- Joined
 - Oct 29, 2013
 
- Messages
 - 10
 
- Reaction score
 - 1
 
Since I was a child, I've always been interested in medicine. I read medical literature (typically medical reference books) starting when I learned how to read. When I would go to my pediatrician, I was always interested in the details. As a grew older, when I would be sick, I typically knew what infection I had, and started to guess correctly what other people had. My pediatrician would call me Dr. Amber. My adult GP, who is a newly-graduated D.O., is pretty spooked when I know what he's talking about. 
As a high school student, in my junior year, I was in a class called 'health careers,' and I was pretty much acing everything. My senior year, I won first place in a medical terminology competition at the regional level, and went to state, achieving 6th place out of 17 contestants.
Unfortunately, in high school I developed dysthymia and GAD, which slowed me down performance-wise and academically. Luckily, I'm in complete remission with the help of psychotherapy and Zoloft. I'm making up for it in college, of course, trying to build my GPA. I'm going for my bachelor's in nursing, while taking premedical-like courses (such as general chemistry, organic chemistry, biology, physics, etc). I'd like to work with eating-disordered patients, but I'm torn between psychiatry, internal medicine and pediatrics, since I'd like to work with all age-ranges while being able to take control of the medical-aspect of eating disordered patients.
I'm only in my freshman year of college, and being the perfectionist I am, I get mad at myself for getting anything less than a B in anything. I'm already in upper-division biology courses, and I'm already a couple of classes away from taking actual nursing courses and clinicals, so I'm way ahead. I'm taking A&P II already, and I'm going to take A&P I next fall, and then microbiology after that. I'm ahead because I took college courses in high school, and my ACT scores were good enough for me to be able to skip some classes (except math...).
My questions are, is it normal for me to feel like since I'm not getting straight A's and I'm not as 'smart' as some of my peers, that I'm not smart enough for medical school? How similar are A&P and gross anatomy (since GA is the hardest class...)? Any advice after this loooong essay you read?
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			As a high school student, in my junior year, I was in a class called 'health careers,' and I was pretty much acing everything. My senior year, I won first place in a medical terminology competition at the regional level, and went to state, achieving 6th place out of 17 contestants.
Unfortunately, in high school I developed dysthymia and GAD, which slowed me down performance-wise and academically. Luckily, I'm in complete remission with the help of psychotherapy and Zoloft. I'm making up for it in college, of course, trying to build my GPA. I'm going for my bachelor's in nursing, while taking premedical-like courses (such as general chemistry, organic chemistry, biology, physics, etc). I'd like to work with eating-disordered patients, but I'm torn between psychiatry, internal medicine and pediatrics, since I'd like to work with all age-ranges while being able to take control of the medical-aspect of eating disordered patients.
I'm only in my freshman year of college, and being the perfectionist I am, I get mad at myself for getting anything less than a B in anything. I'm already in upper-division biology courses, and I'm already a couple of classes away from taking actual nursing courses and clinicals, so I'm way ahead. I'm taking A&P II already, and I'm going to take A&P I next fall, and then microbiology after that. I'm ahead because I took college courses in high school, and my ACT scores were good enough for me to be able to skip some classes (except math...).
My questions are, is it normal for me to feel like since I'm not getting straight A's and I'm not as 'smart' as some of my peers, that I'm not smart enough for medical school? How similar are A&P and gross anatomy (since GA is the hardest class...)? Any advice after this loooong essay you read?