Realistic expectations never put men on the moon, or Usain Bolt finishing 100m in 9.58s, or let Stephen Hawking continue to work despite having AML. They never let Terry Fox run across Canada with an amputated leg, get Pacquiao 10 world titles, or any musician/actor their careers. They didn't get Lance Armstrong his wins (In a Sport Where EVERYONE is blood doping, using erythropoetin and test), they didn't get the discovery of the Higg's boson, and they didn't get Easy company through Bastogne. Come to think of it, realistic expectation never got anyone anything worth talking about. If you want to do something profound, you have to let go and get a little crazy. Those who constantly say to themselves and believe they can and those who say they can't are always right.
I barely passed all my classes in a school that focused on recalling minutiae and rote memorizing lists of symptoms/signs/lab/rx, with no emphasis on why. People laughed and said I'd get 200-210. They said I was crazy for trying and might as well just go home. I thought "allright... so if I'm crazy for trying, I may as well be crazy enough to shoot for 250+." I just believed, and I worked, and I used those four resources @
Phloston and @
maryjane85 said. I kept it simple, and annotated the bare minimum: "what is the question trying to teach me, and how could I have come up with this answer using my FA knowledge." I went into my test and damn near thought I had a pheochromocytoma during that first block, but I calmed myself, and just kept at it and I came out with a 254.
F*** limiting beliefs. See it as it is, but not worse than it is, then see it as it could be grander; and see you as you could be grander.
Proficiency comes from belief, raw effort, consistency and persistence. Oh and a lot of good ol' fashioned light-hearted **** talking between your peers.