Hannibal, you have hit the nail on the head!!! Wonderfully! Yes, becoming a doctor does seem to require you to single-handily ace massive PHYsic/Orgo texts while being a MasterPiece theater writer while on your spare time you philosophize on the greatest ethics issues and then find time to rescue 4 people or 2 children (whichever comes first) per AMCAS rules and for bonus try to rescue stranded cats from trees for Grandma while your undergrad reserach thesis is published right next to the Human Genome Project in Science! Slight Herculien effort is required but it is supposed to expose your perserverence. Hang in there, and you find that being competitive with others only puts you on a bigger treadmill trahn most in this rat race. However, if you learn to foster only the best YOU can do, then you lose interest in what everyone else is doing. The pre-med attitude falls away if you have reach self-actualization. Be all you can be. (Just Kidding) HaHa. Which is the final point. None of this struggle or pain is worth it if you laugh at yourself, or look back and say "I couldn't have done it better or made the same good choices if I had ten more chances" because that is indeed true. I doubt whether anyone on this board could have better choices if they had to do it again. Just choosing to be a doctor tells me that a person is striving and challenging themselves no matter what their potential. If they weren't, they would be lawyers and MBAs. A "pre-med attitude" will fall away if a canidate fells comfortable and secure and ready to learn by making mistakes. Medicine is an art as well as a science. And as Hannibal says, a patient won't even know what a glycoslyated HbA2 is anyway...they just want you to say,"well, we'll get your sugar down and YOU will be alright." Hope is a powerful contagion. Good Rx too!!! 8)