Friday, July 31, 2009

Two weeks and counting

I officially have two weeks before the official start of classes, and those two weeks are going to be relatively jam-packed with all kinds of stuff.  Next week: meeting with a friend to get coffee/hang out/borrow a book, meet with my fellow "homeroom" coordinators to shop for decorations and decorate the room, meet with my fellow peds club officers to arrange meetings for first semester.  And that's just the official stuff.  I'm also still hoping to finish up our guest bedroom--we tackled the yard last week, though I'm pretty much giving up on getting the bathroom ceiling painted.  Maybe I can pay a friend to do it for me.  Then, the week after that is orientation, wherein I will have to be a mentor at lunch each day (though granted, the rest of the week will be pretty un-full).  

I find it more than just a little frightening that I buckled down and bought the Mother of All Review Books yesterday (aka First Aid for the USMLE Step 1).  You see, I not only have to survive the upcoming school year, with its promises of a pathology class supposedly so daunting that it will make us all want to stab ourselves in the eye (along with all of our other classes)--at the end of the year, I get to spend a month or two studying like a madwoman for The Boards.  In the US, you have to take 3 tests (or "steps") to become a fully licensed physician.  Step 1 is taken at the end of the first two years of medical school and covers pretty much everything you learned in those two years--anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, pathology, microbiology, pharmacology, etc.  Passing Step 1 is important, because not only do you have to pass to become a doctor at all, but your score is a very important piece of information that residency programs consider when you start applying in your 4th year of school.  Difficult programs--like orthopedics, plastic surgery, radiology, and dermatology--look long and hard at how well you did on Step 1 when they consider whether or not they should interview you, and thus, doing well is extremely important and the test becomes even more stressful.  

Since I'm interested in pediatrics (or some other form of general medicine), I don't have to stress *too* much about my step 1 score, but it's still one of those things that looms large over your second year of med school, and thus, I went ahead and bought a review book to supplement my studying throughout the year, in hopes that using it to direct my studies will help me get a better handle on where to start come May, when things kick into overdrive.  

But enough about medicine...it's a gorgeous day and I'm heading outside!

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Busy Bee

Once I was done with my internship, I thought the rest of the summer would be spent in a lovely lazy haze...but alas, not so.  Since I've returned from vacation, things have been veritably hopping around here.  My grandfather is still in the hospital, although doing much better and likely to be transferred back to a rehab facility tomorrow.  But the fact that he is in the hospital takes up a lot of time in the day--my typical days for the past week or so have included getting up and doing some light work around the house, going to lunch with my mom, grandma, and sisters, visiting the hospital for a bit in the early afternoon, and then either going to the gym or doing house stuff with my mom (or both).  We've accomplished a lot--I helped mom organize several things in her house so that her fourth bedroom can be converted to a sitting room/closet space (and I can have the twin bed out of it for our guest room), my guest room is moving right along towards becoming presentable, and tomorrow we're working on my lawn--but it has made these past few weeks fly by so quickly that all of a sudden orientation week is only about two weeks away.  

And of course, there's still a lot to be done before then, including:
  • Find and/or buy books, pencils, etc. 
  • Organize what books I'm going to sell at the book sale
  • Have several meetings with the pediatrics club officers, my fellow unit lab advocates, etc. 
  • Decorate unit lab (kind of like med school homeroom--I'm being a camp counselor of sorts with a few other people and acting as a mentor for the new first years during orientation week, which includes decorating their room for them)
  • Weed and mulch my front yard
  • Actually finish the guest room
  • (Hopefully) paint the bathroom ceiling
  • And I'd like to finish my honeymoon scrapbook.
Oh, I'd also like to relax a little.  Ah,well. 

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Vacation!

We just got back yesterday from our lovely vacation.  My grandfather is still in the hospital but things are pretty much just in a holding pattern for now, so no news there.  Now I get to spend 4 weeks (give or take) doing pretty much nothing until school starts (woot!).  This is a Good Thing, because that should give me just enough time to go insane with boredom and actuallywant to start studying again just in time for school.  (Of course, give me a week in and I'll probably be whining about the workload as per usual.)  

For now, though...some discreetly anonymous vacation photos!


Some Birds at sunset...

Taking a walk with D

Pretty view of the ocean and sea oats

Ibis on the beach

Our lovely pool

One of our itinerant lizards

The absolutely gorgeous beach