

you needed money. you did it. what's so shameful?
Uhhhhhhh....
oh come on.
it's a legal job. the OP needed money. it was probably easy to get hired. he worked. he made money. end of story.
as long as he wasn't slipping the date rape drug to underage girls, i don't see the problem.
Well, I am worried about med admission officers feeling that I was in some way contributing to alcoholism. At the time, I really wasn't anticipating possible future consequences, but now that I've decided to apply to medical school I am definitely thinking there may be some questioning when they see this. I am a bit worried, to say the least.
You only did it for 3 months.
IF you are asked about it at an interview, you explain the circumstances (i.e. needed money badly and easy job to get).
I don't even know why you would put it on an application though.
You have to report all past employment jobs I believe.
Well, I am worried about med admission officers feeling that I was in some way contributing to alcoholism. At the time, I really wasn't anticipating possible future consequences, but now that I've decided to apply to medical school I am definitely thinking there may be some questioning when they see this. I am a bit worried, to say the least.
Well, I am worried about med admission officers feeling that I was in some way contributing to alcoholism. At the time, I really wasn't anticipating possible future consequences, but now that I've decided to apply to medical school I am definitely thinking there may be some questioning when they see this. I am a bit worried, to say the least.
Well, I am worried about med admission officers feeling that I was in some way contributing to alcoholism. At the time, I really wasn't anticipating possible future consequences, but now that I've decided to apply to medical school I am definitely thinking there may be some questioning when they see this. I am a bit worried, to say the least.
Heck, you have this bassackwards. Bartenders don't CONTRIBUTE to alcoholism - they're supposed to control the flow. That's like saying that you were embarrassed to have been a pharm tech because someone might think that you had contributed to drug abuse.
ahem. are you applying to loma linda?
as long as he wasn't slipping the date rape drug to underage girls, i don't see the problem.
I was wondering about something. A couple years ago, I worked for about three months as a bartender. How badly is this frowned upon by medical schools? Any helpful information from people who can intelligently speak about this is greatly appreciated.
I will say this: It will in no way effect your chances negatively. It can be a positive though. Talk about how it improved your ability to talk to people and how you had to multitask.
Haha. Well maybe he could talk about those things in a different way and not relate them back to bartending. Talk to people....volunteering at the hospital. Multi-tasking.....research in a lab. In no way would I personally emphasize the job. Its not health related and really doesn't help his application. Not saying that it hurts either....
If anything, I would have guessed that bartenders reduce alcoholism by cutting people off when they've had too much; I would have guessed that people drink much more when they drink alone in their homes, mixing their own drinks. In any case, there was a former bartender in my med school class, it's a perfectly respectable job, not to mention an interesting skill set that isn't as easy to learn as people might think (I mean, aren't there bartending schools that charge people money to learn the ropes?). I really don't think adcoms would view it negatively; they know that the vast majority of med students are alcohol-consumers, anyway, so why would they be prejudiced against the people who mix the drinks?
Learning to mix the drinks isn't the hard part. It's juggling all your customers while being affable enough to earn tips.
You're basically expected to know how to mix drinks right off the bat. Most classes (including the one I took) teach you how to do tricks (flair bartending and fancy pouring methods), and generally impress people so as to earn bigger tips. You're really getting paid for your people skills.
Exactly my pont, which is just anothe reason you could spin your experience to your advantage. I actually don't think it's much of a spin. You could make a very valid case for why it was a beneficial experience and how it could help you as a doctor who interacts with often times demanding and occassionally irrational patients.
I agree with you in that, but....I don't know...I've had some people make various remarks about the job, including my premed advisor with whom I'm actually pretty close saying that I either crossed the line by having that job or that it is going to give med admission officers reason to believe I'm not "100% for helping people". I did love the job while I had it, the pay was wonderful, I got to interact with lots of people, got invited to lots of wild parties, etc, but I will personally agree that the word bartender has a more risque vibe than, say, cashier or store clerk. Your job is to get people their alcohol.
I agree with you in that, but....I don't know...I've had some people make various remarks about the job, including my premed advisor with whom I'm actually pretty close saying that I either crossed the line by having that job or that it is going to give med admission officers reason to believe I'm not "100% for helping people". I did love the job while I had it, the pay was wonderful, I got to interact with lots of people, got invited to lots of wild parties, etc, but I will personally agree that the word bartender has a more risque vibe than, say, cashier or store clerk. Your job is to get people their alcohol.
I agree with you in that, but....I don't know...I've had some people make various remarks about the job, including my premed advisor with whom I'm actually pretty close saying that I either crossed the line by having that job or that it is going to give med admission officers reason to believe I'm not "100% for helping people". I did love the job while I had it, the pay was wonderful, I got to interact with lots of people, got invited to lots of wild parties, etc, but I will personally agree that the word bartender has a more risque vibe than, say, cashier or store clerk. Your job is to get people their alcohol.
I think what everyone is trying to tell you is that your concern over this is a ridiculous, fantastical, unrealistic, highly imaginative, completely unfounded, preposterously anachronistic, quantifiably neurotic, absurdly grandiose distortion of reality.
Relax. The 18th amendment was repealed in 1933. You're parents most likely weren't even born yet then. It is a non-issue.
By far the longest collection of consecutive adjectival clauses I've witnessed anywhere (like my alliteration?). The point did need driving home, though.
i don't think that counts as alliteration. sorry.
