- Joined
- Sep 28, 2009
- Messages
- 9,235
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- 3,810
wait what what did i do 😕
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You know what you did.
wait what what did i do 😕
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hope it was the dean calling you with good news![]()
You know what you did.
i really don't 🙁 let me in on the joke!
here. clueless virgin candle to make up for whatever it was?
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You knew what this was.
are you serious or joking? i can't tell.
http://gawker.com/j%27s%27-dirr-cancer-facebook-/
http://warriorelihoax.wordpress.com/
Cliff notes: an apparent NEOCOM BS-MD student spent the last 7-10ish years (depending on whose timeline you believe) creating a fake persona online. It eventually grew into an entire fake family with 11 kids, including a son facing his 3rd recurrence of cancer, and a trauma surgeon mom who died in a car accident on Mother's Day.
Given the about 75 fake Facebook profiles of these family members and their friends, the hundreds of photos stolen from elsewhere on the internet, the support bracelets, and the fake kids' drawings, she must not have had much time for studying!
Whoa. This is craziness!
Link to the thread in Allopathic: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=921036
Whoa. This is craziness!
Link to the thread in Allopathic: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=921036
The basketball team of Seceded-North-Texas has made it to the finals? 👍👍👍
Brachial plexus tomorrow -_-
Brachial plexus tomorrow -_-
Good luck! My body had an abnormal one. The divisions were super distal compared to other bodies, Haha. It was also one of the first things we dissected out and we spent hours just staring at it trying to figure what the **** was going on, lol. Took us awhile yo figure out if you don't get it or can't find it immediately then just move on.
Total anatomy noob question: what's so crazy about the brachial plexus that makes it the hardest concept over the other stuff?
The basketball team of Seceded-North-Texas has made it to the finals? 👍👍👍
It's a pretty good introduction to the kind of crap medical school will want you to learn.![]()
You'll have to pretty much memorize that picture and be able to identify any of those structures on a body. It's just pure, rote memorization and is kind of symbolic of most learning done in medical school. Add in there are a ton of structures near the plexus, like blood vessels, and you have mess when you actually expose the anatomy. It's so hard to figure out what is going on. Even when I pre-studied the day before I'd go in and just stare at this crap for 10-20 minutes and swear it looked nothing like what I studied. The bad thing about netters and other atlases is you end up memorzing a single plane of visualization. When you get to the body it's totally 3D (duh) and the transfer from book pages to 3D can be hard, especially in the head and neck.
![]()
Brachial plexus is kids stuff compared to the pelvic floor. Wait until you hit the internal iliac vessels. Sweet jesus, that was hard.
It's a pretty good introduction to the kind of crap medical school will want you to learn.![]()
You'll have to pretty much memorize that picture and be able to identify any of those structures on a body. It's just pure, rote memorization and is kind of symbolic of most learning done in medical school. Add in there are a ton of structures near the plexus, like blood vessels, and you have mess when you actually expose the anatomy. It's so hard to figure out what is going on. Even when I pre-studied the day before I'd go in and just stare at this crap for 10-20 minutes and swear it looked nothing like what I studied. The bad thing about netters and other atlases is you end up memorzing a single plane of visualization. When you get to the body it's totally 3D (duh) and the transfer from book pages to 3D can be hard, especially in the head and neck.
![]()
Brachial plexus is kids stuff compared to the pelvic floor. Wait until you hit the internal iliac vessels. Sweet jesus, that was hard.
It's a pretty good introduction to the kind of crap medical school will want you to learn.![]()
You'll have to pretty much memorize that picture and be able to identify any of those structures on a body. It's just pure, rote memorization and is kind of symbolic of most learning done in medical school. Add in there are a ton of structures near the plexus, like blood vessels, and you have mess when you actually expose the anatomy. It's so hard to figure out what is going on. Even when I pre-studied the day before I'd go in and just stare at this crap for 10-20 minutes and swear it looked nothing like what I studied. The bad thing about netters and other atlases is you end up memorzing a single plane of visualization. When you get to the body it's totally 3D (duh) and the transfer from book pages to 3D can be hard, especially in the head and neck.
![]()
Brachial plexus is kids stuff compared to the pelvic floor. Wait until you hit the internal iliac vessels. Sweet jesus, that was hard.
are you serious or joking? i can't tell.
I don't think he's being super cereal.
Whoa. This is craziness!
Link to the thread in Allopathic: http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=921036
I am the most super cereal I have ever been in MAH LAIF. I DO WATTA WANT
No cavities! Pretty good for not going to the dentist for like 6 years. I hate the dentist!!!
Every six months for me now!6 years? ewww nadaba!![]()
Every six months for me now!
So are you going to a new school after your mysterious news yesterday?that's what we like to hear. it's good for your heart! 👍
It's a pretty good introduction to the kind of crap medical school will want you to learn.![]()
You'll have to pretty much memorize that picture and be able to identify any of those structures on a body. It's just pure, rote memorization and is kind of symbolic of most learning done in medical school. Add in there are a ton of structures near the plexus, like blood vessels, and you have mess when you actually expose the anatomy. It's so hard to figure out what is going on. Even when I pre-studied the day before I'd go in and just stare at this crap for 10-20 minutes and swear it looked nothing like what I studied. The bad thing about netters and other atlases is you end up memorzing a single plane of visualization. When you get to the body it's totally 3D (duh) and the transfer from book pages to 3D can be hard, especially in the head and neck.
![]()
Brachial plexus is kids stuff compared to the pelvic floor. Wait until you hit the internal iliac vessels. Sweet jesus, that was hard.
So are you going to a new school after your mysterious news yesterday?
i really don't miss this.
i really, really don't miss this.
I actually really miss anatomy. 🙁 I had an awesome anatomy group, it made life so much more enjoyable.
It's a pretty good introduction to the kind of crap medical school will want you to learn.![]()
You'll have to pretty much memorize that picture and be able to identify any of those structures on a body. It's just pure, rote memorization and is kind of symbolic of most learning done in medical school. Add in there are a ton of structures near the plexus, like blood vessels, and you have mess when you actually expose the anatomy. It's so hard to figure out what is going on. Even when I pre-studied the day before I'd go in and just stare at this crap for 10-20 minutes and swear it looked nothing like what I studied. The bad thing about netters and other atlases is you end up memorzing a single plane of visualization. When you get to the body it's totally 3D (duh) and the transfer from book pages to 3D can be hard, especially in the head and neck.
![]()
Brachial plexus is kids stuff compared to the pelvic floor. Wait until you hit the internal iliac vessels. Sweet jesus, that was hard.
oy. let's combine brains. i loved things like endo and biochem. anatomy made me want to gnaw my limbs off.
I didn't even notice!! 😡64k posts in cof 2016!
64k posts in cof 2016!