Glad to have been of service
😉 Good to see you, you survived M1! M2 was definitely harder on an intellectual level, but also easier in that I'd figured out my stride in M1 and knew exactly how to get focused. I actually found I had more time in M2 for non-school things because I'd become much better at time budgeting.
Step 1 is...phew. First of all I wouldn't start freaking out about it right now. You haven't even learned half of what's on Step 1 at this point. I started studying over spring break of M2, and I think if I'd tried to do anything more I would have burned out.
First of all Cramfighter (
http://cramfighter.com/) is an excellent resource for planning your studying. You can plug in all your resources and how much time you have and it will come up with a study schedule for you that is easily adjustable as you move forward. Give yourself enough time to get through everything but be aware burnout is real. As I said I started full on over spring break, dropped to about half speed during our final module, then balls to the wall during dedicated and seriously...by Step 1 time I was seriously over it...just mentally exhausted.
Second, UWorld. I got UWorld for a year and that was a bit of a waste of money since the only thing I did with it during first semester was do some respiratory questions during that module (as our prof likes to make his exams USMLE-like so doing some was rather useful). Then it gathered dust til spring. Looking back I would've gotten it for six months only tbh, but your mileage may vary. You want to get through UWorld
twice, do not pass Go, do not collect two hundred dollars. If you do nothing else, do that. There's two thousand something questions in UWorld so that's 4k+ questions by game time. By the start of our dedicated study time I was most of the way through a first pass already.
Third, manage your resources. There are a LOT of resources out there and you don't want to get overwhelmed. I used First Aid as a reference, Boards and Beyond for my main video review guide, UWorld, Costanzo Physiology, and some videos from USMLE-Rx (but not many). Netter's for reference on the anatomy questions. I can't recommend Boards and Beyond enough; his videos are so concise and wonderfully explained. I wish I'd known about them earlier and had watched them during my actual classes, he's better than some of our profs lol.
Fourth, practice tests. UWorld comes with two, and NBME sells practice tests here:
https://nsas.nbme.org/. Your school likely will give you an NBME exam a few weeks before dedicated starts so you can see where your start point is. After that take a practice exam once every week or so (I did mine on Friday mornings then usually took the rest of the day off for a brain break). UWorld 2 is rumored to be the most accurate with respect to score -- I can't vouch as I don't have my Step score back yet -- so consider leaving that for the last one you take. Your score will likely be crap on the first exam, that's fine. Just make sure it goes up with every test, and be aware at some point you'll start to level off. It happens to everyone, we all have our peak.
Fifth, make sure you do the drive to the test center at least once, at the hour when you'd need to on test day (and on the same day of the week as test day). My test center was about 40 minutes from my apartment and I actually decided to stay in a hotel five minutes from the site the night before as I was too paranoid about the traffic here. Most test centers have a "practice exam" you can pay for that lets you go do some blocks under simulated test conditions. I did not do this but I know some people did just to get comfortable with everything. Getting past security takes forever so get there early AF on test day. Bring food (I brought way too much lol). I was worried about drinking coffee and having to pee in the middle of a block (you can't pause blocks unless it's an emergency) so I stopped drinking coffee a week before to make sure my body wouldn't miss it.
There's more I could tell you, but I'll stop here for now lol. Send me a PM and I can hook you up with some choice stuff that I've collected over the past year.