- Joined
- Jul 3, 2009
- Messages
- 305
- Reaction score
- 90
Last edited:
Thanks for the advice everyone. I am glad to realize that I wasn't the only one feeling this way. I have to now also figure out what to do in my second gap year if that school doesn't come through for me.
Notice how the keyword you wrote here is ENJOY.
Ahh yes, now I got you. I should read more thoroughly.
It makes all the difference in the world. One of my fellow classmates who I met in my entrepreneurship class was interested in the subject since college, and always worked on things in that field. Today he is a very successful and well-known entrepreneur in Silicon Valley.
He was successful because he was actually doing what he was enjoying, despite this appearing like a lot of work for most other people, who instead did other things during college. That's why he looks very happy right now, at least by the looks of him on Facebook.
With premeds, on the other hand, they end up spending a significant amount of time doing things they aren't exactly passionate about. Volunteering, research, entry-level clinical jobs, and other things don't actually have much to do with being a doctor. Therefore, unless one is passionate about community service, academic research, or working an entry-level clinical job, I would be surprised to see them happy during undergrad.
This is why so many premeds, such as the OP of this thread, get turned off from it. That's also why being a re-applicant is so frustrating, because you need to continue the grind of doing the activities you don't want to do for another year. Otherwise, re-applicants would be jumping for joy if they actually enjoyed these activities, but I doubt you'll see a happy re-applicant anytime soon here.
Basically, I have a 3.75/30 and got one interview this year from a state school. Interview went okay, but now I am beginning to think that a borderline application + okay interview won't be enough to get into medical school this year.
I know I should be doing more volunteering/shadowing/random ECs to boost my app for next year + studying for the MCAT again.
However, I really just don't want to do any of those things at all and am thinking of just switching careers altogether.
Has anyone else gotten this close to med school and then decided to just quit because the process just seems so pointless?
I actually hate them both.
I have wanted to be a doctor since I was a kid. I care about my family, my friends, and also about the well being of others around me, which is why I pursue this profession.
I don't think that the hundreds of hours that I spent performing free labor for a hospital system by cleaning beds, restocking linens, making kits, and very occasionally talking to patients necessarily define me as a person. I would judge a person based on how they act toward me, not by a laundry-list of volunteer commitments that you see over and over again on this site, or the number of hours one commits to these activities.
Would you like to negatively judge the many people you know in your life who aren't "required" to perform such significant levels of "service" in order to achieve their goal (in other words, never took part in the significant volunteer commitments you see every premed doing)? I'd like you to think about that before you go off judging people you've never met. You'd be surprised how many medical students and doctors have openly admitted that they did not enjoy these activities. Does this make them bad physicians, and most of all, bad people worth hating?
Wow
Mediocre stats with very little clinical expereince netted you 2 II in texas -- unheard of in any other parts of the country!!
:troll:
29/3.6 - Applied this year and got 1 interview. Was immediately rejected with the reason that my "Volunteering and international experience, has given me a colored view of the American medical system."
I have 6 years of volunteering as a medical interpreter at a free clinic run by student doctors (from the medical school I applied to). When the Admissions counselor told me this reason I about laughed my butt off at how ridiculous it sounded. Apparently after all that time I still don't understand what I am getting myself into.
There was also a curious statement in my file about how I called a Doctor by their first name which was "awkward". I feel like I was railroaded because of this, and the above reason was a pretext to turn me away. Then again, I am supremely pissed because I found out 6 years of volunteering meant nothing so I could be skewing my perceptions due to my emotional state 😀
"I don't always call doctors by their first names, but when I do, I make sure they're on the admission committee at the only school that invited me to interview"
I knew people in UG who half-@$$ed their way through clinical volunteering and complained about it after putting in 4 measly hours a week. But you don't HAVE to enjoy patients to help them, right?
OP, also consider revisiting your PS when you reapply.
Basically, I have a 3.75/30 and got one interview this year from a state school. Interview went okay, but now I am beginning to think that a borderline application + okay interview won't be enough to get into medical school this year.
I know I should be doing more volunteering/shadowing/random ECs to boost my app for next year + studying for the MCAT again.
However, I really just don't want to do any of those things at all and am thinking of just switching careers altogether.
Has anyone else gotten this close to med school and then decided to just quit because the process just seems so pointless?
Its a difficult process but the fact is, US medical school admissions are easier than many other countries in the world including Canada, India and the UK. If at times you think its hard, think that you have it easier than many others in the world. You have to be determined. Life certainly does not get easy after you get into medical school. If you are under the impression that after getting into medical school you are in some way set, thats not true. You will still have to work hard and study hard. There are longer and harder exams after the MCAT (USMLE Step 1, 2CK, 2CS, 3) and all take a full day or two just to write.
Don't give up hope, but if you don't think you like a life that is something a workaholic would be accustomed to, it is not too late to give up. There are people who realize they hate patient care and that medicine is not for them in residency. By that time they are already in debt to the tune of tens of thousands, the are entering their 30s and are making a very low salary for the amount of work they put in to get there.
Wrote the diversity essay but not the hardship one.
I refuse to believe my ECs/LORs/app writing skills are all that bad. People on SDN have told me that my ECs are good enough. I have seen my LORs, and they are solid too.
Question for you: If all these URMs (~25% of most TX med school classes)/EC champions are getting in with 22-27 MCATs, then where does that leave the average white/asian person without massive EC hooks?
Sorry if this came off as combative. That was not my intention.
Wrote the diversity essay but not the hardship one.
I refuse to believe my ECs/LORs/app writing skills are all that bad. People on SDN have told me that my ECs are good enough. I have seen my LORs, and they are solid too.
Question for you: If all these URMs (~25% of most TX med school classes)/EC champions are getting in with 22-27 MCATs, then where does that leave the average white/asian person without massive EC hooks?
Sorry if this came off as combative. That was not my intention.
Lol calm down brother, and work on your reading comprehension if you think this is an "US vs THEM" thread.
Wrote the diversity essay but not the hardship one.
I refuse to believe my ECs/LORs/app writing skills are all that bad. The admissions person I talked to + some people on SDN have told me that my ECs are good enough. I have seen my LORs, and they are solid too.
Question for you: If all these EC champions & URMs (~25% of most TX med school classes) are getting in with 22-27 MCATs, then where does that leave the average white/asian person without massive EC hooks? If the average MCAT of UTMB is like 30-31, who do you think is bringing that up?
Sorry if this came off as combative. That was not my intention.
The EC lists you see on SDN are a bunch of bull****. The average applicant does not have 300 hours of volunteering, 100 hours of shadowing, 3 years of research, president of 3 different clubs, etc. The average applicant does not have "amazing" letters of recommendation or an "amazing" personal statement.
Look at the AAMC GPA and MCAT tables. If you do average ECs -- let's call this 50-100 hours each of shadowing and volunteering, maybe some research, maybe another activity like tutoring or employment -- and if you have average letters of recommendation and an average personal statement, your chances of being accepted will pretty much fall in line with what the table says. You have a 3.75/30 so you have about a 72% chance of being accepted, assuming you applied to 15 or more stats-appropriate schools.
Lol. Did somebody mention ECs??! Cue Circulus Vitios and Planes2Docs!!
![]()
Wrote the diversity essay but not the hardship one.
I refuse to believe my ECs/LORs/app writing skills are all that bad. The admissions person I talked to + some people on SDN have told me that my ECs are good enough. I have seen my LORs, and they are solid too.
Question for you: If all these EC champions & URMs (~25% of most TX med school classes) are getting in with 22-27 MCATs, then where does that leave the average white/asian person without massive EC hooks? If the average MCAT of UTMB is like 30-31, who do you think is bringing that up?
Sorry if this came off as combative. That was not my intention.
Not getting in. My buddy (asian) with 3.6/29 didn't even get an interview. He did research, work as a scribe, some community service and was member of a couple of club. Also know another person with 3.5/28 not receiving any interviews. This process is quite brutal. It can come down to luck unless you have something that stands out, whether it be numbers, ethnicities or ECs
I'll stop when the EC-whoring adcom members are dead or unemployed.
I'm glad I read through this thread. Not just because of the advice for the OP (whose situation is similar to mine) but planes2doc, you've perfectly worded my frustrations with the premedical process.