I think it was the happiest day of my life, followed by two more, the day I got my acceptance at KCOM. I called everyone and sent emails. My friends were screaming on the other end of the line and people through a party.
I can imagine it being anticlimactic, especially when you realize the work ahead, and the changes that are going to have to happen, but when you work for so long at something you know you want to do, you have to feel at least a little satisfaction.
If you're ambivalent because you got accepted at D.O. vs. M.D., maybe you shouldn't apply to D.O. "just in case", because you think there is a huge difference. There is a difference, but the opportunities and qualifications are exactly the same. I know quite a few people who turned down M.D. acceptances to go to D.O. schools. I hate to break the news to some, but the only people who care about "D.O. vs. M.D." are premeds and the old guard, and the people who listen to them. If you look where graduates of D.O. schools are placing for residencies, you'd see Hopkins, UCLA, Mayo, Cleveland Clinic, Yale, etc. aren't too obsessed over the degree. At the University of Florida Medical School (M.D.), they explain to the students what and who D.O.'s are, and it's in a completely positive light.
I didn't mean to lecture on something that we see over and over again here.
Congratulations to everyone who did get accepted, especially to D.O. schools, but also at allopathic programs. I hope you realize you actually reached a really hard goal. Enjoy your summer (if you get one), and then get ready for the 30+ challenging years ahead of you. And yes, good luck explaining 'what a D.O. is', it comes with the territory.
-Aaron