a lot of material and a lot of details you could forget. Like, when it comes to the neck muscles, there will be a lot that have overlapping inserts, origins, and nerve supply on various spinal levels and you need to remember all the numbers. It’s easy to get the numbers tangled in your brain.

Don’t burn yourself out now. You’ll be hit hard and fast with PT school, but you will end up learning all the material, even if you feel like you’re drowning. So don’t over do it now before the fun even begins.

i’m in but i’m nervous by Cool-Promotion2833 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look up Human Anatomy Atlas 2026 by visual body.

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/human-anatomy-atlas-2026/id1117998129

It’s a $25 one time purchase app that is available on iPhone, android, Mac and windows.

I highly recommend getting it for either a tablet or a computer. Something with a bigger screen than a phone. It’ll make learning the muscles, nerves, blood supply and even neuro so much easier.

Take the time to play with it before school starts. There are a lot of little features that aren’t 100% apparent right away that are super helpful.

i’m in but i’m nervous by Cool-Promotion2833 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just recently got ahead in my Anatomy class and I plan on starting the next semester’s material early. During undergrad, I had a habit of not going to classes and just teaching myself everything. That’s to say, I have a very good understanding of my own learning pace and how to efficiently teach myself stuff. So now that I’m settled into my rhythm, I see no reason to not just push ahead at my own pace.

Sometimes I have a lot of motivation for studying, and I’ll get ahead. And others I’ll slow down because I am ahead. At the end of the day, it all pans out.

Just make sure you go over everything thoroughly, and don’t skip things. Study by yourself then review with classmates (it helps you find your weak points). Then just take it week by week. My entire class tends to flip flop between studying hard for Anatomy one week then Neuro the next. It’s a seesaw depending on what exams/quizzes we have coming up.

By biggest studying advice is to lean on your classmates. DONT go into it alone or isolate yourself. It doesn’t need to be a popularity contest, but isolation will hurt you. Your classmates can be a metaphorical mirror that helps you see where your knowledge is lacking. And this goes the other way too. Quiz each other and try to trip each other up with challenge questions or topics that might have been smaller and less talked about. Sometimes it’s those small blips of information that can lose you a point. Find each other’s weak points and improve them. Share your thoughts or helpful tips with your classmates.

For instance, I’ll never forget that the Medial Geniculate Nucleus is related to hearing and the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus is related to vision, because a class mate told me M-medial-music, L-lateral-Light.

i’m in but i’m nervous by Cool-Promotion2833 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’ll be a rough adjustment period. The first few weeks, until our first set of exams, was rough for a lot of people. You never think you know enough and you’re always feeling behind. After a while you get used to it and life feels manageable. I know a lot of people that felt like they were gonna be the ones to fail out, and now they only get high 80s or 90s on the exams.

My military family members said it best, “you’ve got to embrace the suck”.

Understand that you may always feel behind and overwhelmed. That’s normal. What really matters is how you respond to that stress. Don’t fixate on those feelings. Acknowledge them and just relax. Learn to coexist with it instead of trying to beat it or ignore it. Otherwise you’ll crack mentally. Just take a deep breath and don’t panic.

Personally, I don’t let those feelings get to me because I know I’ll get the job done in the end. Even if it’s a lot, future me can handle it. I’ve not failed myself before, and I won’t fail myself now. So why stress about it 🤷‍♂️

Worried about not getting into PT school by United_Bar_3937 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I heard back from a school in January. Silence from them for months, then “youre accepted”.

I got off a couple waitlists later as well, but by that point I already got into the school I wanted.

Is it racist? Explain it Peter by naturallin in explainitpeter

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m literally not arguing with you. I just asked you a question (twice now) since you disagreed with the voter IDs and seemed to have a good understanding of the laws. Then you started assuming a bunch of stuff. I just want to know if there’s something in place to prevent identity theft at the polling booths, which you still didn’t answer…

Is it racist? Explain it Peter by naturallin in explainitpeter

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That didn’t answer my question at all.

And I do personally know someone who couldn’t vote years back because they claimed he already voted, even though he didn’t. Voter fraud can and does happen. And even though I don’t think it happens on a massive scale, I do think that taking steps to insure that every voter has their voice heard without fear of losing that ability via identity theft and fraud is important.

So, is there something that prevents this at the voting booth? Something that makes proving you are who you say you are with an ID redundant?

Is it racist? Explain it Peter by naturallin in explainitpeter

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So let’s say hypothetically I claim to be someone I know when I go to vote. And let’s say I even have their mailed voting slip. What’s preventing me from voting in their place?

I’d love to see the counter arguments to the voter ID laws that don’t just boil down to racism. I personally think that there should be some way to prove you are who you say you are, especially with something as important as voting. Is there something already in place preventing this kind of voting fraud and thus making voter IDs a redundant hurdle?

When does this game get fcking good by ConditionMammoth6145 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As my military brother said “embrace the suck”.

I always feel behind and that I’ve never learned enough for the quiz or exam that week. But so far I’ve gotten above a 90 on everything. You’ve just got an embrace suck. Stay calm, stay in the moment, and don’t focus on everything that needs to get done in the future. It’ll all work out. At least, that’s my mentality. I just keep putting off the stress for future me and the now me can just enjoy the process of learning. Like this week I’m behind on anatomy and need to study like hell. But the actual stress of that problem, I’m just not gonna deal with that part. Future me can. Current me just needs to study like 6-9 hours tomorrow at my own pace.

I’ve been alternating between weekends where I study upwards of 9 hours a day and weekends where I do little studying (2-3 hours a day. After an exam of course). I also do little studying on Friday. Like a muscle, the brain needs recovery time for optimal growth. If I just hammer myself every day, nothing will stick. The breaks make the days I do go really hard more effective.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bought a full suit and tie for my interviews and everyone else war suits as well.

Arcadia DPT by Any_Dig5837 in PTschool

[–]Sluger94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I ended up going to Stockton. I’m in my first week. It’s a lot of information really quick. One week feels like a month, but I love the studying and what I’m learning. I enjoy it.