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It's interesting to me that at first glance, medical school doesn't seem all that hard to get into. After all, roughly 50% of applicants get in. And especially on these boards, you rarely ever hear people talk about failing as a premed, or not getting in somewhere. It's sort of disillusioning; it makes you forget that, by far, the vast majority of people who were ever premed have failed.
I don't mean to be insensitive, or anything like that. I believe I'm trying (and hopefully succeeding) to perhaps draw attention to a world that many of us, who I'm sure are incredibly thankful, don't have to experience. I personally know 2 people who, after receiving their MCAT score, decided not to apply to medical school. It's almost morbidly funny the way we talk about a 30 on the MCAT as an average score, when in fact, it's near the 75th percentile. 75 out of 100 premeds would have loved to get a 30 on the MCAT.
Do you think it hurts any less if you quit before applying? Or is it compounded by applying and not getting in anywhere? I myself have lurked on these boards for near 2 years; I was always afraid that if I got too involved in the premed community that I might jinx my chances of getting in.
I'm trying not to be pessimistic/optimistic/humble/patronizing... I think I just find it interesting. I mean, for every one person on this board that asks the seemingly normal question of, "which school should I go to, x or y?" there are probably 100s if not 1000s of failed premeds who have dreamed of being able to ask such a question.
Alas, sorry for the long post. Hope I gave you something to ponder.
I don't mean to be insensitive, or anything like that. I believe I'm trying (and hopefully succeeding) to perhaps draw attention to a world that many of us, who I'm sure are incredibly thankful, don't have to experience. I personally know 2 people who, after receiving their MCAT score, decided not to apply to medical school. It's almost morbidly funny the way we talk about a 30 on the MCAT as an average score, when in fact, it's near the 75th percentile. 75 out of 100 premeds would have loved to get a 30 on the MCAT.
Do you think it hurts any less if you quit before applying? Or is it compounded by applying and not getting in anywhere? I myself have lurked on these boards for near 2 years; I was always afraid that if I got too involved in the premed community that I might jinx my chances of getting in.
I'm trying not to be pessimistic/optimistic/humble/patronizing... I think I just find it interesting. I mean, for every one person on this board that asks the seemingly normal question of, "which school should I go to, x or y?" there are probably 100s if not 1000s of failed premeds who have dreamed of being able to ask such a question.
Alas, sorry for the long post. Hope I gave you something to ponder.


There are two girls in particular who come to mind. They were great students, and I thought that they would make great doctors, but both performed poorly on the MCAT. Many dropped before they were locked into the major to the point of no return, but these two are stuck with a degree that they didn't necessarily want and no med school to go to. Four years down the drain. Yeah, sure they at least got a degree, but it sucks to spend four years trying to do something and not have any chance at it unless something changes. Anyhoo, for those of us who do get in (and I think most on SDN have/will) we should remember how lucky we really are.